Québecor says Loblaw deal with telecom is anti-competitive, calls on Ottawa to step in
The head of telecom and media firm Québecor is calling on the federal government to intervene in a deal between Loblaw and a company owned by Rogers and Bell that would see his company and others pushed out of 180 Loblaw-owned stores.
In a letter Pierre Karl Péladeau sent to Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne on May 9, the Québecor CEO says Loblaw decided to «prematurely end» Quebecor's contract for wireless devices and services at the telecommunications kiosks inside Loblaw grocery stores — a move he calls anti-competitive and contrary to the interests of consumers.
The Loblaw-owned supermarket kiosks are branded as The Mobile Shop and there are 180 of them across the country. Right now, the kiosks sell� cell phone plans from seven providers, including Telus and Québecor's Freedom Mobile.
On the brand's «about us» page, The Mobile Shop says «we don't work for any one carrier, so we'll never play favourites.»
In his letter, obtained by CBC News, Péladeau says The Mobile Shop will soon sell only Glentel products. Glentel is a retailer owned by Bell and Rogers.
"(Loblaw) presents this decision as a simple choice of supply for its stores, but in our view, this is an approach aimed at excluding certain other cellular telephone operators to benefit the company Glentel," Péladeau says in the letter, translated from French.
«If Glentel obtains such favour from Loblaw, it is because it's a joint venture made up of the giants Bell and Rogers who once again seek to lock out competition and take Canadians hostage in their consumer choice.»
In his letter, Péladeau asks Champagne for «direct and firm» intervention against Loblaw, Rogers, Bell and Glentel.
In a statement, The Mobile Shop says its business represents «less than