Galen Weston’s brands are allegedly short-changing us, again. This time, it’s not a shadowy backroom deal to inflate the price of your morning toast (aka: the bread-fixing scandal). Now, it’s happening right in front of your eyes at the meat counter. While you’re busy trying to figure out how a pack of chicken breasts is now the equivalent cost of a small kitchen appliance, big grocers are allegedly charging you for food that simply isn't in the package.
For years, Canadians have been told to "shop the sales" and "buy in bulk" to survive the cost-of-living crisis. But what happens when the weight on the sticker is a lie? Recent investigations and social media outcries have pulled back the curtain on a practice that feels like a slap in the face to every hardworking person in this country: weight discrepancies that conveniently always seem to favour the house.
Your "one kilogram" of beef may be a lie
The math is simple and infuriating. When a retailer labels a package of ground beef as 1.2 kilograms, but it actually weighs 1.0 kilograms, they’ve effectively charged you for 20% more than you paid for — short-changing you on a transaction that directly impacts your everyday budget.
In a recent investigation by CBC News, shoppers documented cases where they were overcharged by significant margins because the scale on the store floor did not match the sticker on the meat (1).
One shopper purchased a pack of chicken from a Loblaw-owned store only to find it was 200 grams short. At today's prices, that’s not a rounding error — it’s several dollars gone from a family's weekly budget. The argument consumers are making is the double standard: If a customer walked out of the store without paying for a $5 item, the police would be called. When a grocery giant "accidentally" overcharges millions of customers by $5, it’s called a technical glitch.
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The "weepage" excuse doesn’t hold water
When caught, the corporate response is predictably sterile. A spokesperson for Loblaw told CBC News (2): "We take these matters very seriously and have reached out to the customer to apologize and make it right."
These weight discrepancies are often blamed on "weepage"— the natural loss of moisture from meat — or human error in "tare" settings (the weight of the packaging). But let's be honest, these errors rarely (if ever) skew the other way. When was the last time you brought home a package of meat only to realize you’d received 200 grams of free steak?
It’s happened before
And these errors in pricing have occurred before. Loblaw’s parent company only recently settled a $500 million lawsuit for its role in the infamous bread price fixing scandal.
In most cases like this, corporations settle without a full formal admission of wrongdoing in the legal sense, even when they've made public statements that amount to the same thing. In the bread fixing case, Loblaw took the unusual step of self-reporting (and received immunity), and George Weston Limited made fairly candid public acknowledgments of the brand’s role in coordinating efforts to raise bread prices.
Now, Canadians must decide whether to believe these "weight errors" are mistakes or an effort to juice profit margins.
How to fight back against the grocery giants
You are already paying record prices for food. You shouldn’t have to pay for "ghost weight" too. Since the regulators at Measurement Canada cannot be in every aisle, the burden of proof falls on the Canadian consumer. Here’s what you can do:
- Use the produce scales: Before you put that expensive roast in your cart, take it to the produce section and weigh it on the digital scales. If the weight is lower than the sticker, bring it to the manager immediately.
- Challenge the "tare": You should never pay for the weight of the Styrofoam tray or the blood-soaking pad. If the weight on the scale matches the weight on the sticker exactly, you are likely being overcharged for the plastic.
- Report every instance: Don’t just ask for a refund. File a formal complaint with Measurement Canada (3).
The Competition Bureau of Canada (4) has already noted that a lack of competition in our grocery sector allows these giants to behave with impunity. They know you have nowhere else to go.
It’s time to stop being polite about being robbed. Check your labels, weigh your food and stop letting Galen Weston take an extra cut from your dinner table.
Article Sources
We rely only on vetted sources and credible third-party reporting. For details, see our ethics and guidelines.
CBC News (1, 2); Measurement Canada (3); Competition Bureau of Canada (4)
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Leslie Kennedy served as an editor at Thomson Reuters and for Star Media Group, followed by a number of years as a writer and editor and content manager in marketing communications, before returning to her editorial roots. She is a graduate of Humber College’s post-graduate journalism program and has been a professional writer and editor ever since.
