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Ontario to sell beer, cider in 80 more grocery stores this summer

A Canadian flag flies near a LCBO store in Bowmanville, Ont. on Saturday July 20, 2013.
A Canadian flag flies near a LCBO store in Bowmanville, Ont. on Saturday July 20, 2013. Doug Ives / File / The Canadian Press

TORONTO – Eighty more grocery stores in Ontario will be allowed to sell beer and cider this summer.

The provincial government has opened up bidding for grocery stores looking to get in on sales of suds, and will announce the selected locations in May.

READ MORE: Cider sales soar in Ontario as consumers choose alternatives to beer

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The expanded sales began in December 2015, and now 130 stores sell beer and cider – with 70 of those also selling wine.

Beer and cider will eventually be sold in up to 450 grocery stores in Ontario, and wine will be in up to 300 of those stores.

READ MORE: Ontario allows grocery stores that sell beer to add craft cider to shelves

Grocery stores are allowed to sell beer in tall boy cans and six-packs, with Liquor Control Board of Ontario stores selling six and 12-packs of beer, but the foreign-owned Beer Store retains exclusive rights to sell cases of 24.

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The grocers have to have designated shelf areas for alcohol and have standard hours of sale.

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