Nova Scotia

N.S. spent $1.2. million on controversial wine subsidy program from January to March

After months of silence, the Nova Scotia government finally revealed the total figure spent on a wine subsidy program that caused many of the province's winemakers to feel sour.

Province didn't share details of program for months

A worker driving a tractor at a Nova Scotia vineyard is shown.
A worker drives a tractor at the Luckett Vineyards in Wallbrook, N.S., in 2017. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)

After months of silence, the Nova Scotia government finally revealed the total figure spent on a wine subsidy program that caused many of the province's winemakers to feel sour.

Finance Minister Allan MacMaster told reporters Thursday the province allocated $1.2 million to two wine bottling companies in Nova Scotia between January and March.

When this dispute was in full swing this past winter, Premier Tim Houston claimed the program would not cost millions of dollars a year.

Until now, the province shared minimal details of the support provided to Nova Scotia's two wine bottling companies.

MacMaster said the government released the figures because the amount was going to "come out in the public accounts anyway."

When the subsidy program was first announced, winemakers complained it helped the province's two bottling companies import cheaper grape juice and push local producers off the shelves at the Nova Scotia Liquor Corporation.

The premier paused the subsidy program in March and created a working group tasked with coming up with a new measure that would satisfy all the players in the province's wine industry.