Over 200 firearms seized during Waterloo traffic stop
According to police, during the traffic stop officers noticed firearms and ammunition inside the vehicle.
Traditionally, when shoppers go to Costco, they’re required to flash their membership cards to an employee when they walk in. But soon, some Costco shoppers will have to scan their cards at the door in a move analysts believe is to keep moochers out.
On its website, a statement reads, “Over the coming months, membership scanning devices will be used at the entrance door of your local warehouse.”
On Monday, a Costco spokesperson told CTV News the scanners are currently being tested in Ottawa, Edmonton, Regina and B.C. Lower Mainland locations.
Before entering the store, shoppers will have to scan their physical or digital membership card. Guests must also be accompanied by a valid member for entry.
In a previous email response, Costco also said it was to “help prevent long waits at the cash register from membership questions, such as renewals, invalid membership, etc.”
“This initiative is also to be more efficient at informing our members with their membership status and direct them accordingly,” wrote a company representative.
“It doesn’t bother me,” said Halifax shopper Helen Corkum, who added it would bother her if the door greeter were to lose the job
“I understand the purpose behind it. I see where they’re coming from. But also, I feel like it might take away some of the personability – the personal touch of Costco,” said Erin Sydney, another shopper in Halifax, who noted she likes how many employees Costco has, including greeters at the door. Bruce Winder, a retail analyst said he believes the move is to keep moochers out.
“I think it’s more to keep moochers out and to get more revenue, get more profit by getting more people to sign up and use the membership,” Winder said.
Winder says Costco is not the first giant to crack down on membership mooching, referencing Netflix’s campaign to limit password sharing.
“Everyone is sort of trying to tighten things up. They're at the point now where, in this economy, every dollar counts. Every nickel counts,” Winder said.
Annual membership fees make up the bulk of Costco’s profits and help keep prices down.
On Sept. 1, those fees will jump for the first time in seven years. Annual membership fees will go up by $5 to $65 per year while executive memberships will go up by $10 to $130 a year. Executive members will also see a bump in the maximum rewards they can claim.
While the scanners could keep non-members’ business away, Winder believes the business could also turn some of those people into customers.
“Some of those people who borrow someone else’s membership may say ‘OK, OK, I get it, I’ve been caught. Now I’m going to buy my own membership,'” Winder said.
According to police, during the traffic stop officers noticed firearms and ammunition inside the vehicle.
Cher, Anthony Hopkins, Heath Ledger, Alec Baldwin and Tom Hardy are just a few of the celebrities John Cumming met while growing up in his family's military surplus store.
At the end of a side street in Slave Lake, Alta., Lynn Bowes looks at a grey job-site trailer with boarded-up windows and doors that once operated as her town's only homeless shelter.
After 36 years of waiting, the juice is finally loose again in 'Beetlejuice Beetlejuice,' this time racking up US$110 million in its premiere weekend.
Ties van der Hoeven's ambitions are nothing if not grand. The Dutch engineer wants to transform a huge stretch of inhospitable desert into green, fertile land teeming with wildlife.
In the wake of the NDP withdrawing its automatic support of the minority Liberal government, here is a timeline of key events charting the arc of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's fortunes in federal politics.
It was the years-long cruise that was supposed to set sail, but saw its departure postponed… postponed… and postponed again.
Police are calling for an investigation into why Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill was briefly detained for a traffic violation while entering Hard Rock Stadium on Sunday, hours before his team was set to open the season against the Jacksonville Jaguars.
Huddling for safety in classrooms as gunfire rang out, students at Apalachee High School texted or called their parents to let them know what was happening and send what they thought could be their final messages. One student texted her mother to say she loved her, adding, 'I'm sorry I'm not the best daughter.'
Mary Grace Rico is seeking help in getting treatment for a rare spinal condition.
Swimmer Nicholas Bennett and para canoeist Brianna Hennessy have been named Canada's flag-bearers for Sunday's closing ceremonies of the Paralympic Games in Paris.
Halifax resident Tucker Bottomley started feeling the painful effects of rheumatoid arthritis at the age of 21.
Roger Barker was looking forward to exchanging a book at one of the Little Free Libraries that had been erected in his neighbourhood, until he found it vandalized.
You never know what you might find in your doorbell camera footage...
Brenda Tremblay has been an avid gardener for the last 40 years, but this year’s harvest in Colpitts Settlement, N.B., is a tough nut to crack.
A group of seniors in Ontario is offering their time and experience as parents struggle to find reliable child care spaces.
Saskatchewan man Clyde Hall has been collecting and restoring antique farm equipment for five decades. He's now ready to part with his collection.
An Ottawa man has won the $3.8 million prize in the 'Catch the Ace' draw in Maniwaki, Que. Local radio station CHGA 97.3 has been playing their version of 'Catch the Ace' for nearly a year without a winner.