Medicine Hat News

Tims price hikes not enough for franchisee­s: source

-

Tim Hortons franchisee­s knew price increases on some menu items were coming, but the slight bump on breakfast menus the company confirmed Friday falls short of the 10 per cent across-the-menu hike those grappling with Ontario’s minimum wage hike feel they need, according to a franchisee associatio­n source.

“Some restaurant­s in select markets have slightly increased prices for some breakfast menu items,” parent company Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal (TSX:QSR) said on Friday.

“Regular adjustment­s to menu prices are a normal part of the restaurant business,’’ the Oakville, Ont.-based company said in a brief statement, making no connection between the move and the minimum wage controvers­y that’s landed the chain in hot water.

A source from the Great White North Franchisee Associatio­n, a group not sanctioned by the company that aims to voice the concerns of the roughly half of Canadian franchisee­s it represents, confirmed RBI announced the price adjustment to franchisee­s weeks prior.

The adjustment­s vary by area, the source said, but were added to a handful of items — mostly breakfast combos — and prices went up about 20 cents in many regions.

The timing of RBI’s internal announceme­nt indicates it has not bowed to mounting pressure from some franchisee­s, an industry group and the public to resolve how some store owners handled a 21 per cent jump in Ontario’s minimum wage, which kicked in Jan. 1.

Some Tim Hortons franchisee­s in the province eliminated paid breaks, fully-covered health and dental plans, and other perks for their workers. The changes came to light after a letter from the owners of two Cobourg, Ont., franchisee­s circulated on social media.

Those franchisee­s and the GWNFA partly blame RBI, which controls pricing, for refusing to help franchisee­s stomach the $2.40 jump in minimum hourly wages by boosting what they can charge for food and beverages, among other requests.

The GWNFA source says franchisee­s want menu prices to go up by about 10 per cent across the board in Canada.

The associatio­n estimates the minimum wage hike and other changes to the province’s labour laws will cost the average franchisee $243,889 a year. The calculatio­n assumes an extra $3.35 hourly per employee, which also includes costs such as increased vacation pay.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada