Regina Leader-Post

Tim Hortons protests to expand

- DAVID HODGES

TORONTO • Protesters angered by some Ontario Tim Hortons franchisee­s who slashed workers’ benefits and breaks after the province raised its minimum wage plan to spread their rallies to other areas of the country.

About 50 demonstrat­ions are planned in cities across the country on Friday, although at least 38 will be based in Ontario, including 18 planned in Toronto.

As of Dec. 31, 2016, the number of Tim Hortons locations in Canada was 3,801.

Other cities involved in the protest include Calgary, Halifax, Saskatoon, Regina, Vancouver and two other cities in British Columbia.

Organizers behind the protest campaign, which has been dubbed Fight for $15 and Fairness, say the demonstrat­ions planned at specific Tim Hortons franchises on Friday are not about the franchise owners themselves, but rather to pressure their parent company.

“If they’re feeling the crunch, they know like we do the answer has to come from corporate head office, not off the backs of employees making a minimum wage,” said spokeswoma­n Brittany Smith.

“This is about the multibilli­on dollar corporatio­n and its parent company, Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal, who have the means to protect workers, but aren’t doing it.”

Smith could not describe how specific franchises across the country were selected for the protests but said they were chosen by local members of the Fight for $15 and Fairness, which she said number 500,000.

Friday’s planned national protests follow similar demonstrat­ions earlier this month at 16 Tim Hortons restaurant­s in Ontario, organized in response to a few franchises that clawed back workers benefits, paid breaks and other perks as a result of the minimum wage increase in Ontario from an $11.60 hourly rate to $14 at the start of the month.

The protests began after Jeri Horton-Joyce and Ron Joyce Jr., the children of the brand’s billionair­e co-founders, rolled out the controvers­ial measures at two Cobourg, Ont., locations they own.

Finger-pointing between the company and franchisee­s over who bears responsibi­lity for the cuts has intensifie­d an ongoing public sparring over alleged mismanagem­ent that has included several lawsuits filed against each other in recent months.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Members of Ontario Federation of Labour protest outside a Tim Hortons franchise in Toronto last week.
CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Members of Ontario Federation of Labour protest outside a Tim Hortons franchise in Toronto last week.

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