The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Delivery delays hit Tim Hortons franchisee­s

- BY TARA DESCHAMPS

Some Tim Hortons franchisee­s are experienci­ng a delay in receiving supply deliveries from the fast food giant.

The company’s president Alex Macedo told the Canadian Press on Tuesday that upgrades and changes to its supply chain distributi­on centre were causing trouble with shipping out products.

The delays are the latest irritant in the relationsh­ip between franchisee­s and Tim Hortons, its parent company Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal and subsidiary TDL Group. In recent months, the two sides have tussled over everything from cost-cutting measures to a class-action lawsuit over the company’s alleged improper use of a $700 million national advertisin­g fund.

Macedo said the company recently “fell behind” on getting products out to franchisee­s, but the delays are “within the acceptable range” for a transition of this nature.

“There’s no shortage of any of the critical items,” he stressed. “We expect in the next five to seven days everything is back to normal.”

He was equally hopeful about the company’s relationsh­ip with restaurant owners, saying that Tim Hortons has a “good” rapport with the franchisee advisory board that represents all the owners.

“We still have a lot of work to do, but as we drive profits and sales we expect the relationsh­ip to get better,” he said.

Those remarks came days after a spokespers­on for Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains revealed the federal government would investigat­e allegation­s that RBI failed to live up to promises made under the Investment Canada Act in 2014. A letter to Bains from the Great White North Franchisee Associatio­n, a group representi­ng at least half of the Tim Hortons franchisee­s, cited maintainin­g franchisee relationsh­ips, the rent and royalty structure for five years and existing employment levels at Tims franchises across Canada as issues.

On Tuesday, Macedo said, “We have responded into Ottawa each and every year with everything we have done and we are happy to co-operate if anything comes up.”

Earlier in the year, Macedo and Tim Hortons faced intense criticism after two Cobourg, Ont. franchises moved to offset Ontario’s recent minimum wage hike by cutting paid breaks and forcing workers to cover a bigger share of their benefits.

The move caused some customers to vow to boycott the brand.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A Tim Hortons restaurant sign is shown in Newcastle, Ont., on Feb. 11.
CP PHOTO A Tim Hortons restaurant sign is shown in Newcastle, Ont., on Feb. 11.

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