The Telegram (St. John's)

‘Hold the sugar, hold the cream, Tim Hortons don’t be mean’

Protests target coffee franchisee­s

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Protesters rallied outside Tim Hortons locations across Ontario Wednesday to show support for employees after some franchisee­s made benefits and break cuts after a minimum wage increase — but many gatherers stopped short of committing to a boycott.

Some, but not all, of the chain’s franchisee­s have said employees will have to cover a larger share of their dental and health-care benefits as well as take unpaid breaks in order to offset the added costs of the province’s hourly minimum wage rate increase to $14 an hour on Jan. 1.

But labour groups who gathered outside stores in cities including Toronto, Ottawa and Coburg, Ont. Wednesday describe the company as “wildly profitable” and argue Tim Hortons and its parent company can afford to pay employees at the new rate without taking away previous perks.

Joshua Bowman, a University of Toronto student who rallied at the Tim Hortons location down the street from the university, called the actions of franchisee­s who targeted workers “deplorable,” but said he would not forgo his daily coffee runs at the chain because he figured the lost business would hurt employees more.

“I haven’t decided to boycott because these wages go to the

workers and to putting people like me through university because minimum-wage jobs are the ones largely available to students,” he said.

Bowman gripped a sign reading “Shame on Timmies for not sharing” and chanted “Hold the sugar, hold the cream, Tim Hortons don’t be mean” with at least three dozen other activists, as a steady stream of customers filtered into the Tim Hortons.

Organizers said they hope such rallies will send a message to Tim Hortons and its parent company, Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal. The parent company has denounced the actions of some franchisee­s, who have said they have been left with no

choice because RBI, which controls product pricing, has not committed to a price hike.

“Head office has the means to ensure that these reprisals against workers are reversed, and we are calling on them to do so immediatel­y,” said Pam Frache, Ontario co-ordinator of a campaign for higher minimum wage dubbed Fight for $15 and Fairness. “And we are not going to stop, actually, until they make this happen. We need to make it right for these employees.”

The rallies come a day after a social media campaign sprang up encouragin­g people to boycott Tim Hortons in order to show solidarity with the workers.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? President of Ontario Federation of Labour Chris Buckley joins protesters outside a Tim Hortons Franchise in Toronto on Wednesday. Labour organizati­ons across Ontario are holding rallies today to protest the actions some Tim Hortons franchises have...
CP PHOTO President of Ontario Federation of Labour Chris Buckley joins protesters outside a Tim Hortons Franchise in Toronto on Wednesday. Labour organizati­ons across Ontario are holding rallies today to protest the actions some Tim Hortons franchises have...

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