Toronto Star

Rallying around Timmies workers

Tim Hortons locations hit with protesters after stores cut employee benefits, tips

- SARA MOJTEHEDZA­DEH WORK AND WEALTH REPORTER

Protesters rallied across Canada Friday calling on Tim Hortons’ franchisee­s and their parent company Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal to reverse clawbacks to workers’ benefits, tips and other entitlemen­ts — changes implemente­d at some Ontario locations following a $2.40 per hour hike to the minimum wage.

Demonstrat­ors aimed to gather at 42 Ontario locations, including 20 in Toronto. Eleven more rallies were scheduled to take place across Canada, according to organizers, who belong to the Fight-for-$15 movement, the Ontario Federation of Labour and the independen­t advocacy group Lead Now.

Protests from Vancouver to Halifax were pulled together in just four days, said Lead Now campaigner Brittany Smith, following what she describes as an outpouring of support for workers facing slashed breaks and benefits.

“They have a near religious brand in Canada,” Smith told the Star. “A family-friendly coffee shop for the average worker that takes care and invests in the communitie­s it serves. I think these punitive attacks on workers fly in the face of the values that it purports to have.”

A crowd of around 30 protesters converged at a Tim Hortons opposite Queen’s Park on Friday afternoon, eliciting rounds of honks from passing vehicles. The rally was marshaled by health-care providers from the Decent Work and Health Network, which testified in support of the minimum wage increase during the government’s two-year review of workplace legislatio­n.

“As a family physician, the impact of work on health is very clear to me. It’s something I see every day,” said Toronto-based doctor Ritika Goel, a member of the Decent Work and Health Network.

“I have many patients who are minimum-wage workers in the fast-food industry and it’s very clear that ac- cess to paid sick days, access to benefits, access to paid breaks . . . these things all improve their mental wellbeing. They improve their health.”

Ontario raised the minimum wage from $11.60 to $14 on Jan. 1. In response, some employers moved to offset the increased labour costs by eliminatin­g paid breaks or increasing workers’ contributi­ons for benefits, including at Tim Hortons restaurant­s in Cobourg owned by Jeri Horton-Joyce and Ron Joyce Jr., the children of the chain’s founders.

As previously reported by the Star, workers at a Scarboroug­h franchise at Markham and Lawrence were also told they could no longer accept tips or have paid breaks. Last week, labour groups circulated a statement apparently posted by owners of a Whitby franchise that encouraged workers not to vote Liberal because of the wage increase.

Franchisee­s have asked RBI to increase store prices to offset the wagehike cost, but the corporate parent has dubbed them a “rogue group,” and claimed that their actions “do not reflect the values of our brand.” RBI also says it considers its fran- chises to be “operated by small business owners who are responsibl­e for handling all employment matters, including all policies for benefits and wages, for their restaurant­s.”

“I’m happy to talk to any business owner about the minimum wage, but taking it out on employees is not fair and not acceptable,” Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne tweeted Friday.

“Healthy workers are better workers and paying a living wage leads to higher retention rates. More importantl­y, paying people a fair wage allows them to support their families and contribute to the economy. Standing up for workers is the right thing to do.”

Labour reforms introduced by the government through Bill 148 were aimed to provide greater protection­s for low-wage, part-time and temporary workers and introduced two paid sick days for all Ontarians.

Agroup of 53 Canadian economists endorsed Ontario’s decision to hike the minimum wage, arguing that the bulk of academic research conducted on wage increases in other jurisdicti­ons have not resulted in signif- icant job losses or price increases.

“This is not just a flash-in-the-pan action,” Deena Ladd of the Worker’s Action Centre at Friday’s protest. “This is actually a deeper issue of people really supporting the minimum wage and supporting better rights and working conditions.”

Ladd said the Tim Hortons’ backlash pointed to the need for further action, such as enacting protection­s in Ontario employment law for “concerted activity,” and against unjust dismissal. (“Concerted activity” is a term used to describe groups of employees coming together, with or without a union, to improve pay and working conditions.)

According to the Great White North Franchisee Associatio­n, which represents around half of Timmies’ franchisee­s in Canada, the cost of implementi­ng minimum wage hikes is $6,968 per employee. The Associatio­n said the average franchise has around 35 employees, resulting in “$243,889 a year off a franchisee’s bottom line.”

Total sales for Tim Hortons franchises in 2016 were $6.4 billion, according to its latest year-end report.

 ?? FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A National Day of Action in Support of Tim Hortons workers targeted some 20 locations in Toronto on Friday.
FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS A National Day of Action in Support of Tim Hortons workers targeted some 20 locations in Toronto on Friday.

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