Truro News

Tim Hortons breakfast menu price hikes not enough for franchisee­s: source

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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 acrossthe-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 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.

RBI denounced the actions taken by some franchisee­s and has said it’s committed to helping restaurant owners work through the changes. The company has declined to answer questions on how it intends to do that. Tim Hortons media relations declined to comment further Friday evening.

Tim Hortons maintains individual franchisee­s are responsibl­e for setting employee wages and benefits, while complying with applicable laws.

Angry consumers have targeted both the parent company and the franchisee­s, taking to social media and encouragin­g others to #Boycotttim­hortons in an effort to put pressure on either group to reverse the changes. Protesters also gathered outside Tim Hortons locations across Ontario in recent days.

The Ontario Federation of Labour, an umbrella group for workers and their unions in Ontario, called on RBI’S chief executive Daniel Schwartz to take immediate steps to ensure his franchisee­s comply with and respect the spirit of the province’s labour laws.

The dispute over employee wages and price hikes is the latest round of finger-pointing in an ongoing blame game between some franchisee­s and their corporate parent. They have publicly sparred over alleged mismanagem­ent and filed several lawsuits against each other in recent months.

Tim Hortons appears to have last adjusted prices Aug. 2, 2017 when it boosted what it charges for hot beverages and breakfast items.

 ?? Cp photo ?? Ron Joyce, co-founder of Tim Hortons, is shown in a file photo.
Cp photo Ron Joyce, co-founder of Tim Hortons, is shown in a file photo.

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