Edmonton Journal

RESTAURANT­S MAKE PLEA FOR FEDERAL SUPPORT.

Lobby group seeks more federal support

- JESSE SNYDER

OTTAWA • Restaurant owners issued a stark warning to federal policy-makers on Wednesday, saying that more than half of all Canadian eateries could go out of business in the next three months as the pandemic continues to discourage people from dining out.

Restaurant­s Canada, a lobby group representi­ng 30,000 firms, has been meeting federal officials and calling for a range of supports for the food service sector, which has been clobbered by COVID-19 lockdowns.

The lobby group is calling for an extension of the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy (CEWS) beyond the end of 2020, and a streamline­d rent relief program for business owners, among other things. It is also calling on the Trudeau government to shift its tone when addressing the Canadian public, by encouragin­g people to return to their normal lives rather than focusing solely on health risks.

The industry will be under particular stress in coming months as colder temperatur­es begin sweeping across the country, said David Lefebvre, vice-president of Restaurant­s Canada.

“Patios soon won’t be available, because it’s going to be winter in Canada,” he said. “That’s going to reduce capacity a lot.”

The pleas for support come as the government under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has stuck to a safety-oriented message, while giving far less oxygen to looming concerns around economic recovery. The U.K. government, by comparison, recently unveiled a program that pays 50 per cent of Britons’ restaurant tabs as a way to incentiviz­e dining out.

The U.K. treasury subsidized over 35 million bar and restaurant tabs in the first half of August alone, recent data show.

Canadians have slowly begun to return to restaurant­s as social distancing measures are gradually eased across the country. But businesses are still operating at well below capacity.

A survey released on Thursday found that 29 per cent of food service businesses cannot operate under social distancing guidelines, while another 31 per cent will only be able to keep their doors open for another 90 days at most. “In other words, up to 60 per cent of the industry could fail within three months,” the survey said.

“If we don’t ask for support, or if there’s a second wave, there’s going to be massive bankruptci­es across the industry,” Lefebvre said in an interview.

The survey was supported by the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, Restaurant­s Canada and by large food and drink companies including Boston Pizza and Molson Coors Beverage Company.

The restaurant industry says it has shown some signs of improvemen­t in recent months, which could easily be diminished once outdoor dining is shut down for the summer. Employment in the Canadian food service industry fell to as low as 400,000 people in the middle of pandemic, down from 1.2 million before the outbreak. That figure is currently around 800,000 people, according to data from Restaurant­s Canada.

“We need to act now,” said Perrin Beatty, head of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, in a statement. “Across Canada, our restaurant­s are where we meet for business or pleasure, where we got our first job and where our families spend a night out. Simply put, our restaurant­s are cornerston­es in our communitie­s.”

Uptake under the Liberal government’s rent-relief program, which is administer­ed by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporatio­n, has been lower than initially expected. Lefebvre said the applicatio­n process for the relief was overly complicate­d, and effectivel­y ignored many small businesses like restaurant­s, because it targeted landlords rather than business owners themselves.

His lobby group is also concerned over the decision by policy-makers to wind down the federal wage subsidy program by the end of 2020, saying it could cut off a crucial supply of capital to firms. Plans to wind down the Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB) could also discourage more people from dining out, industry representa­tives say.

“When we go to restaurant­s, we don’t do it with the rent money, we do it with the extra money in our pockets,” Lefebvre said. “So as people have less available income to do that, or less extra money to do to go to restaurant­s, of course that’s going to hurt.”

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 ?? JEFF J MITCHELL / GETTY IMAGES ?? Diners’ tab are being subsidized in the U.K. to promote trade, a move restaurate­urs would like to see in Canada.
JEFF J MITCHELL / GETTY IMAGES Diners’ tab are being subsidized in the U.K. to promote trade, a move restaurate­urs would like to see in Canada.

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