Friction renewed with Tims and some franchisees
TORONTO — A Tim Hortons franchisee who is being denied a licence renewal after the company accused him of violating food safety and operating standards has passed most of such reviews, internal documents obtained by The Canadian Press indicate.
The documents show Mark Kuziora, who has been critical of Tim Hortons’ operating practices and was involved in a class-acother tion lawsuit against its parent company, failed only one review over three years to March 2018 and passed others with scores of between 70 and 95 per cent.
The Great White North Franchisee Association (GWNFA), which claims to represent at least half of Tim Hortons franchisees, said in a letter to the company defending Kuziora that the failures were caused by a change in requirements around the approval and purchase of small wares that they say was faced by “many Tim Hortons store owners across the country.”
GWNFA has been fighting Tim Hortons on behalf of Kuziora since April, when the association said Kuziora was told he wouldn’t have the opportunity to renew his licence for one of the two Toronto locations he owns.
At the time, Tim Hortons did not offer a reason for the denial, but its president of Canadian operations, Sami Siddiqui, told the Globe and Mail that among other issues, Kuziora’s restaurant has “a documented history of problems ... including foodsafety violations and not meeting a number of other Tim Hortons operating standards.”
Kuziora has had a strained relationship with Tim Hortons, in part because he was involved in a class-action lawsuit last year that alleged RBI used money from a national advertising fund improperly. The lawsuit accused RBI of funnelling nearly $700 million to itself and TDL Group, a Tim Hortons subsidiary.