Tim Hortons' Operators Fret It's Losing Its Canadian Culture

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
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Tim Hortons coffee and doughnuts are about as closely linked with the Canadian identity as hockey and universal health care, but the institution is under attack.

That’s the view of many of the chain’s franchisees, who are chafing under the corporate ownership of Restaurant Brands International Inc., the fast-food conglomerate that also runs Burger King and Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen. They claim that efforts to squeeze money from restaurant operators are destroying Tim Hortons’ nice-guy image and forcing them to scale back community programs, including youth hockey.

Restaurant Brands, which subsumed Tim Hortons in 2014, is backed by the Brazilian investment firm 3G Capital -- famous for pursuing hard-nosed deals and then aggressively managing expenses. At Tim Hortons, corporate is now charging franchisees more for everything from rent to bacon, which they say is hurting their bottom lines, boosting prices at the register and irking customers.

“We won’t be able to give the service that we’re known for,” said franchisee David Hughes, who owns five Tim Hortons in southern Alberta. “These guys have turned everything into a profit center.”

As Tim Hortons management charges higher prices for coffee and other supplies, restaurants have had to lay off workers, the franchisees say. Store owners are stocking up on bags of sugar at Costco, where it’s cheaper than what the corporate parent charges. Even knives and scissors are more expensive under 3G.

Daniel Schwartz, a 3G partner who serves as Restaurant Brands’ chief executive officer, said that the company has met with the Great White North Franchisee Association. But he doesn’t want to argue with franchisees in public.

“There’s been a lot of change,” Schwartz, 36, said in an interview last month. “With change comes anxiety and uncertainty.”

Tim Gilks, a former Tim Hortons executive who runs a commodities-consulting firm, says the company is now charging each restaurant about $13,750 more for coffee a year. While commodity costs have gone up for everyone, corporate is pushing prices well beyond that increase, he said.

Diners are noticing the changes, especially the higher menu prices, Hughes said. In Alberta, cups of coffee are now 2 cents more expensive than they used to be. That doesn’t sound like much, but coffee drinkers are creatures of habit -- and even a small uptick may register with them.

Franchisees have been increasingly vocal since 2014, when 3G and Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway first combined Tim Hortons with Burger King. That deal created Restaurant Brands, which located its headquarters in Tim Hortons’ longtime home of Oakville, Ontario.

Wade MacCallum, who owns six Tim Hortons in Canada, said he was told things would be “business as usual” when Restaurant Brands took over. Instead, 3G has overhauled everything, he said.

“The 3G business model is based on cost cutting,” said MacCallum, who serves on the board of the franchisee association. “I don’t think there’s a part of the business they haven’t touched.”

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...rs-worry-chain-is-losing-its-canadian-culture
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
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Don't you just hate these foreigners that don't believe in Holy Canadian Values?

Oh, wait, they do believe in Holy Canadian Values. They're treating Timmies just like Canada treated the Grand Banks.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
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Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
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The time has come to start a new franchise called Harold Snepts.
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
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Don't you just hate these foreigners that don't believe in Holy Canadian Values?

Oh, wait, they do believe in Holy Canadian Values. They're treating Timmies just like Canada treated the Grand Banks.

What? Let the Russians vacuum them clean?
 

Jinentonix

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 6, 2015
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Olympus Mons
Canadian culture lol
Yeah, Canada has no culture of any kind, right? Oh wait, now I understand the reason for your derision. These are small business owners and of course your stinking attitude towards them is they are all just a bunch of scammers anyway. Viva la corporate fascism!
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,817
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Yeah, Canada has no culture of any kind, right? Oh wait, now I understand the reason for your derision. These are small business owners and of course your stinking attitude towards them is they are all just a bunch of scammers anyway. Viva la corporate fascism!

Petros says the crazy pills are in aisle 4.
 

Johnnny

Frontiersman
Jun 8, 2007
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Third rock from the Sun
In my end of town we have 5 Tim Horton Stores. In the city as a whole id say there are 20+.

Tim Hortons does have culture. All the retired shift workers speaking franglais who hangout there in the mornings could be considered "Culture".. :lol:
 

Corduroy

Senate Member
Feb 9, 2011
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Vancouver, BC
In my end of town we have 5 Tim Horton Stores. In the city as a whole id say there are 20+.

Tim Hortons does have culture. All the retired shift workers speaking franglais who hangout there in the mornings could be considered "Culture".. :lol:

That's weird. I find the atmosphere in Tim Horton's to be frantic, not the kind I'd expect retirees to hang out in.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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Vancouver Island
That's weird. I find the atmosphere in Tim Horton's to be frantic, not the kind I'd expect retirees to hang out in.

You go at the wrong time of the day. Same at A&W the old timers are there early in the morning. Long gone by the time the rest of you deal your lazy azzes out of bed.

It's owned by a Brazilian Company.. it's no longer Canadian anything.

Superstore has better donuts, and they are Canadian.. :canada:

The SHell station in Qualicum Beach gets their doughnuts from a local bakery. Far superior apple fritters to timmys.