Tim Hortons workers in Dundas lose paid breaks, Timbits after minimum wage hike
Picketer: 'We need to support those that don't have it as good as the rest of us'
Marianela Quinlan's 15-year-old child used to be able to sample a free donut or Timbit when working at aTim Hortonsin Dundas.
But in the wake of the province's higher minimum wage requirement, that perk is gone along with her child's two paid, 15-minute breaks for every eight-hour shift. They've been replaced by a 30-minute unpaid lunch break.
That's what brought Quinlan out to the franchise location on York Road in the suburb of HamiltonWednesday evening for a picket organized by the Hamilton and District Labour Council.
Joined by more than 100 others, some waving signs as passing vehicles honked,Quinlansaid Wednesday she wanted to draw attention to ways in which workers in her community were being penalized in the wake of the new minimum wage hike.
"This isn't going to affect my child in the same way that it's going to affect those adult workers that had this employment as a means to feed their children, feed their families, pay their bills," she said.
Hamilton protest one of several across Ontario
The local protest was one of at least 17 across Ontario Wednesday called in reaction to reports of workers facinga loss of perks.
TimHortonshas been under scrutiny this month since aCobourg, Ont., franchise eliminated paid breaksafter Ontario increased theminimum wage.
As of Jan. 1, minimum wage increased$2.40 per hour to $14 per hour.
Quinlan discovered the change to breaks when she heard about the similar clawbacks at Cobourg Tim Hortons and asked her teen, whose name and gender she's not disclosing publicly, about it.
Quinlan learned that managers had given her child a changed work contract to sign. She's not sure if other workers were given the same changes.
'I'm still concerned that people ...are being affected this way'
Even though her teen needed a parent's signature to apply to work at Tim Hortons, shedid not have a chance to review the change with her child.
"As a citizen of this community, I'm still concerned that people within our community that work at this Tim Hortons franchise are being affected this way. And as a parent I'm greatly concerned that minors that work at this location were not asked to take these contracts home, have them reviewed and then approved by their parents."
Marianela Quinlan attended a picket at a Dundas Tim Hortons where her 15-year-old works and recently lost paid breaks after minimum wage went up to $14.
"Im concerned that people within our community that work at this Tim Hortons franchise are being affected this way." #hamont pic.twitter.com/g0PGITpWpF
—@kellyrbennett
Another picket will be taking place next Tuesday at a TimHortonslocation at Upper Gage Avenue andFennellAvenue, where thecouncil has heardanonymous reports from workers that breaks are similarly going to be unpaid, said council president Anthony Marco.
"We're just letting people know: This is a franchise that is taking advantage of their workers, and you can choose at that point if you want to come in, or if you don't want to come in," he said.
Also at the protest was PattiEncinas, former chair of the Sherman Hub neighbourhood council.Encinasworked at TimHortonsfor several years in the mid-to-late1990s, and now works a unionized job in healthcare.
"Iknow what it's like to work there, and I know what it's like to live on minimum wage," she said. "I really feel strongly that we need to support those that don't have it as good as the rest of us."
Requests for comment not returned from franchise owner
CBC News' requests for comment to the franchise owner,KaylynPecaric, were not returned Wednesday.
TimHortonscorporate representatives were at theDundaslocation during the day and during the protest Wednesday, but they declined to comment and directed a reporter to contact the corporate office for clarification.
In an email toCBC, TimHortons' media relationsdid not answer any specific questions about theDundaslocation but reiterated that most franchises are independently owned and are responsible for handling all employment matters.
TimHortonshas previously blamed the recent uproar on a "rogue group" of franchise owners who "do not reflect the values of our brand."
'It's my job as a parent to help bring that understanding as much as I can'
The whole experience is providing some learning opportunities, Quinlan said.
"I'm trying to teach my child the ways of the world, so to speak," she said. That includes the importance of asking for paper copies of employee contracts, she said.
It's her teen's first job.
"Right now it's still new and exciting and wow, I have money," she said. "The impacts of what these changes mean is possibly beyond my child's ability at this point to fully understand. But it's my job as a parent to help bring that understanding as much as I can."
Hamilton labour activists have alsoset up a websitepromising workers a secure place to anonymously complain about actions taken by their managers and franchise owners in the wake of minimum wage legislation. The site is called "What my Boss Did."
With files from Aaron Saltzman