How a Montreal restaurant kept its staff through the pandemic and what it might mean for the industry's future - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 11:17 AM | Calgary | -4.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

How a Montreal restaurant kept its staff through the pandemic and what it might mean for the industry's future

Montreal restaurants are reopening their terrasses for outdoor eating but many are scrambling to find the staff to cook and serve an eager clientele. One establishment managed to hold onto its people and says its approach could work for the industry as a whole.

Advocates say that if restaurants hope to keep staff, they need to offer more stability

Candide Restaurant managed to hold onto staff like line-cook Gabriel Gervais (Rowan Kennedy/CBC )

Montreal restaurants are reopening their terrasses for outdoor dining,but many are scrambling to find the staff to cook and serve an eager clientele.

Some, however, like Restaurant Candide in Griffintown,are opening fully staffed and booked for theweekend.

Line-cook Gabriel Gervaisknew throughout the dark days of the lockdown that he would not lose or leave his job.

"I felt supported. I didn't have to ask myself whether I had to find another job," Gervais said.

Candide offers its staff a collective insurance plan that includesdentaland preventive health care, as well as paid vacation and paid sick days.

It employs 10 people and all staff members make a $15minimum hourly pay, not including tips.

"I love doing my job as a cook, but those benefits they definitely help," said Gervais.

During the pandemic, it kept all staff on part-time rotations so that everyone made 75 per cent of what they were making before thelockdown that hobbled most of Montreal's eateries.

WATCH |Restaurant owner says benefits, fair pay for staff has been priority from the start:

Restaurant owner says benefits, fair pay for staff has been priority from the start

3 years ago
Duration 1:58
John Winter Russell, co-owner and chef at Candide, says it's almost like his restaurant was 'built for a pandemic.'

When it comes to retaining staff, Candideisan outlier in food service, says Kaitlin Doucette, of the Canadian Restaurant Workers Coalition.

According to a report from the Chamber of Commerce of Metropolitan Montreal,22 per cent of kitchen staff left their jobs during the pandemic due to prolonged closures.

Beyond that, many people working in the food service industry were laid off at one point during the pandemic.

Doucette, who is a sommelier as well as an advocate for restaurant workers, says she wasn'tsurprised to see theexodus of restaurant staff.

"I'm hoping that seeing the precarity and fragility that workers have had to endure, we realign our priorities as an industry."

During the partial lockdown, Candide stayed open for take-out. 'We were almost built to get through a pandemic,' says owner John Winter Russell. (Rowan Kennedy/CBC)

John Winter Russell, co-owner and chef atCandide, says his establishmenthas built a different business model compared to other restaurants.

With fixed menus, the restaurant has curbed food cost.

"We have sixdishes on the menu," Russell said. "We have almost no wasteand because of this, we can pass those savings onto employees' wages."

He said it was important for him from the outset to run a restaurant that treats its staff well.

"We had a reflection at Candide before the pandemic hitabout making the restaurant environment and the benefits that go with it better than the industry average," said Russell.

"I feel like we've done what was at least necessaryto make sure that everyone was happy workinghere, and everyone wanted to come back to work, and everyone basically was able to hold on totheir benefits, part of their salary through thewhole pandemic."

In another restaurant, Gabriel Gervais says 'I would work six days a week, 12 hours a day, and be paid 40 hours.' At Candide, he works four days a week. (Rowan Kennedy/CBC )

Martin Vzina, spokesperson for the Quebec Restaurant Association, says raising wages often comes at the cost of profitability.

"It's the customer that will have the last say.Are they ready to pay that kind of price?Ifthey are,itcan be maintained that kind of wages and benefits," he said.

"If the customer says it's too costly and we don't want to go to restaurants anymore cause it's too costly, then therewill be an impact."

As for Gervais, the line-cook says he couldn't be more excited to be back at work. "I thrive in restaurants, I love people around me. It's really motivating to come and work for someone like John."

With files from Kwabena Oduro