Alberta restaurants face 'double whammy' as costs rise, sales drop: industry advocate
Last thing industry needs is a carbon tax levy or minimum wage hike, says Mark von Schellwitz
Restaurants across Alberta are barely getting by in the downturn, and the majority of them expect the situation to worsen in the months to come, says one industry advocate.
"Over the last year, our members have been facing a double whammy of double-digit cost increases combined with double-digit declines in same store sales. It really has been a struggle," said Mark von Schellwitz, vice president of Western Canada for Restaurants Canada.
Schellwitz said the poor exchange rate, new liquor taxes, and a "very aggressive" minimum wage increase have on average resulted in ten to 16 per cent increase in costs across the board for Alberta restaurateurs.
"There's many restaurants who are really surviving on a knife's edge right now," Schellwitz said.
He said restaurants are resorting to cutbacks, curtailing hours and reducing staff in order to lower costs.
"They're stuck behind a rock and a hard place when it comes to increasing prices, because when sales are already down, they jeopardize even more sales and customers leaving if they raise their prices."
Carbon levy brings more bad news
Schellwitz said the recent closure of Janice Beaton's Farm restaurant is likely part of a broader trend.
A recent outlook survey conducted by Restaurants Canada showed that 75 per cent of the association's Alberta members expect sales to drop even further over the next six months, he said.
"Our industry is a very low-margin, competitive, labor-intensive industry at the best of times," Schellwitz said.
He said the last thing the industry needs are additional costs imposed by government.
"Now is not the time to add costs with another aggressive minimum wage increase, for example, or with the carbon levy," he said.
"We want to protect the 150,000 Albertans we employ, and we need all the help we can get to do that."
With files from CBC Calgary News