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Nova Scotia’s restaurants need a sector-specific survival package to bring back 9,600 jobs

Foodservice businesses need an exemption from the scheduled scale-back of the wage and rent subsidies to bring back nearly half a million jobs still missing from the Canadian economy.

HALIFAX, May 13, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Restaurants Canada is calling for a sector-specific support package to recover more than 400,000 foodservice jobs — including 9,600 jobs still missing from Nova Scotia’s restaurant sector.

“Restaurants are key to feeding Nova Scotia’s recovery and bringing back jobs, but first they need to survive,” said Luc Erjavec, Restaurants Canada Vice President, Atlantic Canada. “If subsidies are scaled back too soon, they won’t have the working capital they need to transition from survival to revival.”

Restaurants account for most of Canada’s pandemic employment gap

According to the April Labour Force Survey from Statistics Canada, more than two thirds (70.9%) of the 503,000 jobs still missing from the Canadian economy in the wake of COVID-19 are from the foodservice sector.

Factoring in the 80,700 employees who didn’t work any hours last month, there are still 437,500 fewer people working in Canada’s foodservice sector than there were in February 2020. This includes 9,600 restaurant jobs still not recovered in Nova Scotia — a quarter of the province’s foodservice workforce.

With a number of provinces prolonging or increasing dining restrictions as they continue to contend with the third wave of the pandemic, further foodservice job losses will likely be reported in May.

Most restaurants face risk of closure if subsidies are scaled back too soon

“The vast majority of foodservice businesses have been operating at a loss or barely breaking even throughout the entire pandemic, with nearly half consistently losing money for more than a year,” said Erjavec. “They have been counting on the rent and wage subsidies to be the bridge they need to stay alive until dining restrictions are lifted and they can truly start to recover without the help of emergency support.”

According to the latest survey data from Restaurants Canada:

  • 7 out of 10 foodservice businesses in Atlantic Canada are still operating at a loss or barely scraping by, now more than a year into the pandemic.
  • All restaurant operators continuing to lose money expect they’ll need at least a year to return to profitability.

“If restaurants are forced to contend with less and less from the critical wage and rent subsidies before they’re able to operate without them, many will have to give up and close their businesses down for good,” said Erjavec.

Restaurants Canada is calling on the federal government to immediately introduce a sector-specific Restaurant Survival Support Package containing the following measures:

  • An exemption from the scheduled scale-back of the rent and wage subsidies for the highly affected foodservice sector, and an extension of these vital programs for restaurants until at least April 2022.
  • The option for any restaurants eligible for the wage subsidy to also apply for added funding through the Canada Recovery Hiring Program.
  • Partial forgiveness for all government-backed loans and an extension of application deadlines for existing programs.
  • Tax credits to defray costs of COVID-19 health and safety expenditures.

About Restaurants Canada

Restaurants Canada is a national, not-for-profit association advancing the potential of Canada’s diverse and dynamic foodservice industry through member programs, research, advocacy, resources and events. Before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Nova Scotia’s $2 billion restaurant industry was the province’s second-largest source of private sector jobs, typically employing 38,000 people.

CONTACT: Luc Erjavec
Restaurants Canada
902-209-0804
lerjavec@restaurantscanada.org

Marlee Wasser
Restaurants Canada
416-649-4254
media@restaurantscanada.org

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