Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Low Wages, Small Workforce Leaves Booming B.C. Restaurants Without Chefs

The Canadian Press, 16 Oct, 2017 10:51 AM
    VANCOUVER — The restaurant industry may be booming in British Columbia, but a combination of the high cost of living, tight profit margins and a shrinking workforce has made it difficult for kitchens to find enough staff.
     
    Eric Pateman, president of Edible Canada, said the company's restaurant at Vancouver's popular tourist destination Granville Island has been short anywhere from two to five chefs at a time for more than two years. That's meant scaling back the restaurant's hours or turning down special events, which has been a financial blow, Pateman said.  
     
    While the cost of living in Vancouver is a contributing problem, Pateman said a range of issues including long hours, low wages, the gratuity system and rising business costs are factors as well.
     
    "The millennial generation ... even the older chefs I'm seeing and the older cooks I'm seeing, are just saying 'We don't want to do this anymore. That's not the career we want. That's not how hard we want to work.' It's certainly not an easy industry," he said. "I think there needs to be some levelling in the playing field ... to get that wage up to a living wage, which at the end of the day entices more people to be in the industry."
     
    Mark von Schellwitz, vice-president Western Canada with Restaurants Canada, said B.C. may be experiencing a "perfect storm" of challenges in finding chefs but communities across the country are having similar problems.
     
    The number of young people getting into the restaurant business is shrinking while the demand is growing, he said.
     
    A regional "mismatch" of skills and needs exist that leaves some rural communities without enough young people to hire and people aren't willing to move to fill the vacancies, he said.
     
     
    "People want to be employed near where they live and these jobs are not high executive paying jobs, it just doesn't make economic sense to move somebody," he said.
     
    The cost of running a restaurant has also increased significantly — notably with rising food costs — but menu prices have remained stagnant, leaving little room to raise workers' wages, he said.
     
    Jamil Mawani of Jambo Grill in Vancouver said the family run business has turned to non-traditional labour markets and temporary foreign workers to fill the gaps in the kitchen.
     
    While the restaurant business tends to attract younger staff, he said they've looked to older workers with experience cooking Indian and African inspired cuisine to work as chefs in their kitchen.
     
    They do hire plenty of younger staff too, Mawani added, to create a balance of energy and skill.
     
    In an industry with a high turnover, Mawani said they've managed to hang on to a few long-term employees by improving wages and offering flexible hours.
     
    A perk of having the family involved in the business is the owners can "thrown on an apron" when there have been prolonged vacancies, he said.
     
    Many are advocating for the federal government to step in and issue more visas for foreign workers to help fill the gaps.
     
    Darren Clay, executive culinary chef instructor at Pacific Institute of Culinary Arts, said international students typically seek visas to stay and work after completing their program, but in the past year those visas don't appear to be getting approved.
     
    "(It's) a little bit boggling for me because we have such a shortage of workers and these are all well-trained people who work and want to stay here to help out this industry and they are being sent home after their studies," Clay said.
     
     
    Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada said in a statement all international students can apply for the post-graduation work permit program and can even qualify for permanent residency through an express program. The programs do not address specific labour shortages and industry-based or occupational data is not collected, it said.
     
    The department said businesses can apply to hire workers through the temporary foreign workers program if they can demonstrate they've been unable to hire Canadians or permanent residents.
     
    But Pateman said the process of requesting a foreign worker for every vacant position is onerous and the government could make it easier for small businesses to meet their labour demands.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Perjury Conviction Upheld For Former Mountie Linked To Dziekanski Case

    Perjury Conviction Upheld For Former Mountie Linked To Dziekanski Case
    VANCOUVER — A former Mountie convicted of perjury in relation to the death of a Polish man at Vancouver's airport in 2007 has lost his appeal.

    Perjury Conviction Upheld For Former Mountie Linked To Dziekanski Case

    Girl Gets Back Special Teddy Bear Lost In Airport Shooting

    Girl Gets Back Special Teddy Bear Lost In Airport Shooting
    FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Yards from where workers finished the cleanup from the Fort Lauderdale airport shooting, a girl was reunited Tuesday with the teddy bear she left behind while fleeing.

    Girl Gets Back Special Teddy Bear Lost In Airport Shooting

    Watch: Video Of Indian Man Teaching English Grammar Is Breaking The Internet

    Watch: Video Of Indian Man Teaching English Grammar Is Breaking The Internet
    As he sings, he encourages the others to repeat after him, which they do each time without fail.

    Watch: Video Of Indian Man Teaching English Grammar Is Breaking The Internet

    Miniature Brain, Skull Found In 16-year-Old Girl's Ovary

    Miniature Brain, Skull Found In 16-year-Old Girl's Ovary
    A miniature brain, along with partially developed skull bone and matted, greasy hair were found in a teenager's ovaries, when she was undergoing a routine appendix surgery in Japan.

    Miniature Brain, Skull Found In 16-year-Old Girl's Ovary

    Osama Bin Laden's Son Hamza Taught To Hate US, Obsessed Over Coca-Cola

    Osama Bin Laden's Son Hamza Taught To Hate US, Obsessed Over Coca-Cola
    Osama bin Laden's favourite son may have been taught to hate the US, but that didn't stop him from obsessing over Coca-Cola, which he regularly smuggled into the family compound as a boy

    Osama Bin Laden's Son Hamza Taught To Hate US, Obsessed Over Coca-Cola

    British Man To Give Birth, Puts Gender Transition On Hold

    British Man To Give Birth, Puts Gender Transition On Hold
    A British man has put his gender transition on hold to have a baby after finding a sperm donor on social media and is expected to become the first UK male to give birth.

    British Man To Give Birth, Puts Gender Transition On Hold