Friday, July 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. restaurants struggle with supply after floods

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Nov, 2021 12:38 PM
  • B.C. restaurants struggle with supply after floods

Restaurant operators in British Columbia's southern Interior are scrambling after flooding and landslides closed highways and rail lines, cutting businesses off from the supply chains they rely on.

It's the latest hurdle after 20 months of struggles through the COVID-19 pandemic and a summer of smoky skies from wildfires that wiped out tourism.

"We don't actually have more to give in this scenario," said Brandon Loughery, managing partner of Woodsman Group, which operates two pubs around Kelowna and a seasonal restaurant at the SilverStar Mountain ski resort in Vernon.

"We're already operating on razor thin margins," he said in an interview.

They've been getting ready to open the restaurant for the winter season, but in the aftermath of the flooding, they can't order what they need in bulk, Loughery said.

The two pubs in Kelowna rely on deliveries every three days, and with none in sight, Loughery said he expects they won't have enough food supplies by Monday.

They've been shopping at grocery stores, trying to keep the doors open. But that's costly for a restaurant, and while the shelves were a bit fuller by Thursday, there was little meat, milk, eggs or other produce to be found earlier in the week, he said.

Every major route connecting B.C.'s Interior with the Lower Mainland was severed by floods, mudslides or washouts after the southern part of the province was hammered by record rainfall.

If such debilitating supply challenges were to last for a month or more, Loughery speculated that some restaurants in the Interior would have to close their doors.

"If you don't hit your base number to cover your fixed costs, it doesn't take long for things to go backwards."

Goods should start flowing again as some highways are reopened and alternative routes established, but it will be a stressful couple of weeks for the industry, said Ian Tostenson, president of the B.C. Restaurant and Food Services Association.

"It could take 10 to 20 days to sort out the logistics of new routes," Tostenson said, noting trucks usually travel to the Interior every day along the Coquihalla Highway, which is completely washed out and requires extensive repairs.

In the meantime, he said, restaurants in the Okanagan Valley area closing.

"There's not a lot of storage of products in the Interior, because mainly they just rely on overnight shipment from the Lower Mainland, so it’s a real challenge," he said.

Supply was still flowing from Alberta to northern B.C., Tostenson noted.

Minister of Public Safety Mike Farnworth told a news conference this week that "our transportation infrastructure is crippled," though he also said there are many parts of the province where routes are not compromised. The Retail Council of Canada and the trucking industry have been clear that "there's lots of supply," he said.

Mark von Schellwitz, western vice president for Restaurants Canada, said the disastrous flooding is yet another blow for an industry that's been contending with the impacts of the pandemic, wildfires and "rampant" inflation in food prices.

"I can't tell you the number of operators I've talked to that are exasperated, just saying what else can possibly be thrown at us, it seems like everything's conspiring against them trying to survive as a business," von Schellwitz said in an interview.

Loughery, too, said he's seen some food costs more than double in the last year and he's concerned the flooding in prime agricultural land will drive them up further.

"There's always a reason. It's because of the fires, it's because of the pandemic, now it will be because of the flooding. I haven't seen food prices this high, ever," Loughery said, adding he's had to switch products he's used for years "because they're just not in the realm of possibility of what a customer will pay for."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Military officer's new assignment sparks outrage

Military officer's new assignment sparks outrage
Yet survivors and experts of military sexual misconduct are expressing outrage over Maj.-Gen. Peter Dawe’s new role, saying it raises even more questions about the Armed Forces’ ability and commitment to addressing the problem.    

Military officer's new assignment sparks outrage

Report cites B.C.'s inadequate heat wave supports

Report cites B.C.'s inadequate heat wave supports
Human Rights Watch says in its report that while those two groups are at a greater risk of heat stress, many were left to cope with the dangers of record-high temperatures on their own.

Report cites B.C.'s inadequate heat wave supports

Public workers in B.C. must get vaccinated

Public workers in B.C. must get vaccinated
The BC Public Service Agency said Tuesday the requirement is part of an effort to increase vaccination rates throughout the province. It has set Nov. 22 as a deadline for workers in core government services or ministries to show proof of vaccination using the BC Vaccine card.

Public workers in B.C. must get vaccinated

Witnesses sought in sexual assault

Witnesses sought in sexual assault
The suspect is described as a 20-30 year old man with a darker complexion, black curly hair past his ears, medium build, approximately 5’10, and was wearing a grey hoody with baggy pants.

Witnesses sought in sexual assault

Canadian data: risk of death higher with Delta

Canadian data: risk of death higher with Delta
The study, conducted by researchers at the University of Toronto and published Tuesday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, analyzed more than 212,000 cases of COVID-19 reported in Ontario between Feb. 7 and June 27, 2021.

Canadian data: risk of death higher with Delta

Small businesses ask Liberals to extend benefits

Small businesses ask Liberals to extend benefits
The Canadian Federation of Independent Business says sentiment in its monthly barometer from September showed the largest one-month drops since the onset of the pandemic in March 2020.

Small businesses ask Liberals to extend benefits