Sunday, June 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

Restaurants and bars hope for holiday boom

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Oct, 2022 10:08 AM
  • Restaurants and bars hope for holiday boom

TORONTO — Restaurants and bars across Canada are hoping this holiday season could finally spell recovery for the debt-laden sector.

But, elevated inflation and a potential recession have them worried that their new normal won’t pay the bills.

James Rilett, vice-president of Central Canada for Restaurants Canada, said normally the fall is a transition time between the busy summer season and the holidays, which are packed with parties and an opportunity to make some extra revenue before the slow, cold new year season.

Some restaurants and bars are starting to book holiday parties, both corporate and personal, but it remains to be seen whether bookings will return to pre-pandemic levels, he said. There are also fears that the winter could bring a wave of cancellations, after last year’s holiday season saw COVID-19 cases skyrocket, and many establishments chose to close their doors for New Year’s Eve.

Aburi Restaurants Canada, which owns several establishments in Vancouver and Toronto, has started seeing inquiries for holiday bookings roll in, said Michelle Seguin, Aburi’s regional director of eastern operations.

While it’s too soon to tell whether bookings will be back to normal, there are certainly more inquiries than last year, she said.

“It would be great if we could see those pre-pandemic holiday parties,” she said.

Rilett said there’s a lot of hope being pinned on the holiday season again this year, but with a dash of caution after the past two winters.

Meanwhile, hopes for a “back to normal” summer were softly dashed, as traffic was still down and inflation made the cost of running a restaurant much higher, said Rilett.

Seguin said inflation has doubled or even tripled the costs of some products.

As inflation affects restaurateurs, she knows it’s also affecting customers, and knows they may be more cautious with their spending this holiday.

According to Restaurants Canada, in August Canadian consumers started to tighten their purse strings amid high inflation, as fewer Canadians purchased meals from restaurants despite the fact that August is normally a busy month for industry.

As a result, some restaurateurs are extending patio season for as long as they can when the weather allows, he said.

Restaurants are still dealing with elevated levels of debt from the pandemic, plus higher input costs and difficulties hiring, said Rilett.

A busy holiday season would “pay a lot of bills,” he said.

Fewer new food service businesses are opening even as more close, said Rilett, meaning the number of restaurants overall has gone down in the past year.

He’s hoping this holiday season will provide something of a “measuring stick,” showing the industry what to expect from the new normal. But a looming recession could mean the new normal isn’t what many expected.

“Any time people are feeling the pinch, or even think they're going to feel the pinch, they start to cut back. And that hits us pretty quickly.”

The holiday season is on everyone’s mind, said Seguin, but so are the months after — normally slower months for the sector, now talk of a recession means it could be an even harder winter.

“We’ll just take it one month at a time.”

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Task of crafting new cabinet hits final stretch

Task of crafting new cabinet hits final stretch
Conservatives are urging him to dump Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan from cabinet over what they describe as his mishandling of sexual misconduct allegations among the military's senior ranks.

Task of crafting new cabinet hits final stretch

New cabinet should focus on reconciliation: NDP

New cabinet should focus on reconciliation: NDP
At a news conference Monday, Charlie Angus was joined by a St. Anne's residential school survivor and two deputy grand chiefs the day before Trudeau is set to reveal his new cabinet picks.

New cabinet should focus on reconciliation: NDP

GG, Legion mark 100th anniversary of poppy symbol

GG, Legion mark 100th anniversary of poppy symbol
Donations collected during the fundraising campaign are used to support various Legion programs for veterans, including emergency food and shelter as well as bursaries, disaster relief and remembrance activities.

GG, Legion mark 100th anniversary of poppy symbol

Winds delay salvage crew's access to ship off B.C.

Winds delay salvage crew's access to ship off B.C.
The coast guard says in a statement posted on social media that a salvage crew from Resolve Marine is on the scene, but the wind storm that lashed Vancouver Island and the south coast has prevented anyone from boarding the ship.

Winds delay salvage crew's access to ship off B.C.

British Columbia releases climate change plan

British Columbia releases climate change plan
The strategy includes increasing the price of carbon pollution by meeting or exceeding the 2019 federal benchmark of $170 per tonne starting in 2023 through taxes consumers would pay on fuel and goods as well as by industry that emits carbon dioxide.

British Columbia releases climate change plan

Duncan, B.C., man charged with double homicide

Duncan, B.C., man charged with double homicide
The RCMP say second-degree murder charges have been laid against a man for the deaths of two people in the Vancouver Island community of Crofton. They say 33-year-old Justin Dodd was arrested early Saturday morning without incident.

Duncan, B.C., man charged with double homicide