Ontario restaurant owners say minimum-wage hike forcing them to cut, alter menus
The Brussels sprouts pizza was a bestseller at Toronto east-end restaurant Lil' Baci. But pressed by Ontario's Jan. 1 minimum-wage hike, owner Mark Bacci recently took the item off the menu, saying its costly ingredients, such as mascarpone, ricotta, pancetta and truffle oil, made the margins on the dish too small for what he felt he could charge.
"It was such a good pizza, but it was just killing us," Mr. Bacci said.
As with many Ontario restaurant owners, Mr. Bacci has restructured his menu and switched ingredients to be able to pay his staff the new provincial minimum wage, which jumped to $14 from $11.60 at the beginning of the month. The minimum wage is slated to rise to $15 in January, 2019, which will make it one of the highest minimum wage rates in the country. Full story
Trump tax reform leads U.S. entrepreneurs in Canada to consider giving up American citizen
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Despite oil's collapse, First Nations businesses thrive
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Morneau flooded with more than 10,000 messages over controversial tax plan: memo
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Kirstine Stewart joins Toronto startup TribalScale as president
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Paired with university students, Montreal merchants learn French on the job
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Quebec government plans to cut taxes for small business in budget, Couillard says
The Quebec Liberals are planning to cut taxes for small- and medium-sized businesses in the next provincial budget, the premier said Thursday. Full story
Food industry gets inventive in order to attract workers
Jackalope's Neighbourhood Dive in East Vancouver is pulling out all the stops to keep its chefs and cooks in the kitchen. It has offered to help pay for its cooks to attend culinary school and also has implemented averaging agreements, which means staff can work four days of 10-hour shifts instead of five days of eight-hour shifts. Full story
Living wage stickers on Calgary business windows draw compliments, criticism
A Calgary small business owner is leading the charge to recognize businesses that support paying their employees a living wage. Jill Hawker, owner of The Apothecary and All Things Jill in Inglewood, first queried the idea on Twitter last week to see if any local business owners would be interested in posting a small decal on their shop windows that confirmed their status as living wage employers. Full story