Late-night poutine cravings in Quebec City just got more expensive - Action News
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Late-night poutine cravings in Quebec City just got more expensive

The Quebec City fast-food chain Ashton is adding a 12% surcharge to any order that comes in between midnight and 5 a.m., in order to pay premiums to employees working the night shift.

Local fast-food chain adding 12% surcharge to retain night workers

Hungry night owls will have to pay 12 per cent more to get their poutine fix, if they show up at an Ashton restaurant between midnight and 5 a.m. (Julia Page/CBC )

It's hard to explain why eating fries, cheese curds and gravy seems like a good idea at 1 a.m.

It just sounds right.

But night owls looking to fuel that late-night, post-show craving will have to fork over a few extra pennies in Quebec City as of this week-end.

The well-known fast-food chain Ashton has added a 12 per cent surcharge for every poutine, burger orroast beef sandwich sold between midnight and 5 a.m.

The company, whichhas 24 franchises in the capital, is hiking prices to be able to offer a $4 perhour premium to its night crew workersthat are harder and harder to come by, said Mylne Beaulieu, who is responsible for marketing and communicationsat Ashton.

"Almost all our restaurants have had to cut down their hours," said Beaulieu.

Until recently,Ashton restaurants were known to be open well after bars made their last call, said Beaulieu.

Now only two still offer the service one, on Grande Alle, is open until 4 a.m.;the other, on Saint-Joseph Street, is open 24 hours a day.

[Update: On Nov. 26, Ashton announced that it would close itsGrande Allerestaurant on Nov. 30, leaving just one late-night Ashton option in Quebec City.]

But theywere reaching a breaking point, said Beaulieu. That's why thecompany is now offering a $16.50 hourly wageto employees willing to work the graveyard shift.

Ashton Leblond opened his first snack bar in a small roadside trailer in L'Ancienne-Lorette; the brand has since expanded to 24 locations across the city. (Julia Page/CBC)

The company was already offering a $2 per hour night premium, but it couldn't afford to go higher, said Beaulieu. That left only one other option.

"Several customers approached us and told us, 'We're willing to pay more to allow you to open at night,'" said Beaulieu.

Sign of the times

With more than 116,000 jobs unfilledin Quebec's private sector, business owners are having to be more creativeand more aggressive in their recruitment and retention methods, according to the Canadian Federation ofIndependent Business.

SimonGaudreault, the federation's senior director of national research, said Ashton may be the first to adopt this kind of sliding price scale, but he saidconsumers should expect others to follow suit, in one form or another.

"Businesses have absolutely no choice but to react right now so they can they can stay in business," he said.

The downtown Ashton restaurant on Saint-Joseph Street East is the only remaining franchise that is open 24 hours a day. (Julia Page/CBC)

Companies have been offering more flexible hours, more generous salaries and have had totap into the "non-traditional labour pool,"said Gaudreault.

Consumers should also expect higher prices, he said, because some items will necessarily go up.

This isn't the first time prices at Ashtonhave beenaffected by thelabour shortage.

Last year, the company shortened its annual promotion calledRabais Mto a discount on poutine during the coldest days of January.

For example, buying a poutine on a day when it is 30 degrees Celcius came witha 30 per cent discount.

"It's a beautiful problem," said Beaulieu. "The promotion worksso well that our reduced teams aren't able to keep up."

In 2019, Ashton had to limit the discount to the first two weeks of January, when CEGEP students aren't yet back in school and are still available to work. The restaurant will be doing the same thing again in 2020.