Fort McMurray news: Roll up the Tim Hortons metaphors to win - Action News
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Fort McMurray news: Roll up the Tim Hortons metaphors to win

Tim Hortons is a staple in stories about Fort McMurray's boomtown syndrome, but does the length of a drive-thru line really tell us anything about what's happening in Northern Alberta?

Does the drive-thru wait reveal anything about Canada's oilsands? Many journalists think so

Just another busy day at the Tim Hortons in downtown Fort McMurray. (Kyle Bakx/CBC)

It's 10:30 a.m. and the Tim Hortons queue, with only a passing nod to the "Please line up here" sign, actually begins deep inside the neighbouring Wendy's.

Does that sentence seem familiar? If you've read a story about Fort McMurrays oil boom in the last 15 years the answer is likely yes.

The local Tim Hortons, "just off Highway 63," is a time-honoured symbol of the citys economic boom thats almost shopworn enough to make the phrase "time-honoured" itself feel like blushing. Consider, for instance, a story from theFinancial Times from 2005,which notes:

"Some nights, the 24-hour Tim Hortons coffee shop in the northern Alberta town of FortMcMurrayhas little choice but to close at 10 p.m."

The Wall Street Journal, the business paper of record, followsa year later with:

"The 7 a.m. commute to the dozen or so oil sands projects that start 35 km north of town is marked by a traffic jam on the bridge over the Athabasca and at the parking lots of the two Tim Hortons."

Look back to July 2000 and the Edmonton Journal writes:

"The downtown Tim Hortons along busy Hwy 63 has had to close its drive-thruwindow on several occasions because it cant find staff to tend it."

Its sister paper, the Calgary Herald, addsthis tidbit a few years later:

"New employees at the downtown Tim Hortons, meanwhile, get an iPod Shuffle after three months."

(Full disclosure: This was written by one of authors of thisstory.)

The doughnut chain, as an emblem, is also versatile. The Globe and Mail trotsit out in 2005 to illustrate Fort McMurrays tight labour market:

"At Tim Hortons, just off Highway 63, a billboard blares out a starting wage of as much as $13 an hour for management trainees."

Late last year, the paper tapsit again to illustrate the slump:

"Even the lineups outside a Tim Hortons drive-thruare shorter."

As a metaphor, Tim Hortons isnt reserved for the ink-stained scribes of newspapers. In 2013, it was good enough for a literary magazine like The Walrus:

"Even getting a double-double at Tim Hortons takes a half-hour, despite a two-lane drive-thru."

And for a rock publication like Rolling Stone:

"Theres always a lineup at the Tim Hortons drive-thru, where it can take 30 minutes to get a Goddamn coffee."

In a vibrant city full of colourful locals, small businesses, and more industry than you can shake a very large stick at, how has Tim Hortons managed to become a flag-bearer, at least in the minds of journalists, for Fort McMurrays economic well-being?

Has the requisite Tim Hortons mention become a lazy clich or is it more legitimate, a type of reportorial shorthand that effectively gestures towarddeeper truths?

The answer is likely somewhere in the middle. Whats more certain is that the doughnut chain's3,500-plusstores saturate Canada coast to coast. Thisubiquity, says Chris Waddell, a journalism professor at Carleton University, allowsTim Hortonsto function as a type ofeconomic touchstone.

"If youre talking about labour, if youre talking about the availability of getting workers, if youre talking about how much you have to pay workers, if youre talking about the number of Tim Hortons you have in a community of a certain population, it may not be a bad metaphor to use," says Waddell. "People can relate to it in one way or another."

Mentioning the hourly pay at Tim Hortons, Waddell adds, hits home in a way that talking about wages for someone driving the worlds biggest trucks on an ice road in a mammoth strip mine in Northern Alberta just doesnt.

Nogold pavement

When covering the latest boomtownsuch as Fort McMurray orWilliston, North Dakota, a reporter on assignment will arrive to find, sadly, that the streets arent paved with gold. The boom (or bust) may be on, but the trick is showing the audience, as opposed to just telling them about it.

On the edge of downtown right beside, um, busy Highway 63,the location of the Tim Hortons makes it unavoidable. The store is also seemingly always busy. Mid-morning on a recent Friday, for instance, the wait for a double-double was seven minutes and 20 seconds, while the drive-thru, filled with late-model pickup trucks, went 19 vehicles deep.

Another typical day for the drive-thru at the Tim Hortons in downtown Fort McMurray. (Kyle Bakx/CBC)

Seeing such bustle will naturally inspire an intrepid reporter to seek out the store manager, in hopes of accessing the treasure trove of war stories that time behind the counter must surely have provided.

The journalist will soon find, unfortunately, that gaining an audience with the pope might be easier than talking to thelocal Tim Hortonsshift supervisor. True to form, the corporate office denied a request to interview the general manager for this story.

Other stories, fortunately, abound. Locals can be interviewed, there are squatters in the forestand workers rentgarage space for exorbitant sums. Oilsands mines can be toured and environmentalists queried.

Before it was knocked down, a visit to the Oil Can Tavern on Franklin Avenue always held the promise of some late-night colour.

Regardless of time spent, shoe leather burned, or stories ably told, the impression of a bustling Tim Hortons, which must burrowdeep into a reporters brain, still frequently finds its way into the final copy.

"Labour shortages and high costs are evident in Fort McMurray, a distant 18th-century trading post that has become a bustling town of 58,000 ... Today, housing is in short supply, and median prices for single-family homes are close to $240,000, among the country's highest. Fast-food outlets such as Tim Hortons have had trouble attracting and keeping workers." USA Today, September2004

But enough of the labour woes of local coffee shops. How is Fort McMurray doing today?

Well, the "Help Wanted" sign in the Tim Hortons window remains a fixture despite the drop in oil prices.

Does thissay everything that needs to be said about the local economy?

Really, only the Tim Hortons manager could tell us for sure.