Metro reports skyrocketing profits while workers continue to strike in GTA
Grocery store chain reports rising profits while its workers have been demanding better wages
Canadian supermarket chain, Metro Inc., posted a massive profit of 26.1% with net earnings of $346.7 million, while workers at 27 of its stores in the Greater Toronto Area continue to be on strike since last month.
Metro said the skyrocketing profits in its third quarter are due in part to a tax benefit after the Canada Revenue Agency granted capital losses to the company that had previously been disallowed. The Montreal-based company’s adjusted net earnings rose 11 per cent to $314.8 million, while adjusted fully diluted net earnings leaped 14 per cent to $1.35 per share.
Metro’s results come at a time when around 3,700 frontline store employees at 27 Metro stores walked off the job on July 29, after members of Unifor Local 414 members rejected a tentative agreement between the grocery store giant and the union workers.
In a tweet responding to Metro’s results, Unifor president Lana Payne said that “Metro workers are fighting for decent work and pay,” and that there are “no excuses.”
Metro workers are fighting for decent work and pay.
It is the minimum every worker should expect.
And there are no excuses.
Take a look at those profits. #canlab #onpoli https://t.co/YSjDYDicNG
— Lana Payne (@Lanampayne) August 9, 2023
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