Montreal’s great debate: how much control should government have on restaurants?
MONTREAL — David McMillan, co-owner of Montreal’s renowned Joe Beef restaurant, laments that virtually anyone, regardless of experience, can open an eatery in the gastronomical city.
“I can’t decide tomorrow to practise plumbing, to practise amateur electricity,” he muses in an interview with The Canadian Press. “In Montreal you can apply for a restaurant permit and get it immediately – that’s a problem for me.”
McMillan’s view is by no means the consensus in the industry but it reflects part of the debate in Quebec among chefs, restaurant owners, citizens and politicians.
With competition so fierce and profit margins so small – roughly 2.7 per cent on average – the role Quebec’s highly interventionist government should play in one of the province’s most dynamic industries remains a source of contention.


