CBCnews

Navy craves Tim Hortons supplier in Halifax

Last Updated: Monday, November 2, 2009 | 3:20 PM AT

It appears the navy loves a double-double.

The Canadian Forces has issued a tender looking for a company to supply its beloved Tim Hortons coffee to navy customers in the Halifax Regional Municipality.

"There shall be no acceptable substitute," according to the tender issued Monday. "Tim Hortons has been determined by MARLANT" — the navy's Maritime Forces Atlantic command — "as the product of choice based on expressed customer taste and preferences for boosting morale in Afghanistan, Sudan and Sierra Leone."

Sailors also want it on their ships, the tender documents state.

Jeri Grychowski, a spokeswoman for Canada's Atlantic fleet, said the tender is for a three-year period. The navy's current supply agreement expires at the end of the month.

Grychowski said the navy has spent $405,000 on Tim Hortons coffee over the last three years.

"This is not the first time we have done this. It is not sole-sourced," she said. "This is a tender: It is open to anyone who wholesales Tim Hortons coffee."

With 7,500 uniformed and civilian employees in Metro Halifax, Maritime Forces Atlantic is a market any company would want.

Don Shiner, a marketing professor at Mount Saint Vincent University in Halifax, said this kind of order is the reward when a brand completely dominates its competition.

"It shows you the power of the brand is firmly entrenched in the hearts and minds of the military," Shiner told CBC News. "It shows the power of branding over time."

Tim Hortons has several coffee shops on Canadian military bases. The company recently opened a restaurant inside Fort Knox, the U.S. army facility in Kentucky.

  •  
 

Nova Scotia Headlines

H1N1 clinics coming to Halifax-area schools
The first school-based H1N1 vaccination clinics will open in the Halifax area next week.
Fire hall damaged in suspicious blaze
A suspicious car fire in Kennetcook, N.S., has damaged the fire hall next door.
Yarmouth airline grounded after depleting $2M fund
The only airline flying regularly out of southwestern Nova Scotia is suspending operations.
Holiday crackdown on drunk driving
A driver caught with a blood alcohol level three times the legal limit is a cautionary tale for everyone who gets behind the wheel, a veteran police officer says.
Dartmouth Hooters fire deliberately set: police
An arson investigation is underway at the scorched Hooters in Dartmouth.

Canada Headlines

Tories set to introduce HST bill
The federal Conservatives are set to introduce legislation next week that would allow provinces to harmonize the provincial sales tax and federal GST on products and services.
Arrest made in Hamilton prisoner escape case Video
Police have arrested a 19-year-old man suspected of aiding the escape of Hamilton prisoner Fawad Nouri earlier this week.
4 Toronto Humane Society animals euthanized
Four animals inside the Toronto Humane Society's shelter in the east end of the city had to be euthanized after animal cruelty charges were laid against the president and the board of directors at the facility.
Wal-Mart wins at Supreme Court Video
The Supreme Court of Canada ruled Friday that Wal-Mart Canada Corp. was within its rights when it shut down a store in Jonquière, Que., that had been unionized seven months earlier.
Regina man who killed father gets 10-year sentence
A Regina man has been sentenced to 10 years in prison for killing his father, but he'll get credit for time already served.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines