PEI

Charlottetown council votes to extend patio hours for Victoria Row restaurants

Charlottetown city council has voted in favour of a pilot project to extend hours for Victoria Row patios, allowing them to stay open until 1 a.m. instead of having to shut down at midnight.

Pilot project, which passed by a 6-0 vote, will be reviewed again before 2026

A bar sign says "Always a Good Time at the Cork" with a number of patio tables behind it.
As construction takes place on the Confederation Centre across the street, Victoria Row patios have been granted extended hours. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

Charlottetown city council has voted in favour of a pilot project to extend hours for Victoria Row patios, allowing them to stay open until 1 a.m. instead of having to shut down at midnight.

The resolution passed by a 6-0 vote at a special council meeting on Tuesday, with the project slated for reassessment at the end of this summer or in early 2026.

That move reflects the fact that the entire city's patio bylaw is due to be re-evaluated within the year, with public consultation involved.

"Give those folks on Victoria Row an opportunity to recoup some of their losses that they may feel they've suffered with all the renovations happening," deputy mayor Alanna Jankov asked her colleagues at Tuesday's meeting.

"If we're going to pilot it any time, this would be a great year to do it."

The Confederation Centre of the Arts is undergoing a major renovation across from the restaurants on Victoria Row. 

Victoria Row patios have Charlottetown council's permission to stay open until 1 a.m. this summer

20 hours ago
Duration 1:56
Charlottetown City Council has passed a resolution that will allow restaurant patios on historic Victoria Row to stay open an hour later. The city hopes that will help businesses get over any impact of the ongoing Confederation Centre renovations across the street. CBC's Nicola MacLeod reports.

Doug McKinney and Rachel Sauvé, the co-owners of the Cork and Cast restaurant, said the later patio hours will be good for their restaurant.

"I think it's great. It will give us a little boost for our little street, especially in the summertime when the weather gets nice," McKinney said.

"Giving us that extra time to offer tourists and different people visiting our city food offerings and drink offerings... I think is a positive thing." 

He said the tourism season on P.E.I. is short, so later hours during the warmest months are welcome: "The summer goes by very fast… eight weeks, pretty well."

A man in a black baseball hat, sunglasses and a white shirt sits next to the other co-owner of the Cork and Cast restaurant. Other chairs and tables can be seen behind the pair.
Doug McKinney and Rachel Sauvé of the Cork and Cast restaurant are looking forward to being able to serve people on the patio for an extra hour in the warm summer months. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

Sauvé said businesses on Victoria Row will benefit even more when Charlottetown Festival performances really gear up for the summer at the Confederation Centre of the Arts.

"The shows get out later... and the street's back and thriving and we'll just love to be open for longer hours."

Jeff Sinnott is the co-owner of Red Island Hospitality Group, which owns the John Brown Richmond Street Grille on Victoria Row. He said the later closing time will really help.

"Every minute counts. An extra hour... it's quite a help," he said. "P.E.I.'s summer is short. We have nine, 10 months to be inside, so people really want to be outside."

Sinnott said staff members are happy with the change too.

"They lost some hours during the spring; we didn't hire as many staff during the spring, so they're going to get some money back too... It's like everybody on the street's going to benefit from an extra hour open."

A man in a blue collared shirt stands in front of a storefront, people sitting at tables outside can be seen to the left.
Jeff Sinnott of Red Island Hospitality Group says he doesn't expect any issues when it comes to keeping the pilot project in place after this summer. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

Sinnott said he doesn't think anything negative could result the hours were extended for 2026 and beyond.

"I expect that next year, when they look at it again, they'll say, 'Yeah, there was no issues there,'" he said.

"It's good for everybody. It's more for the economy, more for jobs."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ryan McKellop is a graduate of the Holland College Journalism program and a web writer at CBC P.E.I.

With files from Cody MacKay