Lawsuit says McDonald's discriminates against Black
franchisees
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[September 01, 2020] (Reuters)
- McDonald's Corp has been sued by 52 Black former franchise owners who
accuse the fast-food giant of racial discrimination by steering them to
depressed, crime-ridden neighborhoods and setting them up for failure.
In a complaint seeking up to $1 billion of damages, the plaintiffs said
McDonald's has not offered profitable restaurant locations and growth
opportunities to Black franchisees on the same terms as white
franchisees, belying its public commitment to diversity and Black
entrepreneurship.
In a statement on early on Tuesday, McDonald's denied the charges that
the franchisees were unable to succeed due to discrimination.
"We are confident that the facts will show how committed we are to the
diversity and equal opportunity of the McDonald's System, including
across our franchisees, suppliers and employees", the statement added.
The complaint said McDonald's saddled the plaintiffs under its standard
20-year franchise agreements with stores requiring high security and
insurance costs, and whose $2 million average annual sales from 2011 to
2016 were $700,000 below the nationwide norm. Bankruptcy often resulted,
they said.
"It's systematic placement in substandard locations, because they're
Black," the plaintiffs' lawyer Jim Ferraro said in a phone interview.
"Revenue at McDonald's is governed by one thing only: location."
The plaintiffs are suing in Chicago federal court five weeks after
McDonald's updated its corporate values, pledging a greater focus on
diversity.
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A sign is seen at a McDonald's restaurant in Queens, New York, U.S.,
March 17, 2020. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
Chief Executive Chris Kempczinski told CNBC in June that diversity was
"critically important" and needed to touch "every single aspect" of its
business.
He also defended McDonald's record, saying the Chicago-based company had
"created more millionaires within the Black community than probably any other
corporation on the planet, but there's still work to do."
Ferraro called that claim "total hogwash," saying the number of Black
franchisees has fallen to 186 from 377 since 1998.
More than 90% of McDonald's 14,400 U.S. restaurants were recently operated by
about 1,600 franchisees.
The company updated its values before suing ousted Chief Executive Steve
Easterbrook to recoup his estimated $41.8 million severance package for
allegedly concealing improper sexual relationships with three employees.
Easterbrook said the lawsuit is "meritless."
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York and Bhargav Acharya in Bengaluru;
Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Kevin Liffey)
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