You also gotta love The Cracker Barrel's long history of discrimination against blacks and homosexuals. Multiple lawsuits. They were seating people by race and allowing waitresses to refuse service to black customers, as well as not hiring black folk, and treating the ones they did hire like shit.

I'm kind of torn on this one. I mean, after taking a stroll around youtube, I'm not sure I'd want to wait on a table of black folk or not. I guess I'd have to test the waters and make my decisions at the first signs of hostility. If they start throwin they napkins and telling me I aint refillin' they goddamn dranks fast enough, I'd have to give it a big ole' NOPE. There's some irony there, as a waitress at Red Lobster in my vincinity was beat for refilling the dranks too much.

My girl used to wait tables at an IHOP in North County here (black region) and oh the horror stories she brought home. She called me crying multiple times, because a table of black folk would insult her and throw things at her.



In July 1999, a discrimination lawsuit was filed against Cracker Barrel by a group of former employees, who claimed that the company had discriminated against them on the grounds of race.[59][60] Two years later, in December 2001, the same attorneys represented 21 of the restaurant's customers in a separate lawsuit, alleging racial discrimination in its treatment of guests.[61][62][63] Regarding both accusations, Cracker Barrel officials disputed the claims and stated that the company was committed to fair treatment of its employees and customers.[60][62][64]

In 2004, an investigation by the US Justice Department found evidence that Cracker Barrel had been segregating customer seating by race; seating or serving white customers before seating or serving black customers; providing inferior service to black customers, and allowing white servers to refuse to wait on black customers.[65] The Justice Department determined that the firm had violated Title II of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The company was required to sign a five-year agreement to introduce "effective nondiscrimination policies and procedures". The terms included new equal opportunity training; the creation of a new system to log, investigate and resolve complaints of discrimination; and the publicizing of its non-discrimination policies. They were required to hire an outside auditor to ensure compliance with the terms of the settlement.[66]

In 2006, Cracker Barrel paid a $2 million settlement to end a suit alleging race and sexual harassment at three Illinois restaurants.[67][68] Following the suits, Cracker Barrel stores began displaying a sign in the front foyer explaining the company's non-discrimination policy,[65] and added the policy and details of how to make a complaint to its menu and website.[69]

Since the early 2000s, Cracker Barrel has provided training and resources to minority employees, to improve its image on diversity. These efforts involved beginning outreach to minority employees, along with testing a training plan to help employees whose first language is Spanish to learn English.[49] As of 2002[update], minorities made up 23 percent of the company's employees, including over 11 percent of its management and executives.[50] Cracker Barrel is on the Corporate Advisory Board for the Texas Conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP),[70] and is a corporate sponsor of the NAACP Leadership 500 Summit, where three of its officials were moderators and panelists in May 2011.[71] The company has been praised for its gender diversity, particularly on its board of directors, which includes three women out of eleven total board members.[72] Its chief executive officer, Sandra Cochran, is the second woman in Tennessee to hold that office in a publicly traded company, as of August 2011[update].[72]





Edited by fartz (01/06/13 07:00 AM)