Los Angeles Times

High-profile chef fired over photo sharing

- By Joseph Hernandez Joseph Hernandez is a Chicago Tribune staff writer.

Cosmo Goss, executive chef of five Publican restaurant­s in Chicago, has been fired by parent company One Off Hospitalit­y, months after an incident “that violated a staff member’s privacy and respect,” according to a statement from the Chicago restaurant group.

Another employee, Antonio Molina, general manager of Publican Anker in Wicker Park, also had his employment terminated by One Off in relation to the incident. Eater Chicago first reported the news.

The firings can be traced to an employee at a One Off restaurant sharing an inappropri­ate photo of a coworker without her permission among staff. That happened in late 2016, according to separate statements by both One Off and Goss. But the incident didn’t come to light until early this fall when the subject of the photo reported it to company human resources, and One Off started an investigat­ion immediatel­y, according to a One Off spokeswoma­n.

The employee who shared the photo was fired earlier this year for unrelated personal performanc­e issues. Neither the fired employee or subject of the photo were managers.

After a three-week outside investigat­ion, One Off removed Goss and Molina from their positions. Goss, who helmed the five Publican-branded kitchens in One Off’s stable of restaurant­s, was not allowed in any of the company’s Wicker Park properties (Big Star, Dove’s Luncheonet­te, Violet Hour, Publican Anker) during the investigat­ion.

Goss “thought it was a fleeting incident,” said the spokeswoma­n in an interview, “but the reason this is so concerning is he was executive chef. He didn’t report the incident, or fire the person (who took and shared the photo). He discussed it with other employees.”

A One Off employee for seven years — he was named executive chef last year — Goss is also a coauthor of the recently released cookbook, “Cheers to The Publican,” alongside One Off partner and chef Paul Kahan. Goss is no longer part of the book’s promotiona­l tour.

“The old mantra is that it’s ‘just kitchen culture,’ that ‘it’s just the way it is.’ It is actively counterpro­ductive to perpetuate that,” said the spokeswoma­n. “This is a societal issue, and as you see examples of people stepping up in other industries, it makes one optimistic that this pervasive culture can be changed.”

One Off already mandates harassment training for managers, but will be examining its employee training and handbooks.

In his statement, Goss admits to treating the incident of viewing the inappropri­ate photo as a “fleeting moment that was wholly unprofessi­onal and unacceptab­le.” He wrote that he is “deeply sorry to the woman portrayed in the photograph and the other individual­s whom these consequenc­es have affected.”

Goss was already planning his exit from One Off for a venture announced in February with Erling Wu-Bower, formerly chef of Nico Osteria, another One Off restaurant — their project is called Pacific Standard Time.

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