The Columbus Dispatch

Suit: Black Mcdonald’s owners got short shrift

- Dee-ann Durbin

More than 50 Black former McDonald’s franchise owners are suing the burger chain, saying the company steered them to less-profitable restaurant­s and didn’t give them the same support and opportunit­ies given white franchisee­s.

The 52 plaintiffs, who owned around 200 U.S. stores before being forced to sell them over the last decade, are seeking compensati­on of $4 million to $5 million per store, according to the lawsuit. The suit was filed Tuesday in federal court in Chicago, where Mcdonald’s is based.

According to the lawsuit, Mcdonald’s steered Black franchisee­s to stores in inner-city neighborho­ods with lower sales volumes and higher security and insurance costs. The company would provide them with misleading financial informatio­n or push them to decide quickly when a store became available, the lawsuit says.

Once Black franchisee­s owned a store, they would be asked to rebuild or remodel within a shorter period of time than white franchisee­s without the rent relief and other financial support given to white franchisee­s, the lawsuit says. Black franchise owners were also denied the chance to buy more profitable stores in better neighborho­ods, it says.

As a result, the plaintiffs averaged sales of $2 million per year. By comparison, Mcdonald’s average U.S. store brought in $2.7 million annually between 2011 and 2016 and $2.9 million in 2019, the lawsuit says.

“Revenue is determined by one thing and one thing only: location,” said James Ferraro, the Miami-based attorney representi­ng the plaintiffs. “It’s a Big Mac. They’re the same everywhere.”

Ferraro also noted that the number of Black Mcdonald’s franchisee­s has fallen by half over the last two decades. The chain had 377 Black franchisee­s in 1998; it has 186 now. At the same time, the number of franchised restaurant­s has more than doubled to 36,000.

Mcdonald’s Corp. denied the allegation and defended its history with Black franchisee­s.

“Not only do we categorica­lly deny the allegation­s that these franchisee­s were unable to succeed because of any form of discrimina­tion by Mcdonald’s,“the company said, “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.”

Mcdonald’s has a troubled history with Black franchisee­s. In 1969, activists boycotted four Mcdonald’s in Cleveland until the company sold them to Black owners. In 1983, a Black franchise owner from Los Angeles sued the company for discrimina­tion; Mcdonald’s

eventually paid him $4.5 million.

In 1996, Mcdonald’s leadership acknowledg­ed that Black franchisee­s weren’t achieving parity with their white counterpar­ts and resolved to make changes.

But charges of discrimina­tion continued. In January, two Black Mcdonald’s executives sued the company. They claimed Mcdonald’s shifted advertisin­g away from Black customers, graded Black-owned stores more harshly than white ones and implemente­d business plans that had a discrimina­tory impact on Black franchisee­s.

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