A Black former Chick-fil-A employeeΒ in Idaho is suing on claims that he endured racist abuse from his co-workers, including being called an βapeβ and threatened to be put in a cage.
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In December 2022, Thomas Wade started working as a cook at a Chick-fil-A in Idaho Falls. Wade alleges that he faced repeated racial discrimination despite notifying his managers of the alleged abuse in roughly 25 to 30 reports. Per a copy of the complaint, obtained by The Independent, lawsuit, Wade says, one of his colleagues commented, βOf course he works at Chick-fil-A; heβs Black, so he loves chicken.β
In another disturbing incident, Wade alleges that he attempted to intervene when he saw two co-workers βantagonizing a third employee.β He alleges that one of the workers was the supervisorβs son.
βIn response to his attempts to intervene and diffuse the situation, [the son] told [Wade], βShut up ape, before I put you in a cage,ββ the complaint alleged. After reporting the alleged racist remark to his supervisor, Wade said the verbal abuse from the supervisors continued, with him calling Wade βmonkey-lookingβ and making it known that his βparents own this store.β
But thatβs not all. Wade claims he found a variation of the N-word written on the kitchen freezer and his supervisorβs daughters teasing how he βlooked like a monkey and acted like a monkey.β On another occasion, Wade claims he saw a supervisorβs son using a towel to whip a co-worker. The son allegedly told Wade that βhe would know about getting whipped since he is Black.β
After reporting the behavior several times, Wade was fired on October 16, 2023. Per the lawsuit, it was βbecause [he] refused to tolerate and continued to report racist behavior and comments by his coworkers.β Now, heβs suing. Wadeβs lawsuit, filed in March, seeks to hold the franchisee accountable for discrimination, hostile work environment, retaliation, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
The franchiseβs owner, Lauren Mosteller, Inc. of Woodstock, Georgia, denied βeach and everyβ allegation in court earlier this month, calling the claims βgroundless,β βisolated and sporadic,β and βinsufficient to establish a hostile work environment.β
A Chick-fil-A spokesperson responded to Wadeβs lawsuit, telling The Independent in a Tuesday statement, βThis matter involves a franchisee, not Chick-fil-A, Inc. Franchisees are independent operators responsible for all employment decisions in their restaurants. Chick-fil-A, Inc. is not involved in or aware of their employment matters.β
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