Wendy's has a beef with franchisee
Matt Volz | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 10 months AGO
Wendy’s International has a beef with a franchisee that owns 11 fast-food restaurants in Montana, Oregon and Washington, including one closed restaurant in Whitefish.
The Dublin, Ohio-based corporation last month asked a federal judge for an injunction to keep BZB Enterprises from using its brand.
Wendy’s said in its Jan. 20 complaint that the Havre-based franchisee has ignored demands to comply with Wendy’s standards after food-safety concerns were raised at several of its restaurants.
Wendy’s previously terminated the franchise agreements for six of the restaurants, but BZB Enterprises and the owners named in the lawsuit “boldly continue to operate the restaurants with complete disregard for the critical food safety concerns raised in the audits,” the complaint reads.
For example, a 2008 audit of the Wendy’s restaurant in Havre found 265 food safety issues ranging from unclean preparation equipment to employees not washing their hands.
Another audit in 2010 found 111 deficiencies, most relating to cleanliness and food safety, which weren’t corrected in follow-up audits, prompting Wendy’s to terminate the franchise agreement in November.
The corporation said breaches of the franchise agreement also were found at Wendy’s restaurants in Whitefish; Pendleton, Ore.; Kennewick, Wash.; and two restaurants in Yakima, Wash.
BZB Enterprises attorney Jack Quatman of Whitefish said Friday that the restaurants’ owners are working with Wendy’s and hope to have the matter resolved before U.S. District Judge Sam Haddon of Great Falls has to rule on the injunction request.
“Wendy’s has a brand and it’s a brand they want to protect. They want all their shops to be shining stars so they can compete with other fast-food franchises, and that’s what we’re striving to do,” Quatman said.
BZB Enterprises has closed all six of the restaurants cited by the corporation in the complaint, plus one in Walla Walla, Wash.
Quatman said BZB Enterprises will determine which of those restaurants will remain closed for good and which will reopen and then work with Wendy’s to renovate them one by one.
There are a lot of items that need to be repaired, but all the issues raised by Wendy’s inspectors in their audits will be addressed, Quatman said.
The franchisee’s four other restaurants — in Richland, Wash.; Pasco, Wash.; Lagrande, Ore.; and another one in Kennewick — will remain open while renovations are being made, he said.
BZB Enterprises must respond to Wendy’s injunction request by March, but Quatman said he believes the issue will be resolved by then.
Wendy’s Montana attorney, Jeffry Foster, was in court Friday and did not return a message for comment.
ARTICLES BY MATT VOLZ
Author Krakauer denied records on rape case against player
HELENA — Author Jon Krakauer’s five-year quest to find out how and why Montana’s top higher education official intervened to prevent a star college quarterback’s expulsion over a rape accusation stalled Wednesday when the state Supreme Court denied him access to those records.
Montana State Auditor Matt Rosendale announces US House run
HELENA — Montana Republicans’ 2020 election lineup shuffled again Monday after U.S. Rep. Greg Gianforte decided to run for governor instead of re-election, with State Auditor Matt Rosendale jumping into the now-open House race seven months after failing to unseat U.S. Sen. Jon Tester.
Krakauer: Court ruling on privacy hurts right to know
HELENA — Author Jon Krakauer said he feels “a moral obligation” to fight a recent court ruling against him as he tries to obtain records detailing how the expulsion of a University of Montana quarterback over a rape allegation was overturned.