Posted on 03/25/2005 7:19:58 PM PST by crushelits
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Sales have dropped sharply at Wendy's fast food restaurants in the area of northern California where a woman claimed she found part of a finger in a bowl of chili, but analysts say the company's long-term prognosis should not be affected. Peter Oakes, a restaurant analyst with Piper Jaffray & Co. in New York, said he doesn't expect Wendy's business to suffer long term from the discovery Tuesday night of a partial finger.
The hamburger chain serves about 6 million meals a day across the country and has a "national reputation for both quality and cleanliness," he said.
"To me the yard stick here is whether the single incident prompts the consumer to lose confidence in the brand. It's understandable to see some kind of knee-jerk reaction," Oakes said.
Franchise owners have informed the company's corporate headquarters in the Columbus suburb of Dublin that business is down, said Denny Lynch, spokesman for Wendy's International Inc. He said he could not release specific sales figures because Wendy's does not own those restaurants.
"It is an isolated incident. However, it is dramatically affecting sales in that market," Lynch said.
Authorities in San Jose, Calif., planned to search a fingerprint database on Friday to try to identify the finger's owner.
Capt. Bob Dixon of the Santa Clara County coroner's office said he did not know when their fingerprint expert might have a match. "Nobody's claimed it yet," he said.
U.S. financial markets were closed Friday for the holiday weekend. The day before, on Thursday, Wendy's shares rose 43 cents, or 1.1 percent, to close at $39.43 on the New York Stock Exchange (news - web sites) near the high end of their 52-week trading range of $31.74 to $42.12.
Wendy's said the finger did not come from the restaurant's employees. It is also confident company suppliers are not to blame because of product coding that allows the company to trace where a product comes from, the day it was produced, when it was shipped and when it arrived at the restaurant, Lynch said.
However, he acknowledged the process was "not absolutely 100 percent perfect."
Matt Baun, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Agriculture (news - web sites)'s Food Safety and Inspection Service, said it was doubtful a person working at a federal beef producer would have lost the finger in an accident.
"The production line would have stopped, there would have been immediate need for medical attention and the meat products would be destroyed and not used for food," he said.
A Louisville, Ky., lawyer who has handled similar cases said he doesn't expect Wendy's image to take much of a hit.
Bo Bolus, who has represented plaintiffs over foreign objects found in McDonald's food and defended insurance companies against those claims, said consumers tend to realize that incidents like the one at Wendy's are accidents.
"I haven't found any big institutional problems in the fast-food chains," Bolus said. "I still go to McDonald's with my four boys." |
Wait just a minute!!!!! If "restaurant employees" are not to blame and "company suppliers" are not to blame, Who the hell cooked this stuff and WHERE did it come from??????
Then they'd never go missing in the first place, and we wouldn't need their DNA!
Duh! Some people bank DNA samples from their children. Uh...I know it's hard to believe, but sometimes children wind up missing even when they're closely watched. Uh...it makes sense to some people, not to all.
Well DUH! Maybe we should lock up our kids so the predators can roam free.
Oh wait! Uhhh, *nevermind*
Thank goodness there was no booger on it. That would have been really gross.
When I was a kid I used to work at Wendy's. When I had burgers that were sitting on the grill too long and starting to dry out, we'd put them into a big container to be later dumped into the chili.
We called it "chili'd out."
You don't know where that finger's been.
My favorite Wendy's moment...
In a Wendy's just outside Little Rock, AR on the way to Dallas. The guy making my buddy's chicken sandwich looks for a knife for the mayo. He looks around for a moment, shrugs, then sticks his thumb in the mayo and spreads it on the sandwich. Then he sticks his thumb in his mouth and licks off the remaining mayo.
Once the sandwich has been eaten and we are back on the road, I mention the incident to my friend.
Good one! LOL. But remember, this was just an "isolated instance". :)
I'm sorry I was so crabby. I just feel like being crabby today. I don't know why. Sometimes you just feel like a crab.
No problem. (Since you're crabby today, would you mind staying clear of my fingers? I don't want to be the guest of honor on the next thread)...
To anyone in business with an ounce of common sense it is just bad business not to do everthing possible to cut waste in order to provide the highest quality products at the lowest possible cost.
...one of the advantages of online friendships.
No, they were . . . . .
What about sales of Eskimo Pies? ;)
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