Business California city may declare Chick-fil-A a "public nuisance" - I'm sure it's because of the long lines and nothing else

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Chick-fil-A is causing some squawking in southern California, one of multiple locations across the U.S. where the fast-food chain is finding itself to be a victim of its own success.

In Santa Barbara, the city is close to dubbing its sole Chick-fil-A a "public nuisance" due to long drive-thru lines that often has cars filled with hungry customers backed into the street for hours at a time.

The eatery known for its waffle fries and chicken sandwiches has had a restaurant in Santa Barbara since 2013, drawing a steady flow of patrons whose vehicles block nearby driveways and sidewalks and make city buses and emergency vehicles find other routes, according to city officials.

Chick-fil-A's drive-thru lane heightens the odds of traffic collisions and pedestrians getting injured. At peak-volume, the drive-through blocks one lane of traffic for as much as 90 minutes on weekdays and for as much as 155 minutes on Saturdays, according to a city traffic report.

"The city's traffic engineer, police chief and community development director have evaluated the situation and believe that the persistent traffic back-up onto State Street is a public nuisance and that the nuisance is caused by the operation of a drive-through at the Chick-fil-A restaurant," the document stated.

Kristen Sneddon, a member of Santa Barbara's city council, believes the restaurant may have outgrown the location and that the problem can't be fixed, according to the Santa Barbara News-Press. "Chick-fil-A has a good problem here. They are so successful, they have outgrown their site. It's possible they were oversized for that site, to begin with," Sneddon told a council meeting earlier this month, the newspaper reported.

That success is reflected in long drive-thru lines at Chick-fil-A's elsewhere around the country. Quick-service restaurant trade pub QSR listed Chick-fil-A as having the busiest drive-thru windows of any national chain in a 2019 study.

At the city council session, Sneddon and other members unanimously approved moving toward a potential public nuisance designation. Chick-fil-A representatives asked the council to delay the nuisance designation and give it additional time to work on the fixing the problem. The council agreed to continued a public hearing until June 7.

Travis Collins, the franchised operator of the restaurant, said in a statement emailed to CBS MoneyWatch by Chick-fil-A that he wants to "be a good neighbor," and was continuing efforts to ease the traffic issues. That's including hiring additional staff and third-party traffic control, he said.

Local feathers ruffled​

For some people living nearby, the traffic issue has been brewing for years, and it's only of late that the problem is getting serious attention by the city and the company.

"In the past, it felt like the complaints were taken half-seriously," resident Rick Closson told the Los Angeles Times. "Over the years, you've had Chick-fil-A putting together their fixes that really did not do much to fix the traffic problem. But then you have the city coming forward with a possible nuisance title, and the corporation is now saying, 'Oh my goodness, please just give us more time to solve this.'"

Drive-thru businesses are unusual in Santa Barbara as the city has prohibited their construction for more than four decades. But Chick-fil-A is grandfathered into its location, as it was previously a Burger King drive-thru with nothing like the current traffic.

Chick-fil-A's long drive-thru lines have ruffled feathers elsewhere. Business owners in Toledo, Ohio; Beaumont, Texas; and Union, New Jersey, all have sued Chick-fil-A in 2020 after alleging that long drive-thru lines were turning away customers, according to Insider. The publication also reported finding dozens of such complaints, police interventions and significant traffic woes related to Chick-fil-A's drive-thru lines in more than 20 states in recent years.

In Norwalk, Connecticut, Chick-fil-A is proposing that it get rid of an existing drive-thru and rebuild it on the other side of the building to ease traffic backups occurring since it opened two years ago, a local newspaper, The Hour, recently reported.

One of the issues behind the congestion is that "this is the only Chick-fil-A around," Elizabeth Sucky, an attorney for Chick-fil-A told a city zoning commission last year. "The closest around are in Danbury and Brookfield. Folks really like this product and the customer service that goes along with it, it's very popular."

Also in Connecticut, Brookfield city officials last year opted to build an extra lane for cars crossing into a Chick-fil-A entrance, with the federal government picking up 80% of the tab, CT Insider reported this month. And another town in the state, Fairfield, in November denied the chain's proposal to take over a former restaurant, with officials saying they made the decision after considering Norwalk's experience with the chain.

Traffic also regularly causes congestion near a Chick-fil-A close to one of the busiest intersections in Brooklyn, New York, slowing vehicles to a crawl and causing backups. Efforts to mitigate the problem, including placing metal barriers in the street to deter people from double-parking, have been only partially successful, according to one local resident.

In Redding, California, a newly opened Chick-fil-A drew a long line of cars in March of last year, according to a local CBS affiliate, and had police issuing a traffic alert to heed off congestion outside the eatery.


 
If we forced people to go buy their own food again, rather than constantly UberFatting and DoorFashing, I bet their lines would drop about 25%, same as most fast food places.

I hate how it’s impossible for actual customers to get their food now because people would rather get paid to sit in a drive-thru than work at the drive thru.
 
Chick-Fil-A is like what KFC was in the 2000s, but Chick-Fil-A was around in the 2000s as well. I've always chalked up the crowded-ness switching from one fast food chicken place to the other as KFC dropping in quality. And that's saying something cause Chic fil A is like mainly just chicken sandwiches and tendies, incredibly basic compared to KFC's boston-market-esque approach, unless that's changed and they're basic bitch shit now. All I know is they had the shitty "beyond chicken" recently.
If we forced people to go buy their own food again, rather than constantly UberFatting and DoorFashing, I bet their lines would drop about 25%, same as most fast food places.

I hate how it’s impossible for actual customers to get their food now because people would rather get paid to sit in a drive-thru than work at the drive thru.
Before those spiked in popularity after the pandemic bullshit chic fil A was still crowded to the point some expanded their drive thrus to have 2 lanes. It's weird, really. They are somewhat a bit of a quality compared to shit like mcdonalds.
The lines as well as the brawls where we have a guilty pleasure to watch them. :story:
God I can't fucking believe I've never seen this shit happen in there lmao.
 
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Californian politicians are just assmad the Christian Chicken joint both pulls similar amounts of customers and processes them faster than your garden variety In-n-Out.
I have literally never been to the latter and not faced a preposterous wait and massive drive thru queue. The one next to the airport in San Jose would often swamp that entire Lowe's parking lot in terms of waiting customers, they're only mad because the Jesus Chicken is succeeding AND performing better than their own shit-tastic alternative.
 
They recently brought Chicfila to where I'm currently living and people lost their god damned minds. Every time a new one opens the lines are legit blocks long.

It's just a sub par chicken sandwich at best. I say close them all or gas the people that wait 20+ minutes to eat the shit.
 
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They recently brought Chicfila to where I'm currently living and people lost their god damned minds. Every time a new one opens the lines are legit blocks long.

It's just a sub par chicken sandwich at best. I say close them all or gas the people that wait 20+ minutes to eat the shit.
The people need their tendies, sire.
 
If we forced people to go buy their own food again, rather than constantly UberFatting and DoorFashing, I bet their lines would drop about 25%, same as most fast food places.

I hate how it’s impossible for actual customers to get their food now because people would rather get paid to sit in a drive-thru than work at the drive thru.
Door dash/Uber and the rest picks up the food inside.
 
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They thrived for years on decent food, old-fashioned employee friendliness, and massive goodwill from normie conservatives. I've heard they've fucked up all of that—and they've definitely fully succumbed to "corporate wokeness."

Die in a deep fryer, faggots.
Founder's spawn married a britbong or eurofag and let the in-law be a part of the corporate upper management.
 
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They thrived for years on decent food, old-fashioned employee friendliness, and massive goodwill from normie conservatives. I've heard they've fucked up all of that—and they've definitely fully succumbed to "corporate wokeness."

Die in a deep fryer, faggots.
Is chick-fil-a the nuisance, or their average patrons? All I know is the owner of the brand is a cuckold.

Did they really capitulate to wokeness?
 
This happens with a lot of Chick-fil-a sites. We have one where it's hard to pull out of the parking lot because the line stretches into the road/shoulder, so it's hard to see oncoming traffic. Last I heard they had managed to buy the lot next to them and are expanding the drive-thru area so everyone fits inside.

The solution would probably be for Chick-fil-a to vet their locations as thoroughly as they vet their potential employees. They need to have enough room for wrap-around drive-thrus every time.

Anywhere else, the long lines would be evidence of slow service, but for them it's just that popular.
 
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