Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Restaurant Manager Fired For Refusing To Serve Man In Pro-Trump Hat

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jul, 2018 09:24 PM
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver restaurant manager has been fired for refusing to serve a customer who was wearing a "Make America Great Again" hat.
     
    The slogan popularized by U.S. President Donald Trump in his 2016 campaign has been embroidered on bright red baseball caps that have become an emblem of his supporters.
     
     
    Eva Gates, vice president of operations and human resources for the Sequoia Company of Restaurants, says the capped patron was sitting on the patio at Vancouver's Teahouse in Stanley Park on Tuesday when the floor manager approached him.
     
     
    Gates says the manager told the man he had to take off his hat in order to dine at the Teahouse. The patron opted to leave the restaurant instead.
     
     
    The Teahouse's website identifies the manager as Darin Hodge.
     
     
    In a statement, Hodge says he hasn't changed his mind about his decision.
     
     
    "I stand by my decision to ask the patron to remove his hat. The MAGA hat has come to symbolize racism, bigotry, Islamophobia, misogyny, white supremacy, homophobia. As a person with a strong moral backbone, I had to take a stand against this guest’s choice of headwear while in my former place of work," he wrote.
     
     
    Gates said that while that's one interpretation of the "Make America Great Again" phrase, there are other ways to look at it.
     
     
    "That's somebody's interpretation, we don't see it that way. Everyone's got a different interpretation of what that means," she said.
     
     
    Gates said Hodge was fired with cause on Thursday because the incident violated the company's anti-discrimination policy and also because Hodge posted about it on social media before having a planned conversation with upper management about it.
     
     
    "Our company policy and values are that we don't (allow) discrimination of any kind," Gates said, noting that includes discrimination based on political ideology.
     
     
    Employment lawyer Lia Moody said it's an interesting case.
     
     
    If Sequoia had a policy in place that spoke to inclusivity and the grounds on which service could be denied, then the company would be within its rights to fire the manager with cause, she said.
     
     
    If not, she said Hodge would not be in breach of any company policy — although it could still fire him without cause and pay him severance.
     
     
    "In situations like this, determining whether or not the employee has committed a 'fireable offence,' which could give the company the right to terminate without paying severance, comes down to whether the employee did something illegal or did something contrary to company policy," Moody said.
     
     
    It's not illegal to refuse service on the basis of political beliefs, she added.
     
     
    She warned that in the age of social media, employees should consider how what they post to social media could affect their employment, since employers can always terminate their employees so long as it's not discriminatory.
     
     
    "An employer can always terminate you. And employers these days, with the age of social media and everything being out there in public, they're so quick to run away from anything that even smells like controversy. So that's where, as an employee you need to be careful what you do both on the job and off the job," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Police Arrest A Man For Stealing Woman's Purse In West End Sunday Evening

      Vancouver Police arrested a robbery suspect Sunday evening after he allegedly pushed a woman to the ground and ran off with her purse in Vancouver’s West End.

    Vancouver Police Arrest A Man For Stealing Woman's Purse In West End Sunday Evening

    BC Hydro Aims To Fund Two Vancouver Schools In Exchange For Underground Substation

    BC Hydro Aims To Fund Two Vancouver Schools In Exchange For Underground Substation
    VANCOUVER — School trustees in Vancouver have approved a plan that would see BC Hydro finance the construction of a new elementary school in the city's West End and replace another, in exchange for building a substation under school board property.

    BC Hydro Aims To Fund Two Vancouver Schools In Exchange For Underground Substation

    B.C.'s Illicit Overdose Deaths Decreasing Almost Every Month This Year

    B.C.'s Illicit Overdose Deaths Decreasing Almost Every Month This Year
     Latest Overdose Statistics, Show 109 People Died In May From Illicit Drugs

    B.C.'s Illicit Overdose Deaths Decreasing Almost Every Month This Year

    Messy, Screeching Peafowl To Be Removed From Surrey, B.C., Neighbourhood

    Messy, Screeching Peafowl To Be Removed From Surrey, B.C., Neighbourhood
    The mournful cries of peacocks could soon be silenced in a Surrey, B.C., neighbourhood after city council voted to roust the birds.

    Messy, Screeching Peafowl To Be Removed From Surrey, B.C., Neighbourhood

    RCMP Seek Suspect After Man Shot, Woman Injured In Targeted Surrey, B.C., Attack

    RCMP Seek Suspect After Man Shot, Woman Injured In Targeted Surrey, B.C., Attack
    This Is The Third Reported Shooting In Cloverdale Since Saturday, And 25th Shots-fired Incident So Far This Year

    RCMP Seek Suspect After Man Shot, Woman Injured In Targeted Surrey, B.C., Attack

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Blasts Protectionism Of Trump Administration

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Blasts Protectionism Of Trump Administration
    VICTORIA — British Columbia Premier John Horgan says the American administration needs to "wake up" over trade tariffs on aluminum, pulp and softwood lumber.

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Blasts Protectionism Of Trump Administration