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After 40 Years, Carl's Jr. Closing Office In Anaheim


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#1 Chris

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Posted 23 November 2018 - 07:22 PM

There you go democrats....!   Lost another one.......!   Well done....!  To Tennessee they go....!  You should be so proud....!  Probably just racist white people mostly anyway, Trump supporters for sure, evil Capitalists, not transgender friendly I bet, and maybe they even support our military personnel and the police....?  Shame on them...!  I bet they even had a secret "men only" restroom....!  Gosh darn those obsolete American values, they needed to go for sure...!   Well done California and democrats down under the dome....!   You guys are just brilliant....!   Can't wait for Newsome to take over and make our state even more so special and business friendly....!   God, we are so fortunate to live here under the "enlightened" and "tolerant" elite political progressive ones....!  I do feel special.  Soon, Yahoo, Facebook,Tesla, and Google will be the only companies left here..........!  Sad thing is the State of CA will "employ" more than all of them combined in all of their useless state agencies.......!   Chris   

 

https://abc7.com/bus...naheim/4728408/

 

ANAHEIM, Calif. (KABC) -- One of the last vestiges of the Carl's Jr. legacy in Southern California is on its way out.

The company announced it is consolidating the operations of its Anaheim office - once corporate headquarters - with its operations in Tennessee.

"To lose the corporate headquarters here is to lose a little bit of Anaheim history," said City Councilman Stephen Faessel, who added that the move is not entirely unexpected.

"It's corporate America, and they need to move their headquarters to a place they feel is appropriate."

According to the company's website, Carl Karcher opened his first restaurant, Carl's Drive-In Barbeque, in 1945 on what would later become Harbor Boulevard.

"It was a regular drive in," said Faessel. "It had a canopy in the back; cars would pull in, and often Carl himself would be there preparing hamburgers."

The first Carl's Jr., a smaller version of the drive-in, would open in downtown Anaheim. The company's corporate headquarters opened in the 1970s, on aptly named Carl Karcher Way.

By 1977, Karcher employed more than 5,000 people, but was still a fixture in Anaheim.

"I actually trick-or-treated at his house, and Carl himself would open the door," Faessel said. "Carl had deep roots here in town."

Eventually, the Karcher family would sell its interests in the company, which was later called CKE (Carl Karcher Enterprises) Restaurants. Still, the company expanded its footprint in Anaheim, moving to a new building on Anaheim Boulevard. near the 91 Freeway in the early 2000s.

But that office building is the one that's now closing. A CKE spokesperson sent this statement to ABC7:

"As a company responsible for two regional brands, we've undertaken the difficult task of closing our support office in Anaheim and consolidating its roles and functions into our corporate headquarters in Franklin, TN, just outside of Nashville. We sincerely thank our Anaheim employees for their dedicated service and the Anaheim community for its hospitality."

It's unclear how many jobs will be lost, and when the actual closing of the facility will occur. An employee who was leaving the facility Tuesday afternoon said the company was allowing employees to apply for positions at the new location in Tennessee.

 


1A - 2A = -1A


#2 2 Aces

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Posted 23 November 2018 - 07:51 PM

Chris, don't expect an answer from the Libs here. They're locked into their ideology because they are stuck on stupid. And they couldn't care less what the damage is. Real idiots.

#3 The Average Joe

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Posted 23 November 2018 - 08:27 PM

This has been in the works for a year and a half.  You might find it interesting what the CEO said in 2013:

 

And the taxes in California may not be the only reason for the move. CKE Restaurants CEO Andy Puzder told the Wall Street Journal in 2013, “California is not interested in having businesses grow.”

The article points out that many factors, including local building regulations, make one community less desirable than another for businesses.

For example, it takes 60 days in Texas, 63 in Shanghai, and 125 in Novosibirsk, Russia for one of CKE’s restaurants to get a building permit after signing a lease. But in Los Angeles, Ca. it takes a whopping 285 days.

Puzder added, “I can open up a restaurant faster on Karl Marx Prospect in Siberia than on Carl Karcher Boulevard in California.” The street in California is ironically named for the restaurant chain’s founder.

California’s labor regulations may also play a role in a company’s desire to seek alternative locations. In that same interview with WSJ, Puzder said his company had spent $20 million in the state over the past eight years on damages and attorney fees related to class-action lawsuits.


"Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive" -- C.S. Lewis

 

If the only way to combat "global warming" was to lower taxes, we would never hear of the issue again. - Anonymous

 

"Society in every state is a blessing, but Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one" — Thomas Paine, 𝘊𝘰𝘮𝘮𝘰𝘯 𝘚𝘦𝘯𝘴𝘦 (1776)

 





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