Category: Latest Headlines

Beverage alcohol industry pushing back against new regulatory pressure, as views shift on moderate drinking

For some 40 years, producers of liquor, wine and beer have been helped by the notion, enshrined in the dietary advice of a number of governments, that a little alcohol can provide modest coronary and other health benefits. But now, according to a new Wall Street Journal story today, that advice is shifting rapidly, as health-policy officials around the world scrutinize previous advice amid new research pointing to possible cancer risks.

WSJ detail August 23 2016“The change is pressuring the alcohol industry in some of its biggest markets, including the U.S., the U.K. and Russia,” the front-page story says. “Its response is as expensive and sprawling as the threat it perceives, including attacking anti-alcohol advocates’ research and working with governments to formulate policy. Alcohol companies are also funding their own research, including a plan by four companies to contribute tens of millions dollars toward the cost of a rigorous study.”

In Louisville, Brown-Forman could be swept up in the shifting regulatory tides. The nearly 150-year-old companies sells its flagship Jack Daniel’s and nearly 20 other brands in about 160 nations around the globe.

A review of its regulatory filings shows the company has grown increasingly concerned about changes in public views about alcohol consumption, including moderate drinking. In its 2015 annual report to the Securities and Exchange Commission, for example, it added a new passage to the business risks section that highlighted the possibility of “significant additional labeling or warning” requirements.

“Our products already raise health and safety concerns for some regulators,” the company warned investors, “and heightened requirements could be imposed. If additional or more severe requirements of this type become applicable to one or more of our major products under current or future health, environmental, or other laws or regulations, they could inhibit sales of such products.”

BenRiach scotchBut Brown-Forman’s rising concerns date to at least 2012, when it flagged the possible consequences of any new health research that could lead to heightened government scrutiny and controls. Its risk warning in that year’s report said: “If future research indicated more widespread serious health risks associated with alcohol consumption, and particularly with moderate consumption, or if for any reason the social acceptability of beverage alcohol were to decline significantly, sales of our products could decrease materially. Our sales could also suffer if governments banned or restricted advertising or promotional activities, limited hours or places of sale or consumption, or took other actions that discouraged alcohol purchase or consumption.”

That advisory appears to have been prudent, given the shifting views on moderate consumption disclosed in today’s Wall Street Journal.

Photo, inset: Brown-Forman added the BenRiach brand when it bought the BenRiach Distillery Co. in June for $405 million; it just launched 15 new whiskies. In photo, top: the company’s Sonoma-Cutrer wines.

Papa John’s franchisee in NYC agrees to $500K deal on wage and labor violations; Kindred closing second Houston hospital

A news summary focused on 10 big employers; updated at 8:24 a.m.

PAPA JOHN’S: The owner of three Papa John’s restaurants in New York City has agreed to pay $500,000 in back wages to more than 200 workers under a deal with state Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and the U.S. Labor Department; it’s the eighth case brought against Papa John’s franchisees by the state’s top law enforcer in the past two years. In addition to paying $500,000, franchisee Sultan Ali Lakhani must add procedures to handle employee complaints, post a statement of employees’ rights, and designate a compliance officer to submit quarterly reports to Schneiderman’s office (New York Daily News).

Kindred Holcombe hospitalKINDRED is closing another hospital in Houston, the second such closing the Louisville-based hospital and nursing giant has announced there this month as it consolidates operations in the city. The Kindred Holcombe facility near Texas Medical Center will shutter in October and all 204 jobs will be eliminated; local news accounts did not say how many beds the hospital has. With the earlier planned closing of 37-bed Kindred Hospital Baytown, the company will still operate nine hospitals in the Houston area (Houston Chronicle).

Brown-Forman’s BenRiach launches new whiskeys; KFC’s PR stunt smells like success; and Papa John’s pitchman Manning is fumbling in the kitchen

A news summary focused on 10 big employers.

BROWN-FORMAN‘s BenRiach Distillery Co. has launched 15 new whiskies, including a dozen single cask releases, its first since Brown-Forman bought the Scottish distillery in June for $405 million (Scotch Whiskey).

KFC sunscreen 75KFC‘s newest limited-time marketing gimmick is (was!) a natural followup to its current fake Colonel Harland Sanders pitchman: sun screen that smells like fried chicken. And the Yum division wasn’t kidding about availability; introduced today, the chain’s inventory was already exhausted by day’s end. Col. Sanders Extra Crispy Sunscreen followed the late-June introduction of the extra-crispy colonel played by perpetually suntanned actor George Hamilton. And it recalled the chain’s brief experiment last spring with nail polish that tasted like chicken.

PAPA JOHN’S today launched its latest TV commercial starring retired Denver Broncos quarterback — and franchise owner — Peyton Manning, casting him in an exceptionally unlikely new career:

Yum wants a leaner workforce; KFC’s got more competition as chicken menus swell; and Pizza Hut India celebrates Olympians

A news summary focused on 10 big employers.

YUM wants to trim its workforce in advance of spinning off its China division, and has offered an unspecified number of employees early retirement deals at its Louisville corporate office and its three main divisions: KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell. Yum employs about 1,000 at its corporate office and KFC domestic division. The fast-food giant would not disclose terms of the offers or a timetable. Overall, the company employs 505,000 workers. Yum agreed to separate its China division in October 2015, and has said it wants to complete the separation by Oct. 31 (WDRB).

KFC: The restaurant industry is awash in chicken, with the top 250 chains adding some 325 new chicken items during the 12 months ended June 30, according to research from Technomic. By comparison, only 73 new beef items were added in the same period as consumers turn to healthier, less fatty meat (CNBC).

P.V. Sindhu
Sindhu

PIZZA HUT is offering free pizzas today to anyone who shares the last name of the country’s Olympic-award winning badminton player P.V. Sindhu, who won a silver on Thursday. The chain had earlier made the same offer to customers with the same last name as Sakshi Malik, who won a bronze in wrestling. The players are the nation’s only medal winners in the Rio games, which end tomorrow (Business Standard).

KFC calamity? Chicago newspaper claims to have seen culinary world’s Loch Ness Monster

It’s the original recipe Colonel Harland Sanders developed in 1939 for his roadside restaurant in Corbin, Ky., the one with 11 herbs and spices that launched today’s 20,000-location KFC. The Chicago Tribune has published what it says is the top-secret recipe, which a freelance writer got during a visit with Sanders’ nephew, Joe Ledington, a 67-year-old retired school teacher outside Corbin.

Harland Sanders
Sanders

Ledington told writer Jay Jones he’d found the recipe, handwritten in blue ink, tucked inside a photo album he inherited from his aunt, Sanders’ second wife. The newspaper included a photo of it with a story today about the Harland Sanders Cafe and Museum in Corbin.

But as even the daily points out, many others have claimed to have seen what KFC calls one of America’s most valuable trade secrets. “But no one’s ever been right,” the company told the Tribune.

KFC keeps the original recipe, on a yellowing piece of paper, in a Continue reading “KFC calamity? Chicago newspaper claims to have seen culinary world’s Loch Ness Monster”

Roadhouse CEO unloads $6.9M in stock; tragedy strikes Calif. Taco Bells when pregnant worker killed in car crash; fiancé is employee, too; Ford extends $400K supercar production

A news summary focused on 10 big employers; updated 8:55 p.m.

Ford 2017 GT supercar
An overhead photo of the 2017 GT; Ford will produce them for four years.
Kent Taylor
Taylor

TEXAS ROADHOUSE founder and CEO Kent Taylor sold $6.9 million of company stock at a hair more than $46 a share Tuesday through yesterday, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing. Taylor still owns 4.2 million shares worth $192 million at TXRH shares‘ closing price this afternoon of $45.47.

TACO BELL: In San Jose, Calif., a one-day-old baby boy was in critical condition at a South Bay hospital early this morning, after his 18-year-old mother died in a car accident Wednesday. Both the victim, Dulce Capetillo, and the infant’s father, her fiancé Pedro Cortes, were Taco Bell employees working the late shift. Capetillo’s brother was driving her to pick up Cortes at the Taco Bell where he worked. “I just can’t imagine the pain he is going through right now,” said Taco Bell area supervisor Jose Gonzalez. South Bay Taco Bells now have donation boxes in honor of Dulce; the company plans to match customer donations. And a GoFundMe page is also in place to help with funeral costs (ABC 7).

In Toledo, Ohio, a sheriff’s deputy has been fired after making what were considered inappropriate Facebook posts about Taco Bell employees he said had made vulgar remarks about him.

Deputy Thomas Hillenbrand, 57, a 19-year employee, was canned Wednesday. His Facebook post July 23 said a black employee and a co-worker inside the restaurant yelled “Black lives matter,” and laughed at him while he was in his car in the drive-thru. The deputy was in uniform at the time.

His Facebook post said: “I guess we’ll see if they’re still laughing after I call their corporate office on Monday and unload on someone.” He also encouraged fellow officers to boycott the restaurant. Replying to a comment on his post saying he should have reached through the drive-thru window, Hillenbrand wrote: “Couldn’t reach them. In the pre-camera days, Continue reading “Roadhouse CEO unloads $6.9M in stock; tragedy strikes Calif. Taco Bells when pregnant worker killed in car crash; fiancé is employee, too; Ford extends $400K supercar production”