Showing posts with label McDonald's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McDonald's. Show all posts

Monday, November 15, 2021

McDonald's sparks Brazil controversy over unisex toilet

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - A McDonald's restaurant in Brazil was on Sunday ordered to comply with health regulations by installing separate male and female toilets after sparking a controversy with its unisex bathroom.

The scandal erupted over a viral video shot from inside the unisex toilet of a McDonald's restaurant in Bauru, in Sao Paulo state.

In the video, a woman who appears to have shot the clip can be heard complaining: "This is absurd! Children use these bathrooms. This is communism in our city of Bauru, it's shameful!"

The video caused such a storm that health officials visited the restaurant and "found that the municipality's health regulations had not been respected," Bauru mayor Suellen Roim said on Twitter.

According to a local law, bathrooms must be "separated and identified, one for each sex."

McDonald's has been given two weeks to comply with the regulation or face either a fine or the restaurant's closure.

The company explained in a statement that it was trying to create areas of "inclusion and respect" so that "everyone feels welcome to use" the bathrooms.

The fast-food chain said it was cooperating with authorities to "meet certain standards."

But the issue riled up the ire of conservatives in a country where questions about gender have become a hot topic since far-right President Jair Bolsonaro -- often accused of sexism and homophobia -- took power three years ago.

Agence France-Presse

Thursday, March 5, 2015

McDonald's to cut back on chicken fed with antibiotics


WASHINGTON - Fast-food giant McDonald's announced Wednesday it would stop serving chicken raised with antibiotics that are important to human health, as worries grow over resistance to crucial drugs.

McDonald's said it would work with poultry farmers to halt the use of what the World Health Organization has identified as "critically important antimicrobials" to feed the chickens it serves alongside its popular hamburgers.

Some antibiotics would still be allowed, but only poultry-specific ones not used on people.

"While McDonald's will only source chicken raised without antibiotics important to human medicine, the farmers who supply chicken for its menu will continue to responsibly use ionophores, a type of antibiotic not used for humans that helps keep chickens healthy," the company said.

"Our customers want food that they feel great about eating -- all the way from the farm to the restaurant -- and these moves take a step toward better delivering on those expectations," said McDonald’s US president Mike Andres.

McDonald's said that it hoped to implement the new restrictions at its 14,000 US restaurants over the next two years.

The move will help prod changes by the large industrial chicken suppliers which have fostered widespread use of human antibiotics among growers.

Over several decades livestock producers have increasingly fed a wide range of antibiotics to animals to prevent disease and boost growth.

McDonald's said it would not accept any poultry in which antibiotics are used to encourage growth.

It said it recognizes that farmers could use human-use antibiotics on sick animals, but that it would not accept those into its food supply.

The move comes in response to a growing number of health-conscious consumers who have shown in supermarket and restaurant purchases that they are interested and willing to pay for healthier food.

A year ago the Chik-fil-A chain, the largest fast food buyer of chickens, announced a plan to go completely antibiotic-free within five years.

Following that, Purdue, the third largest chicken processor, said it had stopped using human antibiotics on 95 percent of its chickens, and would no longer inject hatchery eggs with antibiotics as a preventative and growth booster.

Laura Rogers, director of the Antibiotic Resistance Project at The Pew Charitable Trusts, said it is crucial to slash the use of antibiotics in the livestock industry.

"Every time we use antibiotics... we have the potential to get antibiotic-resistant bacteria. We are running out of new antibiotics and new types of antibiotics," she told AFP.

But she said the changes are consumer-driven, after years of failed efforts by activists to get the US Food and Drug Administration to ban the use of critical human antibiotics.

"McDonald's made this change because that's what their customers wanted," she told AFP.

But she also noted McDonald's additional statement this week that their criteria in part come from the WHO push to prohibit the use in animals of antimicrobials defined as "critically important" to human medicine. 

"They are at least the first major food company that's talked about responsible use," she said.

Even so, McDonald’s made no mention of the beef used in its popular hamburgers, or pork.

Making the change in both could be more complicated, acknowledged Rogers.

"Raising beef is different from raising hogs or raising turkeys," she said.

But the activist group Food and Water Watch said it's not enough to wait for the industry to evolve with consumers.

"We're glad to hear McDonald's realizes the public doesn't want food from factory farms that overuse antibiotics," said executive director Wenonah Hauter.

"But voluntary measures are not enough. It's past time for the FDA to force the meat industry to eliminate its use of harmful antibiotics though enforceable, non-voluntary regulation."

source: interaksyon.com

Saturday, October 26, 2013

McDonald's drops Heinz ketchup


WASHINGTON - McDonald's said Friday it was dropping ketchup king Heinz as a supplier of the key hamburger condiment, citing management changes at Heinz that put the company closer to rival Burger King.

McDonald's said it was ending a relationship of over 40 years as it axed Heinz from its supplier list.

"As a result of recent management changes at Heinz, we have decided to transition our business to other suppliers over time," it said.

In February US investment star Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway together with Brazil's 3G Capital took over Heinz in a $28 billion deal.

That move brought Heinz closer to Burger King, which is controlled by 3G.

The change would not be a large blow to Heinz. McDonald's said it only used Heinz ketchup in two US markets, Minneapolis and Pittsburgh, as well as some foreign markets.

McDonald's said in a statement that it would work with Heinz "to ensure a smooth and orderly transition of the McDonald's restaurant business."

The company said they "are confident that there will be no impact to our business, our customers and our great tasting food at McDonald's."

source: interaksyon.com

Friday, May 24, 2013

U.S. gospel singer sues McDonald's, claims glass in sandwich ruined her voice


MANILA, Philippines – A gospel singer from New York sued McDonald’s after she bit a chicken sandwich she bought from the fast food giant, the New York Post reported recently. The sandwhich allegedly contained a piece of glass bigger than a penny.

Jacqueline Simpson, 52, who filed the suit before the Brooklyn Supreme Court, told the Post that she had bought the glass-laden sandwich from a McDonald’s branch near the World Trade Center in May 2010.

After eating the sandwich, Simpson, who works as a clerk for the state Attorney General’s Office, said her voice became "hoarse" and "rattly,” according to The Post.

“I still sing alto, but I can’t sing soprano like I used to,” The Post quoted Simpson as saying.

“I have to make a lot of calls for work, and I have to tell people that I’m not a man.  “Before, that never happened,” added Simpson.

source: interaksyon.com

Saturday, August 18, 2012

PayPal could heat up mobile payments race if McDonald’s test pays off


SAN FRANCISCO — PayPal is in the early stages of what may be a blockbuster mobile payments deal with McDonald’s Corp, the world’s biggest hamburger chain.

McDonald’s is testing a mobile payments service featuring PayPal at 30 of its restaurants in France. Earlier this year, McDonald’s ran demonstrations of a broader PayPal mobile payments service at its franchisee conference in Orlando, Florida.

A McDonald’s spokeswoman confirmed the France tests and said the PayPal demonstration at its conference was part of a booth that features “technology coming within the next 24 months or so.”

PayPal is racing against start-up Square Inc and other technology companies to become the mobile payments service of choice as consumers increasingly use smart phones to make purchases in shops, restaurants and other retail locations.

Square struck what could be its most important partnership to date last week when it teamed up with Starbucks Corp, the world’s largest coffee chain.

PayPal, owned by eBay Inc, has signed up more than 15 retailers, including Home Depot and Office Depot, to accept PayPal payments in their stores.

But landing a partner the size of McDonald’s, with over 30,000 restaurants, would be a big win, according to analysts.

“McDonald’s would certainly be a whale,” said Gil Luria, an analyst at Wedbush Securities. “If McDonald’s customers can stand in line and order on a mobile app and pay with PayPal that is a huge extension of PayPal’s reach.”

Square’s deal with Starbucks “creates a sense of urgency for PayPal,” he added. “This is a race.”

The test in France lets McDonald’s customers order food on smart phones through a McDonald’s mobile application, or online, and pay with PayPal. There is a separate line in the test locations to pick up the meals, according to a PayPal spokesman.

Demonstrations at the McDonald’s franchisee conference in Orlando featured a more “in-depth” service that would allow customers to order and pay using PayPal’s digital wallet and mobile application, the spokesman said.

Rolling out a service like this may help McDonald’s cut lines at restaurants, which is a key factor in maintaining and growing same-store sales, Luria said.

“If they can shave 10 seconds off wait times, same-store sales could go up a lot,” he added. “It’s substantial.”

source: interaksyon.com

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Japan McDonald's recalls flawed giveaway glasses


TOKYO — McDonald's in Japan said Wednesday it was recalling giveaway glass tumblers after 78 people reported being injured by the Olympic-themed freebies.

The fast food giant said it had received 130 complaints after handing out the tumblers to purchasers of "Value Sets," which included fries and a soft drink, during their "Olympic Cheer Coke Glass Campaign" in June and July.



McDonald's said they gave away six million tumblers in Japan, some of which had "glass protrusions" on their edges or insides because of a manufacturing error.

"We received 130 complaints from our customers by August 7, of which 78 customers said they suffered cuts, although injuries were not serious enough to warrant their going to hospital," company spokesman Kazuyuki Hagiwara told AFP.

He said flawed metallic molds used by the producer of the glasses were to blame.

The company said customers who return their glasses between now and the end of October will be given replacements. — Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com