Oregon Bakery Fires Employees For Denying Black Woman Service After Closing | KDNL
PORTLAND, Ore. — Two employees of a bakery in Portland, Oregon were
fired earlier this month for denying a black woman service because the
business had closed.
"Back To Eden Bakery" released several public apologies and statements
following the incident, before letting the employees go. In one Facebook
post, the bakery's co-owner wrote, "We are doing business in a
gentrified neighborhood in a racist city within a racist state of a
racist country.”
In one statement, "Back To Eden Bakery" says that according to its own
surveillance video, a black woman named "Lillian", who is well known in
the area as a "professional equity activist", entered at 9:06 p.m.,
after the bakery's closing time. Employees had also turned off the
"Open" sign, but several customers (all white) who had already ordered
were still inside. Two other white women who went to the bakery two
minutes before "Lillian", and were also informed that the business was
closed for the night.
The bakery says "Lillian" left the store briefly and began recording video.
The bakery's statement says that even though it does not consider the
employees to be racist and that they were following the business's
protocol of closing at 9 p.m., they were fired because "sometimes impact
outweighs intent." The bakery also says in the statement that the way
the employees went about denying the woman service, "lacked sensitivity
and understanding of the racial implications at work."
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