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As part of our ongoing coverage of Covid-19 and its effects on franchising, we’re asking franchisees what they’re doing to get through the crisis and come out the other side. If you’re a franchisee with a story to tell about what you’re doing to survive, help your employees, or inspire hope in other operators, please email us at stories@franchising.com.
David Ostrowe has been president of O&M Restaurant Group since 2005. He operates multiple Burger King restaurants in Oklahoma and Northern Louisiana, Blaze Pizza stores in Oklahoma and Arkansas, and Taco Bell locations in Oklahoma City. He also is the Secretary of Digital Transformation and Administration for Oklahoma. He has felt the effects of Covid-19 on his business with dramatic drops in revenue, and has shut his Blaze Pizza restaurants.
Taco Bell sales are down 30% and I had to hard close my Blaze Pizza restaurants, which were doing about $200 a day.
We’ve cut labor accordingly and have frozen all non-essential purchases. I’ve applied for disaster funding and the PPP money. To date, I haven’t received anything.
Not really. Taco Bell deferred royalties for 60 days. This is nothing but changing the terms. Blaze didn’t offer anything.
So far, we’re continuing to cash flow but are monitoring the cash flow in real time.
We’ve been transparent and open with the employees. We haven’t formally laid off anyone yet. Hours have been cut.
All drive-thru and take-out service. No discounts.
I’m highly concerned with getting employees back to work. Unemployment is now $20/hour.
I applied 10 days ago and haven’t received anything yet. Hopefully soon.
We need to get on the other side of this quickly. Franchisors need to provide direct relief.