Ousted Waffle House patron pickets restaurant
Friday, December 30, 2005
By SUE GUINN LEGG
NET News Service
JOHNSON CITY - A Johnson City man with a taste for Waffle House coffee braved Thursday's chilly temperatures and biting winds to stage a one-man protest outside the restaurant's North State of Franklin Road location after he was asked to leave and not come back.
Bart Hoard, 53, North Street, said a long-running conflict with the local franchise's vice president, Andy Mount, of Kingsport, finally boiled over Thursday morning when Mount spotted his truck and called police to order him off the parking lot.
Hoard, a 23-year Waffle House patron, said the dispute began five years ago when he requested milk for his coffee at another city Waffle House and Mount asked him to pay for a full glass. Hoard said he instead bought milk at the market next door, came back for his coffee and stated to Mount, "Got milk? I do.''
"I made Andy Mount look like a fool over that milk for my coffee, and he's had a vendetta against me ever since," Hoard said as he sat in a lawn chair on the sidewalk outside the restaurant, brandishing a protest sign to passing motorists.
"I'm cold. I shouldn't have to do this. But this is not right. I'm an American. I'm a disabled veteran. And this is a violation of my civil rights. I plan to stay here even if I catch pneumonia doing it," Hoard said as a bank thermometer across the street flashed 37 degrees.
"Today, I had to take a stand. Tomorrow, I'm going to the Washington County district attorney's office to see what I can get done about it."
As Hoard sat out in the cold, his boss, Eddie Barnett, passed a petition in his support among customers inside the restaurant, gathering more than a dozen signatures. Barnett, owner of Salvage 1 Used Auto Parts, said he planned to mail the petition to Waffle House's corporate headquarters.
"This is all something between him and (Mount). He's a loyal customer. The waitresses all know him and like him. He's shoveled snow for them, helped fix their cars, all kinds of things," Barnett said.
"I just thought it was unfair. I've got a business, and I can imagine if someone is doing something wrong, you want them out. But he hasn't done anything. And these waitresses will tell you."
Waffle House employees on duty Thursday afternoon declined to comment.
"We could be fired," one employee explained, apologetically.
Mount did not respond to several messages left on his pager and at three area Waffle House restaurants on Thursday.
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