Thursday, January 30, 2014

Chick-fil-A to the rescue

Motorists stranded in their cars on Highway 280 outside of Birmingham, Alabama were allowed to shelter in a Chick-fil-A restaurant but the good works did not stop there.
Once the snow started accumulating, Meadows closed the restaurant and sent his staff home. But a few hours later, many of them returned – unable to get to their homes.

“Our store is about a mile and a half from the interstate and it took me two hours to get there,” manager Audrey Pitt said. “It was a parking lot as far as I could see.”

So Pitt left her car on the side of the interstate and joined a flock of bundled up drivers trudging through the snow.

Some of the drivers had been stuck in their cars for nearly seven hours without any food or water. So the staff of the Chick-fil-A decided to lend a helping hand.

“We cooked several hundred sandwiches and stood out on both sides of 280 and handed out the sandwiches to anyone we could get to – as long as we had food to give out.”

The staffers braved the falling snow and ice and Chick-fil-A refused to take a single penny for their sandwiches.

The meal was a gift – no strings attached.
Christian charity, Southern hospitality or just good citizenship? No matter, but don't expect that classy behavior everywhere. Rahm Emanuel has made it clear that "Chick-fil-A values are not Chicago values.”

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