California city seriously considers declaring Chick-fil-A a ‘public nuisance’

FAN Editor

Santa Barbara, California, may declare Chick-fil-a a “public nuisance” over its long drive-thru lines that form outside the popular fast-food chain. 

“The city’s traffic engineer, police chief and community development director have evaluated the situation and believe that the persistent traffic back-up onto State Street is a public nuisance and that the nuisance is caused by the operation of a drive-through at the Chick-fil-A restaurant,” according to a city traffic report

Chick-fil-a has one location in Santa Barbara that was established in 2013. The long lines of patrons using its drive-thru block one lane of traffic for up to 90 minutes on weekdays and for as much as 155 minutes on Saturdays, CBS News reported. 

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“Chick-fil-A has a good problem here. They are so successful, they have outgrown their site. It’s possible they were oversized for that site, to begin with,” Santa Barbara city council member Kristen Sneddon said at a council meeting this month. 

Chick-fil-A Logo Sign

Chick-fil-A Logo Sign (iStock)

Chick-fil-A representatives asked the city council to hold off on designating it a “public nuisance” to work on addressing the traffic delays. The council said there will be a continued public hearing until June 7 after unanimously approving a step toward designating it a public nuisance. 

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Chick-fil-A did not immediately respond to Fox News’ request for comment on the matter. 

Chick-fil-A

Chick-fil-A announced this week that it will be opening its first restaurant in Hawaii early next year, with two more locations to follow later in the year. (iStock) (iStock)

Other residents say the issue of long lines has long been a problem and only now are the complaints receiving widespread attention. 

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“In the past, it felt like the complaints were taken half-seriously,” resident Rick Closson told the Los Angeles Times. “Over the years, you’ve had Chick-fil-A putting together their fixes that really did not do much to fix the traffic problem. But then you have the city coming forward with a possible nuisance title, and the corporation is now saying, ‘Oh my goodness, please just give us more time to solve this.'”

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