KEY POINTS
  • Herbert Washington, a Black McDonald's franchisee, is suing the fast-food chain for racial discrimination.
  • Washington alleges that the company pigeonholed him into operating restaurants in low-volume Black neighborhoods and then forced him to sell his locations after he complained.
  • McDonald's is already facing two racial discrimination lawsuits from Black current and former franchisees.

In this article

A customer pulls into a McDonald's restaurant.

A Black franchisee is alleging that McDonald's racially discriminated against him by pigeonholing him into operating low-volume restaurants in Black neighborhoods and forcing him to downsize his store base years later after grading his locations unfairly.

Herbert Washington, a former Major League Baseball player and the chain's largest Black franchisee in the U.S. at one point, operates 14 McDonald's restaurants, down from 23 in 2017. He filed a lawsuit against the fast-food giant in Ohio federal court on Tuesday. It follows two racial discrimination lawsuits with similar allegations from Black current and former McDonald's franchisees last year.

In this article