After quite a few allegations of sexual harassment and lawsuits claiming wage theft, the Willows Inn, a world-renowned restaurant and inn on a tiny island within the Pacific Northwest, has closed.
An investigation by The New York Occasions in April 2021 revealed that employees on the Willows mentioned that they had been subjected to verbal and sexual harassment, required to work 16- to 18-hour days, and bullied with sexist and racist language. The house owners denied these allegations, however after the Occasions report, 137 workers filed a class-action lawsuit in opposition to the restaurant over working circumstances, wage theft and wrongful termination; it was settled this 12 months for $1.37 million. A earlier swimsuit was settled in 2020 for $600,000, with a proviso that the plaintiffs wouldn’t communicate or reply to any members of the press.
A number of former workers mentioned the proprietor of the property, Tim McEvoy, informed employees final week that the Willows wouldn’t reopen for the 2023 season, and that the property can be donated to charity and sure offered.
On Monday, the Lighthouse Mission Ministries, a Christian social service company for homeless individuals based mostly in close by Bellingham, Wash., confirmed in a press release that the $2 million property had been donated, and that the group “will consider one of the best use and worth” for the buildings and land. “It’s too early to know if a possible new proprietor would need to function the restaurant and lodge rooms in an analogous method or do one thing totally different,” the assertion added. (The donation was reported Monday by The Seattle Occasions.)
The restaurant’s longtime chef, Blaine Wetzel, made the Willows well-known on his arrival in 2010. He had come direct from working at Noma, in Copenhagen, as a proponent of the chef René Redzepi’s elegantly rustic, hyperlocal fashion of cooking. Mr. Wetzel grew to become a star, profitable awards and spots on world “better of” lists that drew diners and disciples to the Willows — a two-hour drive and a ferry journey from Seattle — by claiming that the substances for his multicourse tasting menus have been foraged, caught or grown on idyllic Lummi Island.
The Occasions investigation revealed darker truths. Restaurant workers mentioned that Mr. Wetzel’s habits was abusive and erratic, that his language was obscene and typically racist, and that he prevented ladies from rising to prime positions within the kitchen. Inn employees, a lot of them younger ladies who lived on the island, mentioned they have been pressured to drink alcohol, use unlawful medication and have intercourse with male kitchen employees members and visiting cooks.
The Occasions additionally discovered that Mr. Wetzel not solely routinely ordered meals from farms on the mainland, but in addition despatched workers to Costco, Goal and different supermarkets for substances when provides ran quick.
Though many workers resigned instantly, and island residents staged protests, chanting and waving indicators at diners as they arrived on the inn, the restaurant remained open by its 2021 season, closing for the winter final December. Mr. Wetzel’s spouse, the chef Daniela Soto-Innes, introduced on a brand new kitchen staff for the 2022 season that started in March, however reservations dropped and the inn closed early, serving its closing dinner the week earlier than Thanksgiving.
The inn’s company entity, Freshore LLC, acquired federal paycheck safety loans of $359,623 in 2020 and $270,309 in 2021, each now forgiven.
Neither Mr. McEvoy nor Mr. Wetzel responded to requests for affirmation or remark. (McEvoy Oil, Mr. McEvoy’s household enterprise, was based in 1932 and purchased in 2019 by Coleman Oil, one of many largest gasoline distributors within the area.)
At a latest gastronomic convention in Mexico, Ms. Soto-Innes introduced that she and Mr. Wetzel have been opening a restaurant and farm in Nayarit, north of Puerto Vallarta.
In accordance with Toby Marshall, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, the remaining particular person lawsuits over wage theft and wrongful termination, introduced by three former workers, had as of final month been “resolved to the mutual satisfaction of all sides.”
The lawsuits additionally named the longtime Willows common supervisor, Reid Johnson, who left this 12 months for the upscale Friday Harbor Home, a preferred vacation spot on San Juan Island. That restaurant’s government chef, Jason Aldous, who labored on the Willows from 2013 to 2015, was arrested in June and is charged with a number of counts associated to a sexual relationship with a feminine worker, a minor whom he and his spouse had invited to reside of their dwelling.
The Willows was one of many foremost inspirations for the latest film “The Menu,” exploring the darkish facet of superb eating and celebrity-chef tradition.