NEW YORK – Subway customers can finally be assured that their “Footlong” sandwiches will be as long as promised.
The rise and fall of Subway: How the world’s biggest food chain lost its ‘fresh’ appeal
With 43,945 sandwich shops in 110 countries, Subway has become the world’s most ubiquitous restaurant chain, posting armies of “sandwich artists” in additional American outposts than McDonald’s and Starbucks combined.
Continue reading.
A judge a week ago granted final approval to some settlement of a class-action suit filed against Subway after an Australian teenager in 2013 posted a picture of his sandwich on Facebook that was only 11 inches. The look garnered international media attention, with The Ny Post writing it found four out of seven Footlongs it bought in Ny “measured only 11 or 11.5 inches.”
A judge had given preliminary approval in October to a settlement between Subway’s parent company Doctor’s Associates and plaintiffs’ attorneys. Final approval was granted on Feb. 25.
As area of the settlement, Subway agreed to institute practices not less than 4 years to ensure its bread reaches least 12 inches long. The judge approved US$520,000 in attorney fees and US$500 for every of the 10 those who were representatives from the class, but no monetary claims were awarded to potential people in the class.
“It was difficult to prove monetary damages, because everybody ate the evidence,” said Thomas Zimmerman, who had been co-lead attorney for the class. Zimmerman said the attorney fees are now being split among 10 law firms.
Subway said in a statement it’s pleased the judge found no wrongdoing on its part.