Quote
If dd were a different kind of kid with a less aware parent, she would not have been carrying an epi. Who knows what would have happened then.
QuoteThis is assuming you want the following outcomes.
1. Compensation for unpaid medical bills only.
2. Changes in corporate practices for food allergic customers that are reasonable and not ending only in a refusal of service to all dairy allergic customers and/or bigger CYA signs.
Have DD write timeline exactly as she remembers like a witness statement. Refer only to that statement. Immediately stop all usage of "I know" "I feel", etc. Stick to times, statements, actions.
Appeal to corporate interests that are shared interests with customers. Fact: food allergies in some markets are approaching epidemic levels. Fact: they will not be able to avoid serving all allergic customers
Use Sloane Miller's approach by showing how adapting practices to the reality of a growing customer base allergic to a variety of foods will help them as they help customers. Request they adopt practices to reduce contamination including employee training, separation, color coding, and the like.
Show in a timeline by DD that she met her burden of caution, that she more than reasonably sought clarification, that customers like her have been able to continue patronage but for errors that could reasonably be reduced with small changes in practice such as color coding. In the meantime because the error was made without any mediating practices you request unpaid medical bills resulting from the wrong drink be paid plus a request to put into place sensible, effective practices on the corporate side to increase service to the market that will continue to grow with allergic individuals.
The one thing I would not do is allow myself to be maneuvered into a position where the claim essentially becomes Company established with a dairy based menu, you owe me because we were served dairy.
Quote from: twinturbo on December 09, 2013, 09:26:53 AM
Same for negligence, lakeswimr. You need proof to show "clearly negligent" as you introduced. So it can't simultaneously be "clearly negligent" yet not need to prove it. Negligence requires proof of intent (posted upthread) which is a higher standard.
Quote from: twinturbo on December 08, 2013, 06:14:50 PM
Proceed how? Specifically? How do you meet the burden of proof of negligence in this instance? That is not a rhetorical question because if one can answer that OP has a much straighter line to compensation.
Upthread is a definition of negligence in a spoiler tag to save space. Negligence requires proving intent, a rather difficult thing to prove. So how?
Here's what I would do if I were OP.
[spoiler]
This is assuming you want the following outcomes.
1. Compensation for unpaid medical bills only.
2. Changes in corporate practices for food allergic customers that are reasonable and not ending only in a refusal of service to all dairy allergic customers and/or bigger CYA signs.
- Have DD write timeline exactly as she remembers like a witness statement. Refer only to that statement. Immediately stop all usage of "I know" "I feel", etc. Stick to times, statements, actions.
- Appeal to corporate interests that are shared interests with customers. Fact: food allergies in some markets are approaching epidemic levels. Fact: they will not be able to avoid serving all allergic customers
Use Sloane Miller's approach by showing how adapting practices to the reality of a growing customer base allergic to a variety of foods will help them as they help customers. Request they adopt practices to reduce contamination including employee training, separation, color coding, and the like.
Show in a timeline by DD that she met her burden of caution, that she more than reasonably sought clarification, that customers like her have been able to continue patronage but for errors that could reasonably be reduced with small changes in practice such as color coding. In the meantime because the error was made without any mediating practices you request unpaid medical bills resulting from the wrong drink be paid plus a request to put into place sensible, effective practices on the corporate side to increase service to the market that will continue to grow with allergic individuals.
The one thing I would not do is allow myself to be maneuvered into a position where the claim essentially becomes Company established with a dairy based menu, you owe me because we were served dairy.
[/spoiler]
If I were SBUX [spoiler]I'd wait you out in court. There's no way as a food service modeled around dairy and coffee I'd make any compensations involving dairy. [/spoiler]
The key IMO is context and tone in request, but also your expectations will matter. In providing full context of the dairy allergy and risk I'd stay on message about common sense precautions, reasonable requests, self-responsibility with regard to DD's timeline (not what you feel, think, "know" as someone not part of the event), highlighting the same regimen used by her to successfully manage her drinks previous years at Starbucks without incidence. Hammer away that it's something a reasonable person would do, and has done with success, that it is in keeping with the medical advice by leading allergists and organization like FARE. Create the structure so that it is convincing that it was employee inattention that was at cause in this particular instance.
If someone has a stronger, more convincing approach go for it. That's all I can come up with.