Here’s the latest I can share based on recent reports.
- Summary: The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) filed a federal lawsuit against Hatch Trick, Inc., the Chick-fil-A franchisee operating several Austin, Texas locations, alleging religious discrimination related to an employee who observed Saturday as a Sabbath and requested not to work on Saturdays. The EEOC contends the company initially accommodated the request but later required the employee to work Saturdays and ultimately fired her after she sought further religious accommodations. [sources from May 14–15, 2026 reporting; see citations below]
Key details from recent coverage
- The EEOC’s complaint claims Hatch Trick, Inc. failed to provide reasonable religious accommodation for Saturday Sabbath observance, and the employee was terminated after rejecting a demotion to a lower-paying role with different hours. The suit was filed in the Western District of Texas in Austin. [BBC, Fox 7 Austin, CBS/CBS-affiliated coverage; see citations]
- The franchisee allegedly told the employee she could have Saturdays off only if she accepted a pay cut and reduced benefits, despite prior accommodation. The EEOC says this violated applicable federal religious accommodation requirements. [Multiple local and national outlets]
What this means going forward
- This is a federal discrimination case under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. Hatch Trick, Inc. has not publicly responded in the articles I’ve seen, and court proceedings would determine whether accommodations were reasonable or would cause undue hardship for the business. Expect filings, discovery, and potential early procedural rulings as the case progresses in Austin federal court. [EEOC framework references cited by outlets]
If you’d like, I can pull the exact court docket numbers and summarize the main legal arguments as the case develops, or provide a brief timeline of events based on the reporting. I can also look for any statements from Hatch Trick, Inc. or Chick-fil-A’s corporate representatives if they publish responses.
Citations
- Chron.com summary of EEOC filing against Hatch Trick, Inc. (Tex. Chick-fil-A operator) for religious discrimination[1]
- BBC News on US federal action against Chick-fil-A operator Hatch Trick for religious discrimination[2]
- Fox 7 Austin coverage detailing the EEOC’s allegations and context[3]
- WSB Radio coverage of a federal lawsuit against Hatch Trick over Sabbath accommodations[4]