Hell's Kitchen, the Minneapolis restaurant known for irreverent marketing, a 35-foot Bloody Mary bar and lemon-ricotta pancakes, will soon stand out for something else: employee ownership.
On Wednesday, owners Cynthia Gerdes and Steve Meyer closed the restaurant after lunch for a staff meeting, where they told more than 100 employees they will transfer their shares into a newly created employee stock ownership plan, or ESOP. The pair, both in their mid-60s, also laid out plans to retire in coming years.
"Hell's Kitchen will be one of only a few independent restaurants in the country with an ESOP," Gerdes said.
The move means that Gerdes and Meyer, instead of being paid for their stake all at once, will receive a portion of the restaurant's profits from the ESOP for years to come. But employees will get most of the future profits, which they will be able to use for retirement savings or additional income.
Sous chef Alfredo Calderon, who translated the information to the 30 or so Spanish-speaking employees, said the news was a surprise. "Unless you work for a big corporation or a restaurant chain you don't have a 401(k) or an ESOP," Calderon said. "The owners are good-hearted people who want the best for everyone."
ESOPs have become an increasingly popular form of ownership for some types of mid- and large-sized businesses because of tax breaks that Congress created nearly 20 years ago. Most ESOP businesses pay no federal or state income taxes.
But they are rare in the restaurant business because the benefits of an ESOP occur when a firm has a long record of profitability, something that's difficult for restaurants to build.
Gerdes remembered her late husband, Mitch Omer, as she announced the transition. Omer, who died in 2015, would have been 65 on Wednesday. "The ESOP honors Mitch's huge, generous heart," she said.