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View Full Version : Sushi restaurant in LI charges taller child full price



Chrisof BK
01-28-2008, 11:39 PM
BY CARL MACGOWAN | carl.macgowan@newsday.com
10:04 AM EST, January 26, 2008

A Commack sushi restaurant's pricing policy for children has reached a new low, a Dix Hills woman said.

Amy Kaplan said staff at Sushi Park on Jericho Turnpike wanted to charge her daughter, Nikki, 11, full price when the family went out for dinner on Jan. 18.

But it wasn't Nikki's age that made her ineligible for a half-price children's meal. It was her height.

Like some local all-you-can-eat buffets, Sushi Park measures children to determine the price of their meals. Children are told to stand next to a giraffe poster with a ruler when they enter the restaurant's lobby.

Children more than 41/2-feet tall pay full price at Sushi Park. Kids between 31/2 feet and 41/2 feet pay half price.

Nikki Kaplan stands 4-feet, 8-inches, her mother said. Nikki's sister, Elyssa, 13, is 5-feet, 4-inches, she said.

"We didn't stay," Amy Kaplan said. "I became indignant and asked to see the manager. ... I asked, 'Do you really feel that if my daughter is tall that she's going to eat more?'"

Though relatively rare on Long Island, height is commonly used for children's meal pricing in Manhattan and out of state, said Kevin Kong, manager of East Buffet and Restaurant in Huntington. The restaurant had charged half price for children between 3 and 10 years old but adopted the height policy two years ago, he said.

Pricing by age "just makes things a little difficult for my employees to determine who should be charged as a child and who should be charged as an adult," Kong said.

He said some customers are less than candid about their children's ages: "Sometimes," Kong said, "the child is like 6 feet tall and they say he's 10 years old." He added, "I'm not saying they're lying."

Kong said the height policy is "flexible." "If they say it's a child, OK, it's a child," he said. "I'm very lenient about that."

Many restaurant managers contacted this week by Newsday said they'd never heard of the practice and said it would be bad for business.

"Kind of insulting," said Jimmy Hahn, manager of the Riverview restaurant in Oakdale. "What if you have a tall girl in the family?" Sushi Park's owner could not be reached for comment.

A Sushi Park employee, who asked that her name not be used, said some customers are incensed when they learn about the height policy. "We have some customers who just go back home," she said.

Amy Kaplan said the state Division of Human Rights told her state law does not prohibit pricing based on height. She is contacting state legislators about having the law changed.

Nikki "eats like a bird" and would not have had a big meal, Amy Kaplan said. "She doesn't even like sushi," she said. "I have tall kids," she said. "What can I do?"



Chris

Chrisof BK
01-28-2008, 11:41 PM
So..if a child whos taller than normal gets discriminated against it gets attenton but a shorter kid....


Chris

snowbee
01-29-2008, 08:41 PM
Hmm this is an interesting article. Everyone knows or hell has probably even had a parent try and get their kid a cheaper price for a meal or a ticket etc so what is a business to do? But this is very interesting that this mother stood up for what is right and is drawing attention to this situation even though it might have been very embarrassing for this girl either way. The point is no person should have to go into a restraurant and have their physical stature judged. And businesses sorry to say should eat it on some of this because children shouldnt be so judged. Also this brings up a good point this woman took her children and left. Power to the consumer, because by leaving this business lost the whole sale and its all about the mighty buck!
Bravo to this Amy Kaplan for contacting people to change a height law she feels is wrong!

mattfromnossa
01-30-2008, 08:09 AM
Yeah. I don't think the business is being malicous here. I can understand how sometimes it can be difficult to determine a child's age. What they are guilty of is being incredibly thoughtless and insensitive and the policy needs to change.