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7 practices to avert substance abuse in restaurants7 practices to avert substance abuse in restaurants

Ron Ruggless, Senior Editor

May 11, 2018

2 Min Read
7 practices to avert substance abuse in restaurants
zhudifeng/iStock/Thinkstock

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In this in-depth investigation, NRN looks at how restaurants can recover from a culture of substance abuse.

Joel Bennett, left, president of the Fort Worth, Texas-based Organizational Wellness & Learning Systems said his research in restaurants found that drug-free workplace and zero-tolerance policies will not work without seven other balanced steps:

1. Help coworkers learn how to listen compassionately to each other. Often times it’s a coworker who knows how to get help or is themselves in recovery.

2. Focus on team resilience and positive strengths that come from good teamwork in the restaurant. Coworkers have complementary strengths. Some are better at building team confidence. Others role model staying calm in the storm. Others show strong long-term commitment that inspires. These qualities actually protect against mental health and substance use risks.

3. Train managers to recognize the important influence they can have. Managers can wield their influence through constructive confrontation and referral to helpful counseling, treatment or 12-step resources. “This is much more personal and heart-centered than abstract recognition of signs and symptoms,” Bennett said.

4. Offer, whenever possible, employee assistance programs to all employees, especially younger at-risk employees.

Joel_Bennet_Photo_202.jpg5. When employee programs are not available, seek local resources through United Way or other community health agencies. Make sure all new hires know about resources for getting help.

6. Train managers to understand how to not "look the other way" when an employee comes in late with a hangover or other subtle signs of problems.

 “Get managers together to talk about their own stories of how to be responsive rather than ignore, tolerate or minimize problems,” Bennett said, “especially if they think ‘It’s not my job’ to take care of them.”

7. Recognize healthy ambassadors or mentors who are often to "core on the floor" for front-of-house employees or well-respected in the back of the house. Train them on how to compassionately encourage help seeking or just be a go-to caring coworker.

Read more:
Coming Clean: Recovering from a culture of substance abuse
Is the notorious world of restaurant partying taking a sober turn?
Why the opioid crisis is a restaurant crisis
Beyond AA: Where restaurant workers go for help
Ron Eyester on sobriety: 'I've honestly never felt worse'
Staying sober while running a whiskey bar
Do you have to leave foodservice to stay sober?
Column: A restaurant employee, an opioid addict, my son
7 things to know about the opioid crisis 

Contact Ron Ruggless at [email protected]

Follow him on Twitter: @RonRuggless

About the Author

Ron Ruggless

Senior Editor, Nation’s Restaurant News / Restaurant Hospitality

Ron Ruggless serves as a senior editor for Informa Connect’s Nation’s Restaurant News (NRN.com) and Restaurant Hospitality (Restaurant-Hospitality.com) online and print platforms. He joined NRN in 1992 after working 10 years in various roles at the Dallas Times Herald newspaper, including restaurant critic, assistant business editor, food editor and lifestyle editor. He also edited several printings of the Zagat Dining Guide for Dallas-Fort Worth, and his articles and photographs have appeared in Food & Wine, Food Network and Self magazines. 

Ron Ruggless’ areas of expertise include foodservice mergers, acquisitions, operations, supply chain, research and development and marketing. 

Ron Ruggless is a frequent moderator and panelist at industry events ranging from the Multi-Unit Foodservice Operators (MUFSO) conference to RestaurantSpaces, the Council of Hospitality and Restaurant Trainers, the National Restaurant Association’s Marketing Executives Group, local restaurant associations and the Horeca Professional Expo in Madrid, Spain.

Ron Ruggless’ experience:

Regional and Senior Editor, Informa Connect’s Nation’s Restaurant News and Restaurant Hospitality (1992 to present)

Features Editor – Dallas Times Herald (1989-1991)

Restaurant Critic and Food Editor – Dallas Times Herald (1987-1988)

Editing Roles – Dallas Times Herald (1982-1987)

Editing Roles – Charlotte (N.C.) Observer (1980-1982)

Editing Roles – Omaha (Neb.) World-Herald (1978-1980)

Email: [email protected]

Social media:

Twitter@RonRuggless

LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/ronruggless

Instagram: @RonRuggless

TikTok: @RonRuggless

 

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