Golden State Foods (GSF) is a US wholly management-owned and -run[4] business-to-business[5] foodservice company that primarily serves McDonald's. Through a joint venture with Taylor Fresh Foods Inc.,[6][7]: 213 GSF is one of the biggest and longest-serving suppliers to McDonald's restaurants,[8] including liquid products, and it is McDonald's third-largest beef supplier in the U.S. market.[9][10] The company manufacturers, supplies and delivers food to restaurants such as McDonald's, Starbucks, Chick-fil-A, KFC and Taco Bell.[5]
The company was founded in 1947[11] by Bill (William) Moore and Frank Streeter and began as a small meat company to supply products to Los Angeles area restaurants and hotels. It is a 100% management-owned and -operated company.[11] In the early 1950s, it started providing meat products to McDonald's Corporation.[12]
On June 12, 1984, GSF employee Samuel Vasquez, 22 years old, was ground to death by a meat grinder in Golden State Foods' City of Industry, California facility when his coworker turned on the machine while he was inside.[13][14][15] "The blender amputated his foot and legs, ripped his chest open, tore out his heart and caused both lungs to collapse." according to investigators.[16] The machine was able to turn on due to the failure of Golden State Foods to practice lockout–tagout procedures mandated by safety regulations.[17][18] Their practice was to clean with the machine running as it was slightly easier.[19] California OSHA and the Los Angeles County District Attorney filed a criminal charge against the company over this matter.[20][21][22] Golden State Foods pleaded no contest to the criminal charge.[14]
In 1998, GSF was acquired by Wetterau Associates, a St. Louis-based investment group led by the CEO Mark Wetterau and The Yucaipa Companies with the latter as the majority stakeholder.[4] At that time, GSF was valued at $1.4 billion.[5]
Chef Gold was launched in 2000 to produce liquid products, such as ketchup and mustard, and cooked meat products for a variety of customers. In the same year, GSF formed a self-serving subsidiary called Centralized Leasing Company (CLC) to provide GSF with leasing services. In 2002 Signature Services was launched to offer customized services such as store painting, lot striping, power washing and landscaping. In partnership with The Arthur Wells Group in St. Louis; GSF formed CFM Logistics to help clients with their freight distribution needs. By 2017, the company serviced approximately 25,000 restaurants.[11]
Prior to 2000, the entirety of GSF's revenue came from McDonald's. With the expansion of its customer base, by 2006, the company's dependency on McDonald's was reduced to 80%.[23] The vice president of distribution said in 2006 that they choose their new customers in such a way to avoid upsetting McDonald's.[23]
GSF established the GSF Foundation, a nonprofit organization, in 2002 to provide support to children and families in need through volunteering and donations.[24]
In 2004, Golden State Foods became a 100% management-owned and operated company with the acquisition of 50.3% of the company that was owned by Yucaipa Companies.[4]
Four GSF distribution centers received awards for food safety in 2004.[25]
In 2006, Quality Custom Distribution (QCD) was formed as a subsidiary of GSF. As of February 2020, QCD delivered supplies to over 7,500 stores, including Starbucks, Chipotle Mexican Grill and Chick-fil-A.[26]
In 2009, an employee was crushed and killed by a robotic palletizer at GSF's City of Industry Plant.[27][28][29] The company pleaded guilty to a felony violation of machinery lockout-tagout and fined $2 million.[30] Additionally, the company pleaded guilty to violating California Labor Code 6425 in January 2013 for "the willful violation of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations § 3314(h)".[31][32] The manager responsible was convicted of a misdemeanor and placed on a probation.[32]
In May 2012, a 60-foot truck operated by Dawayne Eacret employed by GSF / Quality Custom Distribution (QCD) killed a bicyclist Kathryn Rickson while making a right turn in downtown Portland, Oregon. The family and GSF settled a subsequent lawsuit on the eighth day of a civil trial, with GSF agreeing to give $700,000 to the family.[33]
In November 2012, GSF acquired KanPak China, a manufacturing company for customers in the quick-service restaurant industry.[34][35] GSF then acquired KanPak U.S. the next year.[36][37] In 2013, GSF sold its Rochester, New York distribution facility to another McDonald's supplier, Anderson-DuBose Co.[38]
GSF's QCD subsidiary acquired restaurant supplier Mile Hi Specialty Foods, which served approximately 1,000 stores.[39] in November 2016.[40] GSF formed QCD Rocky Mountain LLC to run the unit.[39] QCD opened a new facility in Fontana, California, dedicated to servicing Starbucks stores in July 2018.[41] In March 2019, GSF opened a 165,000-square-foot meat processing plant in Opelika, Alabama.[42] Forbes named GSF in its "Blockchain 50" list in April 2019 for its tracking of food safety data across its supply chain.[43][44] QCD opened a distribution center, in Salt Lake City, in June 2019.[45]
In late 2019, GSF's QCD moved its headquarters to Frisco, Texas and acquired four warehouses in the Midwest and Northeast regions in February 2020, becoming Starbucks' top supplier[46] These four warehouses opened for business between March and September, 2020.[47]
On June 1, 2020, during a protest against police brutality in Portland, Maine, a tractor trailer driver for GSF's Quality Custom Distribution slowly drove into a crowd of protesters following a delivery.[48][49] The driver was arrested on a felony charge of reckless conduct with a dangerous weapon.[50][51][52]
In July 2020, GSF's City of Industry, California facility was closed by the health department after failing to report an outbreak of 43 cases of COVID-19 to the health department as required.[53] The facility reopened less than 24 hours later.[54]
In June 2023, Brian Dick became the president/COO to replace former CEO Mark Wettreau who died in May 2023.[55] Wettreau was the CEO for 25 years.[56]
GSF entered the baked goods business by forming a joint venture with Bryan, Texas-based Mid South Bakery. The baked products are distributed to customers in the Southeastern United States.
The company reports it exports products to more than 40 countries.[57] GSF's Australian group, supplies produce to KFC, Taco Bell and Pizza Hut. The company also owns a food processing and distribution center in Egypt, through which it provides processing and distribution services in the Middle East.
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: CS1 maint: others (link)Golden State Foods Corp. is one of the largest and longest-serving suppliers to McDonald's,
It is now the largest supplier of liquid products and third-largest beef supplier to McDonald's in the USA
he slipped and fell into a heavy-duty meat grinder in the City of Industry. Samuel Vasquez, 22, died instantly in the whirling blades
Vasquez was working inside a meat blender big enough to turn four or five sides of beef into hamburger at one time. He was cleaning the cutting blade, a circular ribbon of steel more than six feet long. Vasquez had just begun scrubbing when a co-worker, thinking the blender was empty, flipped a switch and turned it on. Vasquez's employer, Golden State Foods of Los Angeles, eventually pleaded no content to a criminal charge of violating a state job-safety standard.
Samuel Vasquez, 22, of West Covina was killed about 1 a.m. at the Golden State Foods Corp. plant, said Los Angeles County sheriffs Sgt. Steve Finley.
In Golden State Foods, an employee was literally ground up in a meat blender when he went in, as was part of their regular practice, to clean out meat stuck at the bottom.
People v. Golden State Foods, No. 31386211 (June 11, 1985) (prosecution for violation of California lockout requirements intended to prevent machine operation during cleaning, which resulted in death of an individual who was caught in a meat grinder).
Golden State Foods was ordered to pay $2 million in fines, penalties and restitution after pleading guilty to a felony violation of machinery lockout regulations that resulted in the robotic crushing death of a female employee in 2009. The company was required to establish a $125,000 college trust fund for the victim's young daughter.
Golden State Foods Corp was a case where a machine operator was fatally crushed by a robotic palletizer. Golden State Foods pled guilty to one criminal violation under Labor Code 6425, and they were required to make equipment safe, pay a $250,000 restitution, and a fine of $450,000 The responsible manager was convicted of a misdemeanor and was placed on a one-year probation with a requirement to pay the victim's family $10,000.
Health officials allowed the company's plant to reopen within 24 hours once it updated its reports.