Rubio’s files for bankruptcy days after closing 48 restaurants in California

By Lori Weisberg | San Diego Union-Tribune

Rubio’s Coastal Grill, which began in San Diego more than 40 years ago and once boasted close to 200 restaurants, announced Wednesday it is filing for bankruptcy protection with the goal of selling the business.

In a news release issued by the company’s public relations firm, Rubio’s said its existing 86 restaurants will remain operating while the Chapter 11 bankruptcy process proceeds.

Also see: Rubio’s closes 48 restaurants in California, citing ‘business climate’

This latest filing marks the second one in a span of less than four years, and comes just days after Rubio’s abruptly closed 48 of its restaurants in California.

The company, which hired the Los Angeles-based crisis management public relations firm Sitrick and Co., declined to provide specifics on which restaurants closed. But former employees provided a list of the most recent Southern California closures on Reddit:

All of Rubio’s restaurants in Northern California closed as well.

Nicholas Rubin, the company’s chief restructuring officer, called Rubio’s “one of the legendary fast casual chains.”

“Despite the company’s best efforts to right-size the company, the continued challenging economic conditions have negatively impacted its ability to meet the demands of its debt burden,” he said in a statement provided to the San Diego Union-Tribune. “The company believes the best path forward for Rubio’s is through a court-supervised sale process that will position the brand for long-term success to grow and flourish.”

Rubin said its existing lender has agreed to provide debtor financing and has enough liquidity to continue operating the restaurants during the sale process.

As it did several days ago, Rubio’s blamed its declining performance on what it said is the difficulty in doing business in California, where a recent wage hike to $20 an hour recently went into effect for fast food workers at larger chains.

A number of fast food chains have already raised prices in response to the wage increase, while others are taking a wait-and-see approach.

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