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In late 2011, the company moved its main corporate office from Cypress to Irvine. In early 2012, the chain closed its store in Newbury Park, California, although this was a different location in Newbury Park than the original site of the first Baja Fresh. [14] On April 5, 2012, David Kim stepped down from his position as company CEO.
Calico; California Pizza Kitchen; Callaway Golf Company; CamelBak; Cannabis Science; CapitalG; Carbon Lighthouse; Carbon Sciences; CareFusion; CASA 0101; Cathay Bank
Rubios in the California Bay Area after the 2024 shutdowns. Rubio's locations in Utah were closed in 2019. [citation needed] [original research?] In June 2020, Rubio's Coastal Grill told Nation's Restaurant News about the closure of all their Florida and Colorado store locations, a total of twelve, due to the negative business impact of the coronavirus pandemic.
Meyer Corporation is a cookware distributor based in Vallejo, California, United States, whose parent company is Hong Kong-based Meyer Manufacturing Co. Ltd. It is the largest cookware distributor in the United States and second largest in the world. [citation needed] The company was founded in 1981. [1]
The Magic Pan logo, ca 1970s Guest Receipt from 1975. The Magic Pan is a small American chain of fast-food and take-away creperies using the recipes of a now-closed chain of full-service restaurants that specialized in crêpes, popular in the early 1970s through early 1990s, which peaked at 110 Magic Pan locations [when?] throughout the United States and Canada.
Former employers of note include the State of California Health Department (900 in 1988, 600 in 2001), now the California Department of Public Health and the California Department of Health Care Services. [8] [9]
This Santa Ana wind event will peak in strength late Tuesday into early Wednesday and deliver widespread wind gusts of 30 to 45 mph, with isolated gusts to 55 mph in parts of Southern California.
Ray Danner, the Nashville Shoney's franchisee purchased the company in 1971 and five years later dropped Big Boy from the company name. [ 229 ] [ note 20 ] In April 1984 Shoney's—by then the largest Big Boy franchisee with 392 units—paid $13 million to break its contract with Big Boy, allowing expansion into Frisch's and other franchisees ...