LongIslandCouple said:In my opinion, CMs are very aware of religious headwear - including turbans & yarmulkes, and they can recognize the difference between those items and say, a Yankees baseball hat.
First, for most Jews there is no specific requirement for any specific type of head covering. A Yankees baseball hat is just as valid as a crocheted kipah or a Shtriemel. Unless Disney has recently decided to be the arbiter of Jewish religious practices, that is not their decision to make.
Second, this policy is new, since I last had a reservation at California Grill. In addition, I myself was not dressed according to this dress code (I was wearing a black t-shirt with a logo on it and nothing was said to me) nor were many others adhering to it (there were quite a few t-shirt-wearing people in the restaurant).
If the OP would have respected that any had his guest adhere to the policy, then his guest wouldn't have been asked 5 times to remove his hat. If the guest was wearing a baseball cap in leiu of another more suitable alternative that would conform to the specified dress code, then he has no right no complain if he is asked to remove it.
Actually, if the first Cast Member had said: "I understand your religious convictions, but we cannot allow you to enter our restaurant wearing baseball hat." You would have a point. At that point, we would either have left or asked to speak to a manager. Once they chose to let us enter, they knew what they were getting and no longer had that right. In fact, that the manager did not ask us to leave, but instead said: "I did not know that someone had already asked you about it." means that it was acceptable to him as a religious head covering.
As I noted earlier, by the time the manager came to speak to us there had to have been a minimum of 3 cast members to whom we had already spoken (check-in, elevator, waiter). In the best interpretation, he just did not bother to go ask anyone what had happened before asking us. The other two options were that he does not expect any of his staff to enforce policies or that he did find out, but chose to hassle us any way.
Finally, even Bridget Sherren, General Manager of California Grill disagrees with you. As I noted in my original post, although she never really apologized, she did not that she was surprised as she herself had told the first Cast member that asked her about it (the one from the elevator) that this was acceptable.
Perhaps, if the OP had followed the recommendations and secured an ADR, they could have been reminded of the dress code and avoided their "problems".
- Ken
If California Grill wishes to require advance reservations to sit in their bar, they have every right to prevent people from going to their bar without them. They do not seem to have that policy. For me to be "reminded" of their dress code, would mean that I had to know about their dress code in advance. From what I have since discovered, this dress code applies to Jiko, Artist's Point and other places that I have eaten in many times since it was instituted. Given that when I am walking around the parks I rarely wear anything more formal than a t-shirt and I usually wear a hat, and that I have eaten at Jiko at least 10 times over the last year (I love their mac and cheese as well as their fish) and I was not even aware that this policy existed (and as I said, I was not even wearing proper attire that evening), it seems clear that this policy is not enforced with any uniformity, which makes me wonder even more why they were concerned about my colleague's hat but no other violations.
/carmi