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News / Clark County News

At Portland restaurant, you’ll pay what you wish

Panera Cares community cafe will be 'a test for humanity'

The Columbian
Published: January 13, 2011, 12:00am

Panera Bread, 915 S.E. 164th Ave. in east Vancouver, will continue as a for-profit restaurant, a company spokesman said Wednesday night.

PORTLAND — Panera Bread Co. will open a nonprofit restaurant Monday in Portland where customers can pay what they wish for food.

It’s the third Panera Cares community cafe for the company and its first West Coast location.

Panera opened community cafes last year in Clayton, Mo., and Dearborn, Mich. The restaurants are owned and operated by a nonprofit arm of the national restaurant chain, which receives no profit from the business.

Panera Bread, 915 S.E. 164th Ave. in east Vancouver, will continue as a for-profit restaurant, a company spokesman said Wednesday night.

“In some ways, it is a test for humanity,” said Ron Shaich, founder of Panera who launched the concept for the company. “Will people step up and help each other or will they take advantage?”

So far, people have stepped up. Panera said about 20 percent of the visitors to the cafes leave more than the suggested amount, 20 percent leave less and 60 percent pay what is suggested.

Those who are not able to pay anything do not have to, but the cafe suggests they volunteer their time in support of the organization.

“This is not about a handout,” Shaich said. “This is about a hand up, and every one of us has a need for that at some point in our lives.”

There are a number of other independent community kitchen formats already in existence around the country such as those in Denver and Salt Lake City. Panera, however, is one of the first chain restaurants to make the leap.

The company is converting a Panera restaurant in the Hollywood area into the community cafe format. Panera looked at several potential sites around the country but said that it felt the “sensibility” of Portland suited the project. The company also tries to place restaurants in economically diverse neighborhoods that can support the format.

If there is excess revenue, Shaich said it will be reinvested in the community, such as using the cafe as a work-training site for at-risk youth.

“I think the people of Portland will do the right thing,” he said.

Shaich said he would like to open more community cafes but must see first if the existing sites prove self-sustainable.

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