FIRED FOR BEING SICK: WESTAR FOODS AND THE PRICE OF DISABILITY
The Non-Financial Ledger
Tonya Huber, a fast-food industry veteran of fifteen years, needed two simple things to manage her diabetes at her job: a room-temperature place to store her life-saving insulin and time to eat a meal. As a store manager for a Westar Foods-operated Hardee’s, working 50-hour weeks, these were not luxuries. They were necessities.
When she asked her first district manager, Matt Thayer, for help finding a storage spot away from the ninety-degree kitchen, he dismissed her. His response, according to court records, was cold and absolute: “That’s a [you] problem, not a [me] problem.”
When a new district manager, Cindy Kelchen, took over, Huber asked again. Kelchen’s suggestion was to put the insulin in the freezer. When Huber explained a freezer was not room temperature, Kelchen’s help ended there: “Then I don’t know what to tell you.” When Huber asked for help managing her schedule to get a meal break, she was told to get better at time management. This wasn’t just poor management; it was a complete disregard for a person’s health.
She “felt out of it” and did not know who or where she was. She realized she needed to go to work but then forgot and became confused…
The inevitable crisis hit on the morning of December 20, 2019. Huber woke up with dangerously low blood sugar, a state of hypoglycemia that left her confused and disoriented. She was so incapacitated she doesn’t remember making multiple incoherent phone calls to her son and boyfriend. Eventually, she managed to drive to a doctor’s office, where she was sedated and put on an IV.
While Huber was fighting to stabilize her health, her boss, Cindy Kelchen, was focused on one thing: the unopened store. When Huber finally woke up the next morning, still ill, she immediately called Kelchen. The response was not concern. It was rage. Kelchen’s voice was so loud that Huber’s boyfriend, asleep in the next room, was woken up by the yelling. Five times, Kelchen demanded to know why Huber hadn’t made a “simple phone call.” The company’s final decision was made right after that call. The message was clear: your medical crisis is your policy violation.
Legal Receipts
Westar Foods’ official story is that they fired Tonya Huber for violating the company’s call-in policy. The termination letter itself provides the evidence of their mindset. It argues that because Huber was able to drive and call family members, she was capable of notifying the company.
…because Huber was “driving and in contact with [her] son” on the day of her diabetic episode, she “should have been able to provide notification of [her] absences to the Company . . . or at the very least prior to [her] scheduled shift on Saturday, December 21.”
This statement ignores the documented medical reality of a hypoglycemic episode: confusion, memory loss, and bizarre behavior. It frames a medical symptom as a deliberate act of insubordination.
The company also flatly denied her rights under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). After the incident, Huber requested FMLA paperwork four separate times. She was ignored or rebuffed by HR representative Amy Rowe. Westar’s termination letter addressed her FMLA request directly, rejecting it based on the same flawed logic.
Kelchen did not understand or believe that Huber could not have called, especially when she was able to call her boyfriend and son and drive herself to the doctor’s office. During the conversation, Kelchen asked Huber five times why she did not make a “simple phone call” to inform Westar about her absence.
The court record shows that Westar claims it didn’t know about Huber’s diabetes until after the decision to fire her was made. But Kelchen’s own notes from her call with Huber—taken immediately before she called the company owner to get Huber fired—state the absence was because “her levels of her diabetic [sic] was off.” A reasonable person can see the truth: they knew she was sick, and they fired her because of it.
Societal Impact Mapping
Public Health
This case is a textbook example of how corporate policy can directly threaten employee health. By denying basic accommodations for insulin storage and meal breaks, Westar Foods created an environment where a manageable chronic condition could escalate into a full-blown medical emergency. The subsequent punishment for that emergency sends a chilling message to every worker with a disability: your health is secondary to company procedure. This puts workers in the impossible position of choosing between their job and their well-being.
Economic Inequality
Tonya Huber had 15 years of experience in her industry. She worked a demanding 50-hour-a-week management job. In an instant, that was all gone. Westar’s decision didn’t just cost Huber a paycheck; it stripped a veteran employee of her livelihood over a health crisis she couldn’t control. This demonstrates the immense power imbalance between a multi-location corporation and its employees. The company holds the power to terminate employment, healthcare, and financial stability based on a supervisor’s disbelief and lack of compassion.
The “Cost of a Life” Metric
What Now?
The Eighth Circuit Court’s decision means Tonya Huber will get her day in court. But the system that allowed this to happen remains. The people involved in this decision need to be watched.
Corporate Roster
- Owner and President: Frank Westermajer
- District Manager: Cindy Kelchen
- Former District Manager: Matt Thayer
- HR Representative: Amy Rowe
Regulatory Watchlist
- Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC): The federal agency responsible for enforcing laws against workplace discrimination, including the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
- Department of Labor: Responsible for enforcing the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), which Westar is accused of interfering with.
The Resistance
Accountability does not come from the top down. It is built from the ground up. Know your rights under the ADA and FMLA. Document every interaction with management regarding medical conditions and accommodation requests. Support local worker centers and fast-food unionization efforts that give employees the collective power to fight back against this kind of abuse. A single person fighting a corporation is a lawsuit; many people fighting together is a movement.
The source document for this investigation is attached below.
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