14 years worth of North Canton restaurant’s dollar bills go to hurricane relief

NORTH CANTON, Ohio — A North Canton restaurant is turning a longtime tradition into a way to help victims of Hurricane Ian. With customer approval, Eadies Fish House plans to donate the dollar bills it’s accumulated on its walls over 14 years.

“People have been putting dollars on our walls and creating little artworks, their names, little sayings on their dollars and hanging them on the walls,” said owner Rudy Diotale, explaining the tradition began with a customer who saw similar decor at bars and restaurants in Florida.

The bills’ homage to vacations in the Sunshine State fit the restaurant’s existing theme. Eadies is known to its customer base for its cod and walleye.

“There’s no other seafood places like this here,” gushed customer Nelda Hardie. “If you come here and don’t eat, it’s a shame.”

Diotale also curated eclectic decorations, like tiki carvings, license plates and cheeky signs, from his many trips to Pine Island and Matlacha off the coast of Cape Coral, Florida. He plans to retire to the waterfront home he purchased there with his wife.

“A lot of the aesthetics in the restaurant were inspired by Pine Island and Matlacha,” he said. “It’s an old fishing village. You don’t see hotels or condos – it’s kind of old world Florida.”

Diotale’s most recent trip to southwest Florida was several weeks after Hurricane Ian barreled across the region, destroying homes, businesses and entire communities.

RELATED: Hurricane Ian barrels across Florida, leaving destruction, flooding and power outages

“It’s unbelievable. I think my mouth was hanging open when I saw the destruction. There were roads that were gone and businesses that were blown off their pilings that were built over the water,” he recalled.

He felt compelled to help. And his restaurant had already been collecting the funds on its walls.

“I didn’t feel that the dollars were mine, I felt they were the customers’ that put them up there,” he said. “So we did a little poll and asked everyone what they thought of it. It was overwhelmingly positive, so we went from there.”

The process of collecting, organizing and donating the money has proved more challenging than originally thought. Diotale said it took his staff days to meticulously remove around 5,000 bills and organize them in neat piles of $100. The bank was unable to accept some of the more artistic dollars where markings have obscured serial numbers.

“They haven’t counted all of them yet, but about 10-15% of the bills are unreadable,” he explained. “So we’re trying to figure out some way to clean them so we can use them.”

The restaurant has been researching and crowdsourcing methods to clean the dollars.

“It just absorbs the ink. So it’s hard to get out without scraping the serial numbers off with it,” Diotale said. “We’ve tried chemicals with no luck. And we’re trying a few other different things. We have some other ideas that people threw out there that we’re going to try.”

He’s looking for a solution so he can maximize the donation to his home away from home.

“We spent a lot of time on the island, we know a lot of people on the island. It’s just kind of a hit home to us,” he said.

Eadies Fish House is still collecting funds for victims of Hurricane Ian. Donations can be dropped off in person at the restaurant at 6616 Wise Ave. NW in North Canton. You can also donate through a GoFundMe page by clicking on this link.

Diotale plans to continue the tradition of pinning the dollar bills to the walls and ceilings and says they may be used for another worthy cause down the line.

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Health inspector shares restaurant deal breakers

A health inspector shared her list of deal breakers when it comes to dining out at restaurants, and her guidelines sparked a discussion in the comments about other restaurant red flags.

“I’ve seen a lot,” a TikToker and health inspector who goes by the username Too Far North (@toofar_north) wrote in the caption for a video in which she shares her list of factors that turn her off to certain restaurants. Not only did viewers find her helpful guidelines, but her rules also got people talking about other dining indiscretions.

The clip features a montage of places the restaurant health inspector avoids, starting with buffets.

While some of the red flags listed are obvious, such as places with dirty bathrooms, others might come as a surprise, such as restaurants with huge menus.

Last but not least, establishments where the staff seem unhappy is another deal breaker. Further breaking down her rules in the comments, the woman states that “buffets are unsanitary” and germs can easily spread.

She continues, noting that a dirty bathroom is a sign of a dirty kitchen, while an extensive menu is the code for “lots of cheap frozen food.” Plus, if most of the staff seem unhappy working there, chances are the owners aren’t great.

“I couldn’t agree more”

Viewers, including many restaurant professionals, took to the comments to share their thoughts on the protocol.

“I believe that buffets are like a training course for my gut resilience,” one user joked.

“Bartender of eight years here, and I couldn’t agree more, especially [about] the staff. It shows good management, aka a good restaurant,” commented one seasoned professional.

“Huge menus have always been a turn off for me. How can they serve all of that variety fresh?” one TikToker remarked.

If you ever need the incentive to cook more meals at home, this video and the comments just might do the trick.

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The 21 Digital Disruptors Shaping Restaurants in 2022

Rom Krupp

Founder and CEO, OneDine

The year was 2018. Rom Krupp cleared the table and got dystopian for a moment. What if the restaurant industry never existed? Could a tech company approach food as an all-new sector? Krupp not only thought it was feasible, but fundamental to where consumers were taking restaurants. An industry built on guts was beginning to understand the value of data, as Krupp’s 2012-founded Marketing Vitals was proving out. But the next great disruption was unfurling within the structure of restaurants themselves. “The industry that we’re going to build will serve people food the way food is being served today,” says Krupp.

This was the starting point for OneDine, a company that’s web capabilities out into a lot of areas. At its center, though, it’s a platform that supercharges existing POS systems to enable contactless ordering and payment, to optimize labor, eliminate fraudulent chargebacks, and create a “triple-win for servers, managers, and guests alike,” the company says.

What Krupp, who has been in the business for 26 years, is recognized as having a lack of agility among POS devices.

As he explains it, “a ground-up rewrite of looking at the restaurant industry as a brand-new industry. Not one trying to adopt all of the things that have been adopted for the last 40 years.”

Krupp doesn’t believe restaurants need a brick-and-mortar tech stack anymore. Consider a project OneDine recently tackled. It completed a baseball stadium setup—23 concession stands, eight kiosks, 12 handhelds for VIP suites, 7,000 QR codes, and 180 pickup cubbies. But the key was OneDine did so without installing a single piece of software in the building. Everything runs from secure browsers.

“Cloud-based POS are not really cloud-based POS, they’re cloud-based databases,” says Krupp, “which means the POS is running locally but the database is running in the cloud; but there’s software running in the building. That means you have to upgrade it, version control it. We don’t. Even the software is running as a web service. So there’s nothing really deploying to the field. And that’s a brand-new way to look in the industry, which is you don’t need actual software to run the physical locations.”

OneDine early on created handheld tablets that interfaced with a merchant’s existing tech stack. It was a solution focused on labor and creating a contactless and efficient ordering and payment process for servers and diners. It established PCI and EMV compliance and eliminated fraudulent chargebacks.

However, this was just an opening shot. OneDine expanded to incorporate additional contactless payment technology, mobile menu browsing, and curbside order and payment options to help restaurants generate off-premises revenue. AI surveys, guest preference tracking, and offer management eventually made their way into OneDine’s 360-degree solution as well. It then expanded to accommodate multi-merchant venues (like malls), hotels, airports, retail establishments, and event venues, such as the stadium case.

In Krupp’s two-plus decades working with restaurants—he spent 16 years with Custom Business Solutions before Marketing Vitals—he’s seen the space evolve from POS’ infancy in 1996 to now. And what’s happened since, he says, is commerce has become increasingly decentralized. That began in the early 2000s as online ordering arrived. Krupp himself was involved in launching the integrated system for Jason’s Deli from the internet into the POS in 2000.

Restaurants quickly had different channels for online ordering and different ones for digital menus. It was an OK concept when that slice of business represented a “few percentage points here and there,” says Krupp. But in 2018, the world had morphed to 30–50 percent of sales for countless brands sector-wide.

So given how many transactions are now decentralized, the amount of effort it was taking operators to manage commerce ballooned into a massive, and often messy, undertaking.

“Because everything was still anchored in the POS systems,” says Krupp, “and the POS system was built to run the brick-and-mortar; they were never built to run kind of an Amazon concept. An ecommerce concept. Commerce is not only happening on multiple channels for you as a brand that you can control—commerce was also happening on channels you couldn’t control.”

Krupp is referencing streams like third-party marketplaces and Google ordering.

Again, going back to the idea of ​​OneDine, Krupp says he didn’t look at the industry’s evolution only through the lens of labor. There were a bevy of solutions working to help restaurants maintain new channels and improve flow.

Krupp says efficiencies in throttling and quoting times, and just managing kitchens in general, flashed on the horizon. “When you have multiple commerce channels, POS, on-premises, off-premises, third-party, not only do you have six or seven vendors to do commerce, but how do they know to quote the delivery driver the right timing and not effect negatively the people who showed up in the building and

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