KC brunch spot closes, says it was ‘collateral damage’ of Westport controversy
A Kansas City brunch restaurant has announced its departure from a Westport space at the center of a $70 million lawsuit alleging racial discrimination in leasing decisions.
Holy Brunch released a statement on social media saying it will no longer operate at 4128 Broadway Blvd., in the former Westport Ale House space. The controversial lawsuit was filed before Holy Brunch opened in the space.
“This building has become something we never imagined and never signed up for,” Holy Brunch’s statement reads in part. “We can handle people screaming into the void to defame our character. But when my safety and my employees’ safety is at risk? That’s where the line is drawn.
“The constant chatter surrounding a lawsuit we are not a part of has created an environment of harassment, intimidation, vandalism and fear … to our business, to our homes and to our personal lives.”
In the comments of the post, Holy Brunch said it would close Wednesday. Owner Drue Stewart was not immediately available for comment .
Westport Ale House closed last year, two years after a shooting at the bar left one person dead and five injured.
Controversy surrounding the space unfurled into a lawsuit after building owner Hal Brody, who is white, entered a tentative agreement with business owner Chris Lee, who is Black, to open a quieter, more upscale concept than its late-night predecessor.
But Brody told The Star in an interview earlier this year that he later learned Lee was marketing the business as a nightclub concept called Ale House West, and their agreement fell apart.
The lawsuit by Lee and other Black business owners claims racial prejudice influenced leasing decisions. Now, talk over whether Westport fosters a “Whites Only” mentality has become widespread online.
U.S. District Judge Roseann Ketchmark in early October approved what amounts to a sweeping expansion of the case, allowing the Black plaintiffs to add a racketeering charge that alleges Westport’s Community Improvement District — the semi-private board that oversees the neighborhood — has operated more like a racist gatekeeper than a civic body.
In the suit, two other businesses — UniKC and The Sourze, LLC — say they’ve been denied leases in Westport for racially discriminatory reasons.
On Monday, local and national civil rights leaders stood in front of Holy Brunch to voice their support in the lawsuit.
Holy Brunch, meanwhile, says it has become “collateral damage” in the controversy.
“Holy Brunch KC was built on love, second chances, and community,” the restaurant said in its post. “It was never meant to be a battleground.”
The restaurant added that it was actively searching for a new location while it holds onto its original, less than 2,000 square foot space at 204 Westport Road.
Stewart opened its Broadway space in July, selling cereal-topped waffles, wings and more.
At the time, Stewart told The Star he planned to open a circus-themed bar called Freak Show in the basement and to convert the Westport Road space into a burrito-centric concept.