This employer DOES discriminate against individuals with disqbilities, age, and sex. It is owned by a female, and she pays women a higher hourly rate than men. She fires people who have disabilities.
The GM offered a job to a deaf person, and the owner made the GM recind the offer. She pays teenagers and people in their early twenties more money than a 30 year old.
The Papa John's manager claims they never received my order. Even though their store # is showing next to my $94.00 purchase which was charged twice but never got any pizza, If my debit card was invalid why did the charge go through. They ain't keeping no $188 of my money and I didn't get any pizza or drinks I ordered. My bank said they did charge it but reversed it.
I never had this type of problem in the 17 years of ordering pizza at this location. It's a good thing I stopped hitting the submit button or I would have been without all my money. If the Papa John's website declines my order then why did two $94.00 charges went through. The manager isn't being completely honest with me & is refusing to refund my money. So I have to go through all the trouble of calling my card company to get them to stop them from getting my money.
They don't deserve $188. I only order $94 worth of pizza breadsticks and drinks. They better not come and throw pizza all over my property when other customers had to put stop payments from them receiving any money. I do have house cams on my home.
Recently, Papa John's Pizza decided to change the way they calculate my points. I had over 20 points accumulated which is almost enough for a free pizza. But now, instead of points, I suddenly have "papa dough" which, as it turns out is nearly worthless.
Here is how the scam works: The way I expected it to calculate:
I enter an online order for $40.00
I apply my coupon for 50% which makes my total $20.00
I use my $20.00 of "papa dough".
They add tax and delivery fee, so I owe $5.50
The way they rip me off:
I enter an online order for $40.00
They force me to use my my $20.00 of "papa dough" which makes my total $20.00
They apply my coupon for 50% which makes my total $10.00
I ordered an extra large The Works pizza from Papa John's sometime in the winter of this year. I'm going to get the bank to give me a printout, so I can state the specific date. The Papa John's delivery woman came to my home and delivered a large The Works pizza. I ordered it online. I paid for it online. I did not order a large and do consider the large delivered to be a gift. I ordered a extra large, and I'm still waiting for Papa John's to deliver it. I've complained three times. So far no response at all.
I'm a delivery driver for Papa Johns. Iron $8.50 an hour plus tips plus $1.20 per mile. I work 2 weeks about 50 hours and about 300 miles my gross was 791 and my net was $420 for two weeks and nobody there could explain to me why. I would greatly appreciate a call my phone number is thank you. Louis elhalim
Upon receiving a flyer in my mailbox from Papa John's (International, Inc.) on Monday, October 5, 2015, I proceeded to take advantage of the printed promotion being advertised by logging into their site on my computer.
The coupon read as follows:
"50% OFF Regular Menu Price
Large & EXTRA Large
Pizzas
Monday's Only
Online promo code: GIVEME50
LARGE ORIGINAL CRUST
Papa John's (logo) Expires 12/28/15
Coupon required."
After several unsuccessful attempts to use the promo code I gave them (in Harvest, Alabama) a call and spoke to a local manager who said they are "no longer honoring that promotion."
In other words, on the very same day that the promotion was being advertised someone in management decided to re-neg on the published offer.
A second local day manager, consequently, refused to discuss the matter, and a corporate official (in Kentucky) could only patronize me with a limp-wristed response that passed the buck of responsibility onto someone else (who I was told would make contact in 3-5 days).
The moral of this story is: Papa John's says one thing, and does another. Truth in advertising doesn't apply, and back-peddling on advertised promises comes about faster than getting satisfaction from those responsible who authorize what amounts to false advertising.
That they wouldn't honor the original offer, speaks volumes. That I won't make any future purchases from them because of the principle of the thing, speaks louder.
Buyer beware. Papa John's doesn't have to actually honor what they say.
Papa John's Pizza Reviews
This employer DOES discriminate against individuals with disqbilities, age, and sex. It is owned by a female, and she pays women a higher hourly rate than men. She fires people who have disabilities.
The GM offered a job to a deaf person, and the owner made the GM recind the offer. She pays teenagers and people in their early twenties more money than a 30 year old.
The Papa John's manager claims they never received my order. Even though their store # is showing next to my $94.00 purchase which was charged twice but never got any pizza, If my debit card was invalid why did the charge go through. They ain't keeping no $188 of my money and I didn't get any pizza or drinks I ordered. My bank said they did charge it but reversed it.
I never had this type of problem in the 17 years of ordering pizza at this location. It's a good thing I stopped hitting the submit button or I would have been without all my money. If the Papa John's website declines my order then why did two $94.00 charges went through. The manager isn't being completely honest with me & is refusing to refund my money. So I have to go through all the trouble of calling my card company to get them to stop them from getting my money.
They don't deserve $188. I only order $94 worth of pizza breadsticks and drinks. They better not come and throw pizza all over my property when other customers had to put stop payments from them receiving any money. I do have house cams on my home.
Recently, Papa John's Pizza decided to change the way they calculate my points. I had over 20 points accumulated which is almost enough for a free pizza. But now, instead of points, I suddenly have "papa dough" which, as it turns out is nearly worthless.
Here is how the scam works: The way I expected it to calculate:
I enter an online order for $40.00
I apply my coupon for 50% which makes my total $20.00
I use my $20.00 of "papa dough".
They add tax and delivery fee, so I owe $5.50
The way they rip me off:
I enter an online order for $40.00
They force me to use my my $20.00 of "papa dough" which makes my total $20.00
They apply my coupon for 50% which makes my total $10.00
They add tax and delivery fee, so I owe $15.50
Do you see how this is unfair?
I ordered an extra large The Works pizza from Papa John's sometime in the winter of this year. I'm going to get the bank to give me a printout, so I can state the specific date. The Papa John's delivery woman came to my home and delivered a large The Works pizza. I ordered it online. I paid for it online. I did not order a large and do consider the large delivered to be a gift. I ordered a extra large, and I'm still waiting for Papa John's to deliver it. I've complained three times. So far no response at all.
I'm a delivery driver for Papa Johns. Iron $8.50 an hour plus tips plus $1.20 per mile. I work 2 weeks about 50 hours and about 300 miles my gross was 791 and my net was $420 for two weeks and nobody there could explain to me why. I would greatly appreciate a call my phone number is thank you. Louis elhalim
Upon receiving a flyer in my mailbox from Papa John's (International, Inc.) on Monday, October 5, 2015, I proceeded to take advantage of the printed promotion being advertised by logging into their site on my computer.
The coupon read as follows:
"50% OFF Regular Menu Price
Large & EXTRA Large
Pizzas
Monday's Only
Online promo code: GIVEME50
LARGE ORIGINAL CRUST
Papa John's (logo) Expires 12/28/15
Coupon required."
After several unsuccessful attempts to use the promo code I gave them (in Harvest, Alabama) a call and spoke to a local manager who said they are "no longer honoring that promotion."
In other words, on the very same day that the promotion was being advertised someone in management decided to re-neg on the published offer.
A second local day manager, consequently, refused to discuss the matter, and a corporate official (in Kentucky) could only patronize me with a limp-wristed response that passed the buck of responsibility onto someone else (who I was told would make contact in 3-5 days).
The moral of this story is: Papa John's says one thing, and does another. Truth in advertising doesn't apply, and back-peddling on advertised promises comes about faster than getting satisfaction from those responsible who authorize what amounts to false advertising.
That they wouldn't honor the original offer, speaks volumes. That I won't make any future purchases from them because of the principle of the thing, speaks louder.
Buyer beware. Papa John's doesn't have to actually honor what they say.