The decision to remove Chick-fil-A from Emory University was based solely on student feedback.

David Furhman, Emory Food Service Administration director, The Emory Wheel on March 12, 2013

Karishma Mehrotra is a journalism major at Emory University who is completing an internship with PolitiFact Georgia. She is also an editor at The Emory Wheel but took no part in the Chick-fil-A news coverage.

Emory’s newspaper, The Emory Wheel, reported last month that the university will boot Chick-fil-A off campus this summer.

The move comes after Chick-fil-A President Dan Cathy last year angered supporters of same-sex marriage. David Furhman, the senior director of Emory’s Food Service Administration, told the Wheel that the decision to remove Chick-fil-A was not spurred by the Cathy controversy, but based solely on student feedback.

“What we learned was that there was no great affinity or love for Chick-fil-A,” Furhman said in a March 12 article in the Wheel. “It was more of an affinity or love of the convenience.”

PolitiFact Georgia wondered: Was Emory’s decision triggered solely by focus-group feedback?

And we wanted to know what that feedback included.

The conflict began when Cathy discussed same-sex marriage in a July 2012 interview.

“I think we are inviting God’s judgment on our nation when we shake our fist at Him and say, ‘We know better than you as to what constitutes a marriage,’” Cathy said.

Critics called for boycotts. Supporters organized a “Chick-fil-A Appreciation Day” that packed eateries.

Chick-fil-A, which began in metro Atlanta and is headquartered here, did not respond to an interview request.

Emory groups formally requested the removal of Chick-fil-A after the controversy began. Senior Director and Dean of Campus Life Ajay Nair released a statement saying the university wouldn’t remove the eatery based on Cathy’s comments.

But in February, the university and a student committee called FACE (Food Administration Committee Emory) said they were going to review all campus food venues, including Chick-fil-A.

Furhman told the Wheel that the review predated the controversy. But both student co-chairs of FACE said the review plan began when Furhman joined Emory in January.

Furhman referred all inquiries to Campus Communications.

One student co-chair of the food committee, Karoline Porcello, told the Wheel the restaurant’s values were a contributing, but not deciding factor in its removal. In an email, Porcello clarified that those values referred to “human development values” such as physical well-being, not political values.

After PolitiFact Georgia reached out to Campus Communications, Porcello said: “We’ve received strict instructions by Emory to no longer comment on the issue.”

Michael Sacks, another co-chair, said the removal was not political.

The process reviewed each venue according to six criteria, including consistency with the campus life department’s core values and survey data.

The committee held open monthly meetings and focus groups with more than 30 volunteer attendees who answered FACE’s questions. In all three of the monthly meeting documents on the FACE website, Chick-fil-A was not mentioned.

Sacks sent over three of the four focus groups’ minutes. He said that he was told that the last meeting “did not present much opportunity for note-taking.”

The three focus group minutes didn’t conclusively show a distaste for Chick-fil-A.

Porcello said some focus group members wanted to remove Chick-fil-A for health reasons and that some said they only liked the convenience of the venue. The documents provided to PolitiFact Georgia didn’t confirm those claims. Porcello didn’t respond to requests to do so.

In March, the food committee put three floor plans up for a vote. None included Chick-fil-A or Pizza Hut. Sacks said that decision was based on the focus groups.

Dena Smith, Emory’s senior communication officer, sent PolitiFact a link to a March 12 Campus Life statement indicating that Emory would announce a final Chick-fil-A decision soon. She said Emory would consider FACE’s input, which does not include “a chicken restaurant.”

PolitiFact contacted 15 Emory political science professors for a comment. None wanted to weigh in on the controversy.

Kennesaw State University political science professor Kerwin Swint says that it is difficult to believe that the decision wasn’t political.

“I’m not saying that it isn’t true,” Swint said, “But I work on a college campus … and I can tell you that Chick-fil-A is probably the most popular dining option (on my campus).”

Our conclusion:

An Emory administrator said that a proposal to remove Chick-fil-A from a campus dining hall was not politically motivated but was instead based on focus groups. Campus officials have offered conflicting statements about Chick-fil-A’s future.

PolitiFact rules require the person making the statement to provide the proof to back it up. Furhman and Emory failed to do so.

There apparently was an objective process that reviewed all food vendors, but only incomplete documentation was provided. That documentation didn’t confirm any of the sources’ claims. And the final redesign plan doesn’t indicate the committee was concentrating on health concerns. It wants to remove Chick-fil-A, but plans call for a proposed pizza and pasta joint and expanded Mexican food areas. Not exactly healthy alternatives.

We rated the claim Half True.