Special Eats has grown from 16 employees in 2022 to 76, with a dessert truck already added, a wood-fired pizza truck coming and a brick-and-mortar Tucson restaurant planned later this year.
The expansion targets a shortage of integrated, competitive-wage jobs for neurodivergent adults and people with developmental disabilities, and demand is strong enough that the business now has an applicant waitlist.
Routine-based kitchen design, a simplified menu and job rotation across prep, trucks, shopping and creative work let employees build skills while accommodating medical, behavioral and sensory needs.
That model has also produced broader gains: some workers have moved into other restaurant jobs, while managers say the structured setting has improved communication, morale and retention in a high-turnover industry.