Texas State student Griffin Fisher reads a notice posted outside Alvin Ords in San Marcos on April 14, 2026, stating the restaurant is temporarily closed for an “unknown period of time” due to unforeseen circumstances.
Nicholas Hernandez/MySA
In the days following Easter weekend, a longtime San Marcos sandwich shop became the center of allegations after an anonymous Facebook post accused its partial owner of creating a hostile work environment.
Within hours, the now-deleted Facebook post spread through local social media threads and Texas State University circles, drawing hundreds of comments and turning Alvin Ord’s, a longtime fixture near campus, into a point of scrutiny by Sunday, April 12.
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The post alleged that minority-owner Steve Martin verbally harassed and intimidated employees, including managers and fostered a workplace environment described by staff as fearful and degrading. It also claimed that ownership projected a public image that did not match day-to-day conditions inside the restaurant.
By midweek, former employees say the shop’s entire staff of roughly 15 workers resigned within days, bringing operations to a sudden halt and leaving shifts uncovered.
A notice posted outside Alvin Ords in San Marcos on April 14, 2026, announces the restaurant’s temporary closure for an “unknown period of time” due to unforeseen circumstances.
Nicholas Hernandez/MySA
A social media post last week from the shop’s Instagram account announced and confirmed the departure of its staff, dubbed the “graduating class of 2026,” while expressing gratitude for years of support and criticizing ownership, leaving the restaurant’s future uncertain.
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The restaurant is now temporarily closed. A printed notice on the door states it is shut down for an “unknown period of time” due to unforeseen circumstances. No reopening timeline has been announced. What began as a single post has since expanded into competing accounts from former employees, ownership denials, and a rapid operational collapse of one of San Marcos’ longest-running eateries.
A workplace tension years in the making, employees say
Former employees say the events leading to the mass resignation did not begin online, but inside the restaurant long before the post appeared. Some describe a workplace dynamic that stretched back more than a decade, where tension was steady, predictable, and eventually normalized as part of the job.
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One longtime male employee, who worked there for more than a decade and asked to remain anonymous, told MySA the core issue was Steve Martin’s behavior toward staff. He described frequent yelling, rigid rules that changed without warning, and an atmosphere where employees adjusted their behavior to avoid confrontation.
“Everyone was walking on eggshells,” he said.
He alleges that conflicts were not isolated incidents, but part of daily operations that shaped how the restaurant functioned. The breaking point, he claimed, came during an early April lunch rush when a disagreement over routine operations escalated into shouting and what he described as physical intimidation.
He said he quit on the spot in front of employees and customers. In the immediate aftermath, he claims owner Bill Martin initially agreed that Steve Martin would step away from working inside the restaurant. Employees say a meeting was held and a temporary agreement was reached in an effort to stabilize operations. But within days, that understanding unraveled.
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Customers enjoy a weekday lunch at Alvin Ord’s in San Marcos.
Nicholas Hernandez/MySA
“The Salvation,” a fan-favorite at Alvin Ord’s, layers ham, salami, cheddar, mozzarella, parmesan, lettuce, tomato, onion and mustard on fresh-baked bread.
Nicholas Hernandez/MySA
According to the longtime employee, Bill reversed course — a decision employees say marked the beginning of the end. Several workers described the aftermath as abrupt. Shifts went uncovered, messages went unanswered, and staff stopped coming in. The longtime worker said employees had already reached the same conclusion independently.
“ I wouldn’t say it was a planned walkout,” he explained. “Everyone was just like, ‘Oh, this is gonna be absolutely terrible.”
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He then claimed there was a “huge issue with abuse” and “everyone got tired of it” to the degree that they gave up their income.
An individual who identified themselves as Steve’s stepdaughter later made separate allegations of abuse in a social media post, expanding the claims surrounding the business and drawing additional public attention.
The exterior of Alvin Ords sits closed on April 14, 2026, in San Marcos, Texas after the longtime sandwich shop announced a temporary shutdown.
Nicholas Hernandez/MySA
Former employees recount experiences at Alvin Ords in San Marcos
Former employees say complaints were rarely formalized because staff assumed nothing would change. Instead, employees adjusted daily routines to avoid confrontation, sometimes warning new hires about what would trigger conflict.
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“With new people, I would tell them, ‘Don’t go back for bread … Just say we’re out. Because if you go back there at the wrong time, you’re going to get screamed at.'”
A female employee, who worked there for several years and asked to remain anonymous, claimed that the adjustment happened quickly for new employees: “You’re kind of indoctrinated into this.”
Following the March departure of a previous bread maker, Steve Martin’s presence at the restaurant reportedly increased, with former employees saying he shifted from working occasional Saturdays to being in the kitchen roughly four days a week. Martin, who is around 70 years old, had previously maintained a more limited schedule, according to staff accounts.
What’s next for Alvin Ord’s in San Marcos amid employee allegations
In the days that followed, employees say the reversal of the earlier agreement became the breaking point. Some resigned immediately; others simply did not return for scheduled shifts. The longtime male employee said ownership initially expected operations to continue as normal, but arrived to find no staff on hand to run the restaurant.
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As of Friday, April 17, Alvin Ord’s remains temporarily closed with no announced timeline for reopening.
Despite the allegations, Bill, the majority owner, said he could not recall specific incidents involving his brother, Steve, and stated he had not observed any pattern of misconduct firsthand, reiterating that he only became aware of the claims after they were raised collectively at the meeting. Bill claims he was pressured into signing a “letter of agreement” after staff threatened to walk out and the business faced an immediate staffing crisis, which he said forced him to act to keep the business open.
“It was an operator’s worst nightmare that I was confronted with,” he explained to MySA, detailing the crew’s potential walkout.
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Steve Martin did not respond to requests for comment.
This is a developing story. Stay tuned to MySA.com for updates.