Saturday, September 15, 2007

Banned From Tim Hortons, That's Un-Canadian!


It was a heated day Friday for a Tim Hortons in Etobicoke, after an attempt to ban teens from the coffee shop from 11am to 4pm raised the ire of an entire student body.

Rather than being welcomed with a friendly smile at the local coffee shop, students from Michael Power and St. Joseph Catholic High School were greeted with a sign - that's since been taken down - telling them their money was "welcome" inside - but they weren't.
A spokesperson at Tim Hortons headquarters said the franchise owner was just trying to speed up traffic, while an employee claimed the students could get really out of hand. A partial statement was also issued by the company's headquarters saying that the partial ban was because of unfortunate and inappropriate behaviour that's on its way to being resolved.
Needless to say, the teenagers were outraged, and felt the many were being blamed for the shortcomings of the few.

Another found the sign was insulting, "That's very discriminating toward us. If there's a group of people you can't tell us that it's only kids that can get rowdy."

The principal of the school met with the shop owner Friday morning to put a stop to the ban which could have resulted in a boycott. As for whether Tim Hortons was within their rights to do that, the answer is yes. The Ontario Human Rights Code does not provide protection to people under 18.

1 comment:

Firestarter5 said...

I can't blame the store owner. If 15 or 20 students come piling into his store they should be expected to at least buy something rather than sharing one coffee between all of them and taking up all the seats and being typically loud and rude. It's a coffee shop, not a bus shelter.