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ratheripped.livejournal.com) wrote in
davis_square2010-06-07 08:43 pm
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I guess America does not actually run on dunkin...
I'm trying to get back into running and on my jog today I was getting to the point where I was about to keel over and pass out if I didn't rehydrate soon. I figured I could just walk into a highland ave dunkin and get a quick cup of tap water and be on my way. Apparently they demanded "25 cents for the cup". Are you kidding me? I've never heard of such bullsh*t - is this some sort of sick work around? I thought it was was illegal to refuse someone tap water for free.
Can someone help me out here? I usually go to that dunkin all the time and now I'm honestly thinking about straight up taking my caffeine addiction business elsewhere.
Can someone help me out here? I usually go to that dunkin all the time and now I'm honestly thinking about straight up taking my caffeine addiction business elsewhere.
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I'm pretty sure most places, esp coffee shops, do the same. I know 1369 and the little shop next to me do.
Seems reasonable to me. . .
Tap water isn't free for the business. The water itself is very inexpensive, but not free. $.25 really doesn't seem unreasonable, IMHO, given employee time, the cost of providing a cup, and some water.
Re: Seems reasonable to me. . .
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diesel at least sometimes has a big jug of water and cups next to it in the middle of the cafe'. reusable cups, so you just put them in the bus bin.
there is, or at least was, also a public water fountain in the middle of the square, kind of in front of jp licks and such.
good luck and STAY HYDRATED!
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Workaround: bathroom sink + cupped hand!
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When I worked for a big chain theater years ago, they counted cups, bags, even lids to keep track of sales, which is pretty common for a chain like DD/
-Ian/Somerville Theatre
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Or bring a water bottle with you next time.
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Obviously I need more friends because I've thought about this a lot since I first saw it implemented at the DD in Central Square. I thought it was interesting that they made it clear that the surcharge was for the cup not for the water, AND YET, whenever I ask for an extra styrofoam cup for my plastic cup of iced coffee (mea culpa, I know), I never get charged a surcharge for a cup. This is absurd, really, and the only way I've been able to make sense of it is to conclude that the 25 cents is supposed to serve as a throttle on the unchecked outflow of free cups to an insatiable, free-cup-crazed populace. Why I try to make sense of (or even assume decent motives on the part of) a megacorporation like Dunkin Donuts I leave as an exercise for the reader.
By the way, I first noticed this policy after the economic downturn, and so I figured it was a cost-saving measure, and I'm all up for a business trying to save money if it saves even one person's job, especially those unbelievably hard-working, always-friendly souls on the Central Square DD morning shift.
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There were bubblers on the Public Garden and Boston Common that are now gone, though. But I don't think they were removed because of pressure from the bottled-water industry; I think they were removed because they were constantly being vandalized. (This is why we can't have nice things!)
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I think this is only true for alcohol-serving establishments. So if you're out running and you really need a drink, stop at a bar instead. They'll probably serve it to you in a reusable glass and they can't charge you for it (though, depending on the bar, they may sneer at you). Last time I did this, at an otherwise shady looking bar I'd never otherwise patronized in Chicago on a very hot day, the bartender was very nice about it and even gave me ice, too.
People can try to justify this through economic arguments and "if we did it for you we'd have to do it for everyone" arguments to their heart's content, and they would be technically correct. But in practice I think this just makes DD a bad neighbor in much the same way that it does for businesses to refuse to let anyone use their restrooms. Sure, it may not directly benefit their business to provide free cups with water in them, but it's fundamentally mean-spirited of them not to do it.
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[1] I am not entirely certain whether DD constitutes a "restaurant" for these purposes. Table service might be required.
[2] And some jurisdictions go even further by requiring that tap water be given by default to patrons who didn't even request it.
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Not sure what the moral of this story is, but wanted to say that some bars don't give free water.
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Do you have a cite?
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(My captcha was "donutted and"--surprising relevant)
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They are essentially a small business, even though it's under a franchise umbrella.
I find them extremely friendly at that location, and very hard working.
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