Companies have the right to exclude someone from their own facilities unless they are affected by discrimination by race, religion, or gender.
I am working at a convenience store. We will often be "caught" by teenagers. Only 2-3 officials are working and a group of 5 to 10 teenagers will charge around the shop and run around them and 1-2 people will carry it as far as possible and escape. We finally hired security guards standing at the door, they could only leave them alone. Many of them are blocked by stores (even subject to criminal anti-social behavior and ASBO regulations), but they do not prevent you from entering the store.
At one stage, we became the target of a group of travelers who camped in the area illegally. Again, 5-6 of them will enter the shop, 2 will buy cheap goods, busy cashier, others will get expensive items and use up. This group includes adolescents and adults. Eventually, some people moved to an apartment on the street of the shop. Convenience stores in the parade had big problems with them and had to ban them with all their known colleagues.
Maybe, but probably not. In malls that prohibit teenagers, you can stay with parents. A 15-year-old child can not enter, while a 14-year-old group can not say that admission is permitted. I think that it will cause a lawsuit right away, but I do not know whether the ban will be passed. Youth curfew, youth restrictions, and banning of youth have already filed a number of lawsuits and many laws and bans are denied. My dream is to open an adult-only restaurant. Do not worry about listening to the screams of babies and toddlers where you can (eat) relaxedly at ease. Do not worry that teenagers speak loudly. But in fact it's not a good idea to spend money on places that do not correspond to your child, but at a convenient mid-range price.
Have you not been able to enjoy lunch because customers can not understand it? Are these people always student or are teenagers? For teenagers there are certainly noisy and destructive situations, but not all teenagers are the same. Some of these summaries also apply to adults. Joe "Munchy" believes that abstinence for teenagers will help increase his business income. Companies should not have the right to prohibit paid customers based on age and stereotypes. Teenagers should not be discriminated against any restaurants or shops because they are paying customers. According to business analysis, about 80% of customers in July were adults. But by October the percentage of adult customers has decreased to 27% of Munchy 's. In 3 months, youth sponsors have increased by 53%. In addition, Munchy 's revenue in October comes from many teenagers. this is
The store manager was designed to prove that the ban is reasonable and say that the youth group was causing trouble on the weekend night, the ban was to prevent discontinuities. However, teenagers and parents argue that they oppose strict measures and interfere with the tradition of socializing with friends and unnecessary punishment of poorly behaved teens.