I sort of understand the reasoning here. It sounds like these are restaurants leasing space at rest stops and train stations. The state has an interest in making sure that the restaurants they contract with are open 7 days a week.
It's really no different than shopping malls forcing anyone with a store there to match the mall's hours- they have an interest in every store being open the whole workday to attract shoppers.
What I don't understand is why this would need to be a law. Concessionaires sign contracts for their space, and this sort of thing is more appropriate as a contract term. If New York wanted them to be open on Sunday they should have put it in the contract and Chick-fil-A would have just been ineligible to participate if they won't open on Sundays.
I wonder if this is an attempt to break the contract with Chick-fil-A without paying a penalty, as contracts are automatically voided if they violate the law. It wouldn't surprise me at all if this was a case of the NY Thruway Authority colluding with the legislature to get out of paying Chick-fil-A for breaking the contract.
They do need to leave truck stops. Truck stops are like the grocery store of the highway. Can't be closed one day a week. It's crazy they go all, " Christian Values" until they starve travelers, or cost exit and entrance fees for toll roads in Sunday.
Your position might hold any merit if they were literally the only food being sold in that building whatsoever. Somehow, I feel like the truck stop still has the full suite of gas station available food and probably its own little burger, hotdog and taquito cases still right there and available.
So I'm going to guess you just don't like their food, valid, and are trying to extrapolate that into some position of them being immoral.
Go ask a trucker. It's a truck stop. They'd be the expert. I don't like their food, and I don't like how much money they put into making other people miserable. But, those same miserable fuckers love their food. So they can have each other.
But, we do not have Japanese vending machines here.
I sort of understand the reasoning here. It sounds like these are restaurants leasing space at rest stops and train stations. The state has an interest in making sure that the restaurants they contract with are open 7 days a week.
It's really no different than shopping malls forcing anyone with a store there to match the mall's hours- they have an interest in every store being open the whole workday to attract shoppers.
What I don't understand is why this would need to be a law. Concessionaires sign contracts for their space, and this sort of thing is more appropriate as a contract term. If New York wanted them to be open on Sunday they should have put it in the contract and Chick-fil-A would have just been ineligible to participate if they won't open on Sundays.
I wonder if this is an attempt to break the contract with Chick-fil-A without paying a penalty, as contracts are automatically voided if they violate the law. It wouldn't surprise me at all if this was a case of the NY Thruway Authority colluding with the legislature to get out of paying Chick-fil-A for breaking the contract.
I never liked them.
They do need to leave truck stops. Truck stops are like the grocery store of the highway. Can't be closed one day a week. It's crazy they go all, " Christian Values" until they starve travelers, or cost exit and entrance fees for toll roads in Sunday.
Your position might hold any merit if they were literally the only food being sold in that building whatsoever. Somehow, I feel like the truck stop still has the full suite of gas station available food and probably its own little burger, hotdog and taquito cases still right there and available.
So I'm going to guess you just don't like their food, valid, and are trying to extrapolate that into some position of them being immoral.
Go ask a trucker. It's a truck stop. They'd be the expert. I don't like their food, and I don't like how much money they put into making other people miserable. But, those same miserable fuckers love their food. So they can have each other.
But, we do not have Japanese vending machines here.