Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Europe.
Is their tap water potable and safe? That is usually the reason other countries don’t offer free water.
Anonymous wrote:Were you west of the Rockies or in New England? Major drought - have not seen the news? - to the extent that cities, counties, and states are asking businesses and residents to cut water usage in any way they can including not bringing water to the table unless specifically requested (bc often a TON of water gets wasted daily from untouched water cups).
Anonymous wrote:Were you west of the Rockies or in New England? Major drought - have not seen the news? - to the extent that cities, counties, and states are asking businesses and residents to cut water usage in any way they can including not bringing water to the table unless specifically requested (bc often a TON of water gets wasted daily from untouched water cups).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not surprised. Drinks (including non-alcoholic) have much better margins than food. It's probably a way of coping with inflation without raising menu prices
They had bottled water for sale.
Anonymous wrote:Europe.
Anonymous wrote:Did they have a bathroom on-site. There's a code requirement to have a water fountain by the bathroom in most jurisdctions.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not surprised. Drinks (including non-alcoholic) have much better margins than food. It's probably a way of coping with inflation without raising menu prices
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Encountered my first one today it was a casual coffee/sandwich place with seating. Is this a thing nowadays?
Did they charge you for tap water in a washable cup or did they charge you for tap water in a disposable cup? For some reason, some places charge a cup fee for a disposable cup but not a washing fee for a regular non to go type cup.
Anonymous wrote:Encountered my first one today it was a casual coffee/sandwich place with seating. Is this a thing nowadays?