The founder of "Teremok" complained to Sobyanin about "McDonald's"

The businessman, in a letter to the mayor, said that McDonald's establishments continue to let visitors in, despite the ban on public catering on non-working days. A representative of McDonald's told RBC,

The founder of the Teremok restaurant chain, Mikhail Goncharov, wrote a letter to Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin, in which he complained about the McDonald's fast food chain, which does not comply with the ban on visiting establishments on non-working days. FORBES writes about it.

In his appeal, Goncharov indicated that McDonald's continues to let visitors into its premises, despite the ban. The founder of Teremka attached several videos to the letter, in which people in uniform and with McDonald's badges say that they can let up to five people into the restaurant by agreement with the city authorities and Rospotrebnadzor.

“We also want to work this way, but we cannot and do not have the right, since we comply with the decree. Literally, about work in restaurants and cafes, it says the following: “take-away service without citizens visiting the premises of such enterprises,” Goncharov wrote.

Muscovites cut spending on cafes and restaurants ahead of the lockdown Society

He noted that in the days leading up to the non-working days, Teremok received “dozens of warnings” from administrations and district police departments that establishments should not let visitors into the premises when working takeaway.

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