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The lock thing: Because it's much easier and cheaper to do beforehand than afterward. If you had to lock the store (medical emergency, evaculation), it would be a crappy time to have to find a locksmith.
For a while there were a number of Friendly's restaurants that didn't have locks, because they were supposed to stay open all the time. The chain had to shell out a good chunk of money for smiths when they needed to close (holiday, I think).
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Originally posted by Wombat The lock thing: Because it's much easier and cheaper to do beforehand than afterward. If you had to lock the store (medical emergency, evaculation), it would be a crappy time to have to find a locksmith.
For a while there were a number of Friendly's restaurants that didn't have locks, because they were supposed to stay open all the time. The chain had to shell out a good chunk of money for smiths when they needed to close (holiday, I think).
Thanks for the clarification.
I could have come up with a dozen possible reasons as to why there would be locks.
How about if the you need to call an exterminator and need to close the store for a while? What if there's floods and the store can't remain open? How about when the building was first erected 7/11 wasn't the first tenant in the building. There would have been locks on the doors. Would 7/11 have removed them because they are always open.
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