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Kalbėdamas apie priežastis, kodėl kyla alaus kainos, jis nurodė tiekėjų keliamas kainas, taip pat kylančius atlyginimus.
„Nenorėjome kelti kainų, bet kiekvieną savaitę gauname prekes vis brangiau ir brangiau arba prekių nėra. Pavyzdžiui, vienkartiniai indeliai maistui išsinešti yra visiška katastrofa, mokame dvigubai daugiau nei mokėdavome anksčiau. Susikrauna tokie dalykai ir nebeturi variantų, turi kelti kainas“, – dėstė baro vadovas.
Asmeninio archyvo nuotrauka/Vidmantas Čičelis, „Local Pub“ vadovas
V.Čičeliui antrino „Gringo Pub“ vadovaujantis Karolis Paliulis. Šiame bare už bokalą alaus teks pakloti apie 3,50 euro.
„Pagrindinės priežastys, kodėl brango – nes viskas brango. Žaliavos, atlyginimai kilo, komunalinių paslaugų kainos kilo. Dar turėtume paminėti, kad mes du tris metus labai neženkliai didinome kainas, tai taip sutapo, kad per šiuos metus buvo didesnis padidėjimas”, – akcentavo K.Paliulis.
Daniel Laufer05:00, May 29 2021
Brett Jordan/Unsplash
Is an apology enough to end a crisis? It depends on the type of transgression.
OPINION: Earlier this month, David Gaughan, the owner of Eagle Brewing, posted on Facebook a statement about Māori viewed by many in the public as offensive. As a result of Gaughan’s Facebook post, companies started pulling Eagle Brewing’s products from their shelves including Liquorland and The Beer Library in Christchurch. Bars in Auckland and Wellington were also quick to stop selling Eagle Brewing products.
Gaughan quickly apologised for his Facebook post, but this incident raises an important question about apologies during a crisis. Does the public always accept an apology? Are words enough to end a crisis?
Boycott of brewery over racist Māori Facebook comments Fri, 14 May 2021, 3:58PM
Calls have been made to boycott Eagle Brewing after racist comments made by its founder and head brewer. (Photo / NZ Herald)
Boycott of brewery over racist Māori Facebook comments Fri, 14 May 2021, 3:58PM
Bars and bottle shops around New Zealand are boycotting a local brewery because of racist comments about Māori made online by its founder and head brewer and a subsequent post by the company saying the comments were misconstrued .
Eagle Brewing founder and head brewer David Gaughan yesterday commented on a news story on Facebook about a shooting in Napier calling Māori the scourge of New Zealand .
Pubs, liquor shops boycott Eagle Brewing over racist Māori Facebook comments
14 May, 2021 01:06 AM
3 minutes to read
Calls have been made to boycott Eagle Brewing after racist comments made by its founder and head brewer.
Calls have been made to boycott Eagle Brewing after racist comments made by its founder and head brewer.
Bars and bottle shops around New Zealand are boycotting a local brewery because of racist comments about Māori made online by its founder and head brewer and a subsequent post by the company saying the comments were misconstrued .
Eagle Brewing founder and head brewer David Gaughan yesterday commented on a news story on Facebook about a shooting in Napier calling Māori the scourge of New Zealand .