Somerville Secondary College students banned from nearby McDonald’s: Read cheeky sign from restaurant management
- Macca bans students from a high school
- Students would regularly misbehave in the store
A Macca’s store brutally informed students from a nearby school that they are not allowed to enter the store due to their bad behavior.
Students at Somverville Secondary College in Somerville, Melbourne’s south-east, have been told not to enter the store.
McDonald’s has posted a handwritten sign on the front door of the store telling students not to enter.
A local Macca store has sensationally banned students from Somerville Secondary College in Melbourne’s south east after staff got fed up with the students’ antics
“No admission for Somerville Secondary Students,” it read in capital letters on a large white poster.
“you won’t be served (sic),” it read.
The sign taped with blue-tack was hung on the inside of the store’s front door.
A photo of the sign was posted on Instagram after journalist Jacqui Felgate saw the sign in the store.
The sign outside the McDonald’s store said Somerville Secondary College students would not be served for their behavior towards staff, but the store’s supervisor declined to comment when contacted by Daily Mail Australia
“McDonalds Somerville bans students for bad behavior in store,” she wrote Friday.
It is unclear when the sign was put up in the store.
The store is located at 49 Eramosa Road West, Somerville.
The store’s supervisor declined to comment when Daily Mail Australia contacted him.
Daily Mail has also contacted Somerville Secondary College for comment.
Macca’s shop is a short walk from the school, which is just over 9 miles from the Morning Peninsula.
The grades 7-12 secondary school, which is within walking distance of the Macca store, was approached by the Daily Mail for comment
According to the school’s website, Year 7-12 high school aims to provide an “inclusive, encouraging, caring, safe and secure learning environment.”
The website also states that the school is in a thriving environment, with up to 700 students expected to be enrolled at the university in the coming years.