Roadside stalls really make people love and hate each other, especially when the stalls gather together. This is a natural night market place where you can gather delicious food and buy it at night. But in terms of hygiene, the really delicious things probably come from roadside stalls and deep alleys, and natural hygiene is not comparable to those shops with big facades. Some diners know that what they eat in their mouths may have undergone some kind of "chemical treatment", but he still knows that the reason given is: "Because it is delicious"!
This reason is too strong for me to refute. The same is true of vendors around the school, such as fried snacks, brewed milk tea and cheap small packets of snacks. Mobile management, stubborn management and cheap management are their unchanging truths. Some parents even specially bought roadside snacks to wait for their children to leave school. The school must stop it. After all, children are studying in their own schools, and there is something wrong with eating unclean things around them. Parents will definitely not think about why their children buy them, but blame the school for not managing them well.
The school came forward to manage it by consulting with the security guard or calling the nearby health bureau to help get rid of it. Is it useful? The stall has agreed, that is, the kind of business where you kick me out and you go and I run. The ugly point is that there is a dog skin plaster around the school that can't be torn off. When I was a student, the teacher on duty was most afraid of Sundays, because students came back from self-study at night and lived in school. Before entering the school, they have to buy a stall to fry. Acute appendicitis happened one after another in the middle of the night, and the teacher on duty didn't dare to sleep all night.
For these "plasters", compulsory management may be another "urban management drama". Therefore, what Shandong did was not forced eviction, but filing a case. The stall is filed for free, and the stall must show its own health certificate and other documents required for operation. If there is a problem, it will consult with the registered manufacturer. It's clear, but it may be too expensive for them to make health certificates at roadside stalls.
In short, this method at least clarifies the problem of vendors around the school. To a certain extent, the safety of students is guaranteed. As for the actual implementation, it depends on the supervisor. Don't wait for the renter to stare at the roadside stall without checking the hygiene and business license. That's really funny!