Last week, Powell farmer Allen Hatch was told he and his two draft horses, Coal and Onyx, werenât welcome in the McDonaldâs drive-thru.
After news of the drive-thru ban spread internationally, McDonaldâs has reportedly changed their order. The farmer said that not only are he and his horses welcome to return, but thereâs also going to be some changes under the Golden Arches.
Hatch said he was contacted by a representative of Yellowstone McDonaldâs, the company that owns and operates 16 McDonaldâs franchises in Wyoming and Montana. He received a âpersonal, private apology" and was told he and his horses are welcome back.
âThat ban has since been rescinded,â Hatch told Cowboy State Daily. âI was offered one free meal for the entire family. I was also told they are retraining their employees, so any legal form of transportation is allowed through the drive-thru.â
McDonaldâs might have second-guessed its horse-and-wagon policy, but Wyoming businesses doubled down on theirs. Hatch has been contacted by several regional businesses, which told him â and his horses â that they are welcome anytime.
âThe community support, across the state, has been staggering,â he said.
Phone calls and emailed sent to the McDonald's franchise were not returned.
Thatâs Not âOurâ Policy
Hatch had already visited both windows and received his order when the manager of the Powell McDonaldâs told him that his horses and wagon werenât permitted in the drive-thru.
âI was told there was a company policy precluding having livestock in the drive-thru for purposes of liability,â Hatch said. âThe one thing that (the manager) was very clear about is âwhat happens âif they shit in my drive-thru,â since there's no one to clean it up.â
Hatch didnât argue. He got the message to âtake his order and leave,â and he did.
After the story was circulated online, Hatch got a call from Casey Taggart, the marketing and public relations lead for Yellowstone McDonaldâs. They had âa discussionâ about what had transpired and about the drive-thru directive.
âAt the onset, he told the decision was essentially that of the local manager,â he said. âHe stated that she was acting on her own accord, with no outside communication or issued guidance.â
That conflicted with what Hatch was told in a private message from âa separate, unrelated McDonaldâs manager.â
In that message, Hatch was informed that the policy had come from âa new area supervisor from another stateâ who told the Powell manager âwhat to do, real-time, while I was in the drive-thru.â
Hatch isnât sure who gave the order not to allow draft horses through drive-thrus, but he believes that it didnât originate with the Powell manager.
âWhile she was rude and somewhat unprofessional, it didnât sound like it was her decision to tell me I could never bring the horses back through,â he said. âI donât think she was acting on her own. It wasnât just her.â
Banned Vs Banned
According to Hatch, one thing Taggart wanted to clarify was his interpretation of âbeing bannedâ from the Powell McDonaldâs. He explained that it was never the intention for anyone involved.
âHe insisted that I wasnât personally banned,â Hatch said. âI said that I agreed, but âweâ were banned, meaning the horses and me. The three of us were told that we would never do this again. That was the genesis of my use of the word âbanned.ââ
Taggart clarified that neither Hatch nor horse was banned from any McDonaldâs drive-thru, and that there would be some changes.
âHe said they are retraining nearly 1,000 Yellowstone McDonaldâs people so they will allow any legal form of transportation through the drive-thru,â he said. âI asked, via text and phone, if this would be a written policy change, but he wouldnât commit to that.â
For the record, Hatchâs wagon is a road-legal vehicle, with all the proper âSlow Moving Vehicleâ signage, when he went through the drive-thru initially.
Plus, Hatchâs exact wording was that he was â86edâ from the McDonaldâs drive-thru. And he has witnesses.
âMark Davis, the Powell Tribune reporter who took the photo, witnessed the exchange,â he said. âWhen I mentioned this to (Taggart), he seemed unimpressed.â
Donât Have A Cow Over Horses
Overall, Hatch wasnât particularly perturbed by the drive-thru debacle. He certainly wasnât intending to get that much attention for a spur-of-the-moment decision.
âIâm not that invested in it,â he said. âIf I had known there was a policy regarding livestock in the drive-thru, I wouldnât have made the turn.â
All Hatch wanted to do was continue training his new draft horses, Coal and Onyx, as they acclimate to Wyoming. The horses arenât used to things like lights at night, and they primarily take commands in Swedish rather than German or English.
âThey come from a different culture,â he said. âTheyâre different from every other team Iâve been around. I just wanted to give them some miles, learn how to communicate with them, and see how they would do.â
Hatch intends to use his horses for farm work and private trail trips for his friends and family. They were entirely unperturbed and unbothered by their short-lived McDonaldâs ban and are slowly bonding with their new owner and home.
Meanwhile, several Wyoming businesses have contacted Hatch, saying he and his horse-and-wagon set are always welcome.
âIâve heard from the K-Saloon, Legends Pizza, Millstone Brewery, and Body and Paint in Powell and the Tractor Supply in Cody, offering services to horses and wagons,â he said. âThe Dairyland in Thermopolis told me theyâre attempting to gather teamsters for a drive-thru event.â
Everythingâs cool now. Yellowstone McDonaldâs has, in Hatchâs words, âcontained the PR disaster this incident has become,â and heâs freely going about his business with his new horses.
There was just one more thing Hatch wanted to clear up.
âIâve heard Onyx and Coal called everything from mules to Clydesdales,â he said. âThey are Percheron draft horses, and we are no longer 86ed from the McDonaldâs drive-thru.â
Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.




