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AP: Chipotle says employee worked while ill at Va. location

I thank my fucking stars everyday that the food service place I work at has a union. 3 weeks paid vacation as a part timer, and I for damn sure take every single day of that every year, even if I just sit on my ass for a week.
 
Yeah, I understand, I've worked in a major city my whole life. I guess I've just been lucky in avoiding jobs that are this terrible to their employees, even though I've worked some shit jobs.

Yeah I've been relatively lucky too. I largely avoided working in college (ultimately to my detriment). But in high school, my first job was at a grocery store. Even for part-timers, they offered stock options, retirement, and other perks. There wasn't an official PTO setup for hourly workers, though. Had I knew what I know now, I likely would have stuck with them and just tried to move up. Or at least take advantage of their tuition reimbursement....

All of my other jobs have been more traditional office or work from home that had clear and largely encouraged vacation/sick leave policies. But there are plenty of jobs out there where even vacation time use is discouraged. No matter the time of the year. And there is no recourse for employees - there largely are no laws saying employers ever have to approve your use of paid time off.
 

Gouty

Bloodborne is shit
I doubt anyone was actually sick. There are sick people working in every kitchen in the US and yet it's Chipotle that once again has people shitting themselves to death. Not Taco Bell, Hardees, Applebees, etc etc. Chipotle. Again.

Blame it on a sick employee and that means it could have happened anywhere, it was just bad luck. It absolves their entire supply chain of further scrutiny.

Bullshit.
 

Flux

Member
Chipotle's been in the diarrhea business for years. It's their claim to fame and practically their slogan.
 

Nydius

Member
I doubt anyone was actually sick. There are sick people working in every kitchen in the US and yet it's Chipotle that once again has people shitting themselves to death. Not Taco Bell, Hardees, Applebees, etc etc. Chipotle. Again.

As has been brought up in this topic multiple times, that has to do with the type of food Chipotle sells and the way it has to be prepared. Taco Bell, Hardees, and fast food establishments, usually cook their food into oblivion and have very few incidents of raw ingredients which makes transmission of the virus more likely. It IS much more likely in non-fast food restaurant settings like Applebee's. Because the food there is much different than fast food, has more handlers, and different cooking protocols. (That wasn't the first incident for an Applebee's either.)
 
As has been brought up in this topic multiple times, that has to do with the type of food Chipotle sells and the way it has to be prepared. Taco Bell, Hardees, and fast food establishments, usually cook their food into oblivion and have very few incidents of raw ingredients which makes transmission of the virus more likely. It IS much more likely in non-fast food restaurant settings like Applebee's. Because the food there is much different than fast food, has more handlers, and different cooking protocols. (That wasn't the first incident for an Applebee's either.)

All these other burrito places though?
 

NewFresh

Member
I don't understand. You think the problem is 'training?'

Like as in...Chipotle didn't 'train' their employees not to throw up or put feces near the food?

I have to believe this goes deeper than that consider how often this is happening to them...
I think it's a combination things. As people pointed out there could be negative reprocussions for taking sick time, They could be understaffing, and then training isn't effectively being executed or emphasized.

My career is in food safety for a large grocery chain. This is what I do for a living. If you can't get the importance across on stuff like this or you set your employees up for failure then that's on you.

As has been brought up in this topic multiple times, that has to do with the type of food Chipotle sells and the way it has to be prepared. Taco Bell, Hardees, and fast food establishments, usually cook their food into oblivion and have very few incidents of raw ingredients which makes transmission of the virus more likely. It IS much more likely in non-fast food restaurant settings like Applebee's. Because the food there is much different than fast food, has more handlers, and different cooking protocols. (That wasn't the first incident for an Applebee's either.)

The fact of the matter is, when you are dealing with handling ready to eat foods, you need to be even more cautious. There is no extra kill step to protect the customer.
 
I think it's a combination things. As people pointed out there could be negative reprocussions for taking sick time, They could be understaffing, and then training isn't effectively being executed or emphasized.

My career is in food safety for a large grocery chain. This is what I do for a living. If you can't get the importance across on stuff like this or you set your employees up for failure then that's on you.



The fact of the matter is, when you are dealing with handling ready to eat foods, you need to be even more cautious. There is no extra kill step to protect the customer.
Do you work for a large chain in the US?
 
6c1c5123251777baa1d983f9292be1d8--sick-day-to-work.jpg

Sums it up.
 
I assume you don't want to get too specific. I work for a large US grocery chain, and food safety standards at the store level are abysmal. Hope we don't work for the same company.

I work store level at a grocery chain as well, and while I don't think our food safety standards are terrible, I know we could do better. But we've been understaffed for years and that doesn't help things.
 
I work store level at a grocery chain as well, and while I don't think our food safety standards are terrible, I know we could do better. But we've been understaffed for years and that doesn't help things.
What department do you work in? We are understaffed also, probably the main source of our issues. To be fair, we always pass health inspections...but that doesnt mean we dont have employees working sick.
 
Right, that's my point. You don't find it strange that at the literally THOUSANDS of other fast food chains...no employee has gotten customers sick lately like with Chipotle? If a sick employee could really get this many people sick, wouldn't we be hearing about something like this much more often?

Usually it's a cold or flu not a bad strain of noro.
 

Acorn

Member
Man I work in an office and they don't let me work with norovirus or anything infectious. Nuts to allow this in a food industry.
 
What department do you work in? We are understaffed also, probably the main source of our issues. To be fair, we always pass health inspections...but that doesnt mean we dont have employees working sick.

Deli, which means I'm in the only department in the store that deals with raw, processed and cooked foods all at once (and generally has to switch between the 3 at various points during the day). I personally take things pretty seriously just because of that.
 

mhayes86

Member
Right, that's the reason. Because no one works while sick at any other food service job.

And paid sick time is pretty much non-existent in minimum wage jobs. Call out, and you get berated, then management cuts your hours.
 
Looks like the US never got rid of slavery, they just extended it to all races. If I get food served or prepared by a sick person that's the last time I eat there. Between debt (for freaking education, that should be free like in every civilized country) and non-existant health care (deductibles, really?) and lack of holidays I wonder why there is no mass exodus. Y'all should move to Europe for a decent life with no fear.

Most of the population has been brainwashed or conditioned to accept slavery as "normal". They still run out of people, so they "let" a few people "snug in" from the southern countries. Works perfect for them, pay a fraction, slave is in constant fear, and when they star slaking, call the "authorities".

If you don't submit to these principles, you are called a filthy liberal, or demanded to go back to your "socialist" country.
 

C.Mongler

Member
Wow, shocking, a food service employee working while sick. Yeah, but really you'd have to be oblivious (or not American) to think that there isn't any less than a coin-flip's chance some sick dude isn't in the back sniffling all over your order when you go out to eat. I worked in food service for 6-years and that was 6-years I never had any official sick leave. I made pizzas with flus, colds, the day after I got my wisdom teeth pulled, running to the back to throw up because of food poisoning/stomach issues, etc.; you name the common disease, I've probably made your food with those germs. I got sympathy maybe 3 or 4 times in that entire 6-year time span to stay home when I was sick. Otherwise it was "Oooooo, sorry man, but we really need you tonight; can't you just tough it out? I promise I'll get you out as soon I can".

I see the article says hourly Chipotle workers do get sick leave; that's cool, but I guarantee you they still have an anti-leave culture at most restaurants. While I never got a sick-leave bank, I know plenty of other food servants who do, and I've heard the story from every single one about how their boss is an absolute shithead about them trying to use it. Those who have managed to use it just get punished in whatever passive aggressive means their manager can come up with to guilt trip them into never doing it again. It's a shitty system that's reinforced by requiring these places to cut labor costs as absolutely much as they can, so 99% of the time they're running on bare bones staff that can't be down any people without service significantly suffering.
 

Kthulhu

Member
No shit. Sick days aren't allowed in America

A few states have them.

I'd love to see every company, every single one, close down because they don't treat employees like human beings. I'd love it, and would not care how many business went under. The government would be forced to extend unemployment and fix the issues. I don't know how they would do it, and don't care since it isn't my job, but they would be forced to do it or be overtaken.

And it makes no sense, if your profit margin is so low that you can't afford to hire 1 or 2 extra employees at $7.25 an hour with no insurance then fuck your company. It is a failure.

I know I'll get heck saying for this though.

Pretty much every for profit business would shut down then lol.
 

Falchion

Member
Coming to work at a place like Chipotle while sick is definitely not a good idea since you could so easily contaminate everything on the line.
 
Anyone that has ever worked an hourly food service or retail job will tell you that even if you do have sick time you manger will treat you like absolute garbage and retaliate against you if you try to call out.

Gotta change work culture if we want things like this to stop.

Worked at Target for 5ish years (no longer though) and called in sick plenty of times

Manager never said a word to me about it, and work just carried on as normal for me

I didn't realize it was so bad to call in sick for a lot of places

Still gonna do it in the future though
 

rrs

Member
Worked at Target for 5ish years (no longer though) and called in sick plenty of times

Manager never said a word to me about it, and work just carried on as normal for me

I didn't realize it was so bad to call in sick for a lot of places

Still gonna do it in the future though
I'm guessing Target has a pool of workers to drag in if someone is sick or no shows, grocery chain I work at has this kind of system.
 

Rockandrollclown

lookwhatyou'vedone
Anyone that has ever worked an hourly food service or retail job will tell you that even if you do have sick time you manger will treat you like absolute garbage and retaliate against you if you try to call out.

Gotta change work culture if we want things like this to stop.

Yup. Especially in food service its just good customer service to not have the customers' food being handled by sick people. Hopefully Chipotle's downfall brings changes in that area. It probably won't.
 

ShyMel

Member
I worked in retail for three years and while we weren't penalized for using sick time, my store was pretty much always short staffed. I know myself and others wouldn't call out so that it wouldn't just be two cashiers till the closers come in. I would imagine the same is true in the food industry. And due to American work culture some people feel as though they shouldn't use sick time, even if their bosses won't retaliate.
 

old

Member
One thing this thread made clear is that usa work culture is fucked up.

Republicans have effectively scared rural and suburban folk into thinking that rich people, corporations, and employers must always have their way or the economy will tank. That workers rights and consumer rights would lead to the economic collapse of America.

And because rural and suburban areas often have tenuous microeconomies held up by one big employer, they bite and vote to undermine workers in the hopes that it will "bring jobs". Which they do...just not the jobs they want. These votes lead to one decent job turning into three bad underpaying jobs.
 

Keasar

Member
It was either that or getting fired if I understand American work culture right.

And reading this thread I think I do.
 

gaiages

Banned
No shit. Sick days aren't allowed in America

^

When I worked food and retail people routinely came in sick because...
1. Managers wouldn't let them have off
2. They couldn't afford to take the day off and lose the hours
3. Possibility of vindictive managers slashing hours of people who call off because "they don't want to come in anyway"
4. Any combo of the above

It's some fucked up shit.

In most places like this even if you are bestowed the amazing rare honor of sick leave trying to use it is a damn shitstorm. Oh and the goddamn doctor's note, because minimum wage workers without insurance can afford to go to a goddamn clinic to get one.

When I was a shift leader at a food place, I sent home sick workers all the time. My store's GM manager would get FURIOUS. "They're just faking it!" "You don't have enough workers now", etc etc. Look, if someone is willing to go vomit in the bathroom and say to me, word for word, "look I don't feel good I just vomited but I didn't flush it so I can prove to you I'm not lying", guess the fuck what? I'm not gonna look at vomit and take their goddamn word for it. If they weren't sick they sure as hell really wanted to leave if they induced vomiting.

Looks like the US never got rid of slavery, they just extended it to all races. If I get food served or prepared by a sick person that's the last time I eat there. Between debt (for freaking education, that should be free like in every civilized country) and non-existant health care (deductibles, really?) and lack of holidays I wonder why there is no mass exodus. Y'all should move to Europe for a decent life with no fear.

Minimum wage workers don't make enough money to move out of town. How will they afford to move to another country? And what kind of skills do they have to offer for a country so they can work?

I think it's a combination things. As people pointed out there could be negative reprocussions for taking sick time, They could be understaffing, and then training isn't effectively being executed or emphasized.

My career is in food safety for a large grocery chain. This is what I do for a living. If you can't get the importance across on stuff like this or you set your employees up for failure then that's on you.

The fact of the matter is, when you are dealing with handling ready to eat foods, you need to be even more cautious. There is no extra kill step to protect the customer.

Training is all fine and dandy, but if employees can't go home or stay home when they're sick, training and more training isn't going to do jack shit.

I guarantee you most food employees and managers know how food safety works. Hell the grocery chain I worked for had monthly mandatory training on it. Doesn't help when I'm calling in sick and my manager goes "well we need you here, two other people called out!" Why did they call out? Cuz someone else was forced to come in sick as all hell (who was full time and had sick leave, mind you, but had to come in regardless) and got other workers sick. And when I said "I'm too sick to work" I mysteriously got my hours slashed for two weeks. Guess I was lucky it was only two weeks though... but our turnover was so high they can't punish people for being sick too long!

Not to mention the time I got injured and was unable to stand on my knee for two weeks, and suddenly I didn't get hours for a whole month, despite after two weeks my knee was healed enough to work again. Good thing they were my second job at that point! That was the move that made me go "eh, I don't need this second job anyway lol"

So it's better to risk making customers sick and the fallout from that?

How does that make any sense...

It doesn't but when you got bills to pay and a risk of getting fired for the audacity of getting sick, well... yeah. Employees gotta do what they gotta do.
 

Nipo

Member
Collapsing "sick" and "holiday" time off into a single PTO bucket has made it so sick people always come into work at my white collar job. There is sa strong desire to not "waste" a day off recovering when you can suffer at the office and make a few other people sick too.
 
Collapsing "sick" and "holiday" time off into a single PTO bucket has made it so sick people always come into work at my white collar job. There is sa strong desire to not "waste" a day off recovering when you can suffer at the office and make a few other people sick too.
I'd rather have a few extra days off than not be able to use all of my sick days (without lying about being sick)
 

Nipo

Member
I'd rather have a few extra days off than not be able to use all of my sick days (without lying about being sick)

Mental health was covered under our old policy so you could use them during/right after periods of high stress or anxiety. Also they rolled over so you could bank up to 25 of them.
 

Pluto

Member
Sick days, vacation days, US bosses don't like you taking them. My boss gets PISSED whenever I take a vacation day.
Meanwhile in socialist commie europe my boss gets pissed when people don't take their vacations, he'll assign them if people don't take them, that's how I ended up with an unplanned two week vacation in october the year I started. Using all our vacation days is mandatory.
 

DarkWish

Member
I said it in the other thread about this but I ate at that chipotle the day everyone got sick. Thankful that I'm fine now. But now I'm so conflicted... I love Chipotle, but they've had a few incidents so not sure if I should avoid them for good or not.
 

Truant

Member
I had this virus, and I had no idea how any person managed to work while sick. I was literally vomiting in a bucket while sitting on a toilet and pissing from my ass.

All this while having like 40 degrees fever and intense pain in all my joints.

This man deserves a promotion.
 

VariantX

Member
I work store level at a grocery chain as well, and while I don't think our food safety standards are terrible, I know we could do better. But we've been understaffed for years and that doesn't help things.

Same here. First our store eliminated several positions and I got lucky enough to be able to get moved into a new department. Then more hours were cut in the following months. Then several full-time employees got laid off, replaced by inexperienced part-timers. People come in sick all the time because, if they don't come in, shit literally wont get done because of how stingy corporate has gotten with hours there's no one to cover the shifts anymore. Theres several incidents in the year+ of me working there of people who had no buisness working at all coming in to work.
 
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