I haven't really told anyone on here yet, except Spectre, but this past Sunday was my last scheduled shift at my job. 28+ years of highs and lows, meeting and working with great and not so great fellow employees, and interacting with the customers (also great and not so great).
We were told last Thusday that Sunday was our last day open. The 'official' story was our company didn't want to sign a 30 year lease for $1,000,000. The location had been there since either '85 or '87. The story in the termination letter was COVID related. Them deciding to close down was the reason why they hadn't gotten the heat fixed (two units on roof, one working extra to provide heat to the entire building as the other untit wasn't working at all).
Monday and Tuesday was spent going through the restaurant and packing/throwing out stuff/breaking down shelving, transporting items, etc.
I spent the majority of Tuesday breaking down big 15+ Metro shelves, loading up the shelves, and transporting them home as they could not be taken to another store. Four truck loads of Metro shelves, from 2 foot by 2 foot up to 6 foot by 2 foot. All those years of veggie oil and foor release left residue on the shelves no matter how hard we scrubbed them over the years. Anyway, I don't know the dollar amount, but I probably got over 3K in Metro shelving. I plan to take pics of all the shelving when I have better light outside.
Also, since the majority of the dine-in materials (polios, spatulas, kitchen materials, etc) could not be used at another store, it was going to be tossed out. With out store having hard water and years of use, they aren't spotless, but we washed them every use. My Mom and I filled several car loads of materials to donate to her church (napkins, plastic bags, spoons, silverware, plates, cups paper goods, cleaning supplies and storage materials, cutting utensils, shakers, kitchen tools, individually wrapped knives/forks/straws, wood shelving, garbage cans, Rubbermaid salad bar cart, Metro shelf carts, Christmas decorations, etc, etc, etc). Basically anything still unopened was able to be taken to other units, anything open was getting tossed away. Since I'm a packrat and hate to see usable items thrown out, I was allowed to get it out of the store and give it to the Church.
Two days of clean up got me up over 51 hours, so that will help when NY State figures out Unemployment Insurance.
I reached out to a former boss and am trying to get into Cornell University, although there is a temp firing freeze through December. I worked a summer for Cornell back right after school, and left the job on good terms, so that helps.
There are two businesses (a new Dollar General being built and Incodema3D) that are both about 1.5 miles away from home that I could look into. Incodema3D
https://incodema3d.com/ is a manufacturing facility that deals with 3D printing.
I am not freaking out or anything at this time, just disappointed that we have been working short staffed and very hard to keep the restaurant (chain restaurant) open and going. One store manager, two other managers, and two drivers doing everything. All that hard work and nothing.
After 28 years of interacting with the public; dealing with 'Karens' and the like; dealing with younger generations of employees that don't seem to understand the concept of work ethic ("What's this, 'work ethic'?"); dealing with the negative aspects of customer service; or having to cover/adjust my schedule with little to no warning; I am looking for a job where I won't be obligated to work that way anymore. If there is extra shifts, I can accept or decline at my discretion. Customer service is customer service, and I've done that. I am looking for a job where I go in, do the job, and go home. No crazyness or BS.
I have to admit, I felt like the Grinch going through the restaurant and packing everything up. I even took all the paper towels from the dispensers, all the hand soap and sanitizers units, and all the unused toilet paper. My Boss took out light bulbs he had just replaced last Wednesday.