Quoth Ironclad Alibi
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The Coronavirus Panic Thread
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Sadly, the most deaths from the 1918 pandemic were in the second wave because so many people were tired of wearing masks and staying home if they didn't need to go out
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Quoth Ironclad Alibi View Post
The thing about that is back in 1918 people were way more reasonable and rational regarding public health.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-M..._San_Francisco
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Quoth Food Lady View Post... I keep telling myself that society survived the 1918 flu so we can survive this virus. ...
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It is sad what's happening to businesses. I keep telling myself that society survived the 1918 flu so we can survive this virus. I think it'll just take a bit of sacrifice, just as every other world problem does. I'm thinking of the world wars and other events. I think selflessness goes a looooong way in helping in these situations. It's frustrating but I feel sad and hopeful at the same time. I'd like to be interviewed about this in old age, actually--by a high school student doing a project, when the crisis is long gone and we've come through.
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Quoth Food Lady View PostI don't know how her company is allowing that.
Some hospitals (Los Angles & in Arizona, IIRC) have been so devastated by Omicon that are allowing employees who have tested positive, to return to work if they have no or mild symptoms.
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I'm apparently personally responsible for most of the shortages in the store. The morning orders can be filled generally as requested, but as the day goes on it's harder to even find substitutes. I've taken to stashing a few dozen eggs in my coolers first thing in the morning if later orders need them. SCs are starting to examine my cart and I've caught more than one trying to remove items Either people try to take stuff, or they think I'm stocking the shelves.
I had to pull major OT last week due to the only 3 crosstrained shoppers calling out at once; AM did get SM to approve any OT that I work. We're not sure whether any sick calls are actually Covid-related or if people just see that as an acceptable excuse to not face the public (that I can actually understand--while my department has far less direct SC contact than the rest we do deal with the occasional morons). My store does not require any sort of proof (positive test, exposure, etc) and assumes that self-monitoring/self-reporting is actually going to work. Folks have been coming to work with confirmed Covid--they've told someone!--and not sent home because a manager didn't directly overhear it.
I've been quietly encouraging any customers who complain about the maskless SCs to go to Corporate--I've reminded the store manager numerous times about the town/state mask mandate (FFS there's a giant sign out front that the company made) and been met with a decent amount of indifference...I think they expect us grunts to enforce it. Hell to the no, I'm not trying to confront the crazy.Last edited by Dreamstalker; 01-12-2022, 01:44 AM.
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Did I post in here? My coworker's kids have it. They are home and he works from home. His wife has it too and has been going to work anyway. I don't know how her company is allowing that. He thinks that it's a different thing than a cold or that it's not as serious as it is, or both. I'm not sure. He made a comment in our online meeting. I just know he's totally annoyed that his kids are not in school but he's keeping them home because school policy is forcing him to.
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I have a friend who has a sister whose family just came down with COVID. Well, not quite all of them. There are 9 of them in the household, and 7 of them came down with it. I'll let you guess how many of them were vaccinated....
If you said "two of them", you win a prize! A fabulous hunk of NOTHING!
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In the last two weeks, two of my coworkers have caught Covid. Came in via their kids
The Wife's place of employment has at least 6 people out with Covid. One of whom we saw Christmas Eve. We tested negative.
Interesting stats: Half of NYC COVID hospitalized patients were admitted for other reasons. Superspreaders on the loose.
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Apparently work is going to open on Wednesday, and we're being told not to expect f/t hours. Despite the fact that there are enough appointments booked from Wednesday onwards that we're going to need both f/t reception people. Oh, but salaried management can step in and help...despite them having all their own responsibilities to deal with. And as part of the management team I'm supposed be getting f/t hours when we're not shut down, but that apparently doesn't matter. Ugh.
I've already started looking at applying elsewhere. I was guaranteed certain things when taking on a management role, but heaven forbid that the higher management remember that when it's inconvenient to them.
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sigh. My dad was checked into the hospital tonight with COVID. He started showing symptoms on the 26th, but couldn't get an appointment to see a doctor until today. You would think someone with MS could see a doctor sooner, but no. All he could get was a video meeting after an 8 day wait. My mom is sick too, but she is getting over it quickly and the doctor in the hospital just told her to keep doing what she was doing to treat it.
Edit 1/7: My dad is home already. He responded very well to the treatments. They also found he had an UTI that was the cause of his bad fever. His doctor at the hospital was pissed at how long he had to wait just to get told to go to the ER. They said they would have had more options for treatments if they had just told him to go in rather than make him wait for a video conference.Last edited by Arcus; 01-08-2022, 03:10 AM.
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FIrst time in awhile since I've had anything to contribute to this thread, but the 'rona has hit the Store hard this week. We've got about 7 people out right now, which is the most we've had all pandemic - and that doesn't sound like a lot for a store of 170, but 4 of them were cashiers and they were all supposed to be working today. Of course, the people who always complain about not having enough hours never want them when they're offered a chance to pick up a shift, so even though our sales were only average today we had long lines from before I started until just a few hours before I left. I had to spend about 2 hours of my dairy shift checking and one of the other grocery clerks was stuck in the checkstand for over half of his shift, so with the boss' understanding I had to leave the dairy only so-so filled so I could make sure his work got done.
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The powers that be for work decided that we're going to be closed until Thursday next week. The numbers keep going up here, and with one of our coworkers coming in close contact with two positive family members, the decision was made. Mind you, I think the fact that pretty much all of us made it clear that management was way out of line for putting our health at risk like they did had a lot to do with it.
I went into the spa today and hid away in my office to reschedule or cancel appointments for the appointments from today and tomorrow. One of the managers told me that I could make the calls from the hotel front desk...the hotel has not closed and I would have been sharing the desk with another coworker. With less than six feet between us. I opted to head into my office up in the spa - I know it's clean and disinfected because I'm the one who does it. I don't have to take chances that a coworker has licked the computer mouse with their infected tongue or coughed all over it before I'm able to attack it with medical grade disinfectant. I clean my office at the end of every shift and then lock it up. Nobody else touches it. So yeah, forget what my manager told me to do.
I have a feeling that I'll be asked to do it all over again tomorrow. Woo?
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