Aldi Archives - Page 2 of 2 - I Hate Working In Retail

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Aldi staff broke into beauty therapist’s car and dumped it in a bush because ‘it was obstructing their delivery lorry’

  • Janina Wasiuta discovered her red £4,000 Ford Fiesta pushed off the road
  • The driver’s window was smashed to pieces and glass was over the seat
  • Aldi staff said they were forced’ to break in so a truck could gain access
  • Beauty therapist works just a hundred yards away in Chorley, Lancashire

 

Supermarket staff smashed their way into a woman’s car and dumped it in a bush because they claimed it was obstructing a delivery vehicle.

Janina Wasiuta finished work to discover her red £4,000 Ford Fiesta pushed off the road with the driver’s window in pieces and glass over the seat.

There was no note on the car but staff at the Aldi next to the scene said they had been forced to break into the vehicle so a delivery truck could get to their store.

Miss Wasiuta has slammed the supermarket chain after staff broke into the car and dumped it in bushes

Dumped: Janina Wasiuta finished work to discover  her red £4,000 Ford Fiesta pushed off the road with the driver’s window  in pieces and glass over the seat
Aldi

 

In a bush: The beauty therapist, who works just a  hundred yards away, had moved from her regular parking spot which was  closed due to maintenance work
Angry: Miss Wasiuta said there were no double yellow lines or signs telling her she couldn't park in the road

 

Angry: Miss Wasiuta said there were no double yellow lines or signs telling her she couldn’t park in the road

Miss Wasiuta, 29, said there were no double yellow lines or signs saying she was not allowed to park on the road by the supermarket in Chorley, Lancashire.

The beauty therapist, who works just a hundred yards away, had moved from her regular parking spot which was closed due to maintenance work.

She said: ‘I’m absolutely disgusted and so angry.

‘My boss left work just before me on Friday evening and she called me saying I needed to get over quick because she’d found my car in a bush.

Janina Wasiuta finished work to discover her red £4,000 Ford Fiesta pushed off the road and in a bush

Janina Wasiuta finished work to discover her red £4,000 Ford Fiesta pushed off the road and in a bush

When Miss Wasiuta returned to her car she found it in bushes with the windows smashed in

 

When Miss Wasiuta returned to her car she found it in bushes with the windows smashed in

‘I ran over and when I got there she was already speaking to a member of staff who said that one of their employees had broken the window and moved it because a lorry couldn’t get round.

‘I got no apology and their attitude was terrible.

‘There were cars parked behind me and I don’t see how my car was causing an obstruction.

‘It’s the first time I’ve parked there and there were no signs to say no parking or yellow lines so I assumed it would be ok. I’m just so angry.’

Miss Wasiuta says the paintwork on her car was also scratched and her wing mirror was left turned in during the incident last Friday.

Aldi have offered to pay for the repairs but the ordeal has left her deeply upset.

‘It’s not about the money,’ she said.

Staff at the Aldi say they were forced to break into the car so a delivery driver could access the store

 

Staff at the Aldi say they were forced to break into the car so a delivery driver could access the store

Picture shows where Janina's car was parked before members of staff broke in and pushed it out of the way

 

Picture shows where Janina’s car was parked before members of staff broke in and pushed it out of the way

The Aldi in Chorly, Lancashire, where staff broke in to a customer's car to move it out of the way

The Aldi in Chorly, Lancashire, where staff broke in to a customer’s car to move it out of the way

‘Since Friday, I’ve been left to pick  up the pieces. I’ve had to phone the police and contact my insurance and I’ve had to get a taxi to and from work.

‘I don’t understand how Aldi could allow a member of their team to do something like that.

‘If they weren’t aware at the  time, then they should have at least left a note explaining what had  happened and apologised. I’m just grateful my boss was there otherwise I wouldn’t have known what to do.

‘I was told apparently it took them four hours to get the truck in. If  they have spent four hours messing about trying to find a way of getting in, they could have come to the shop to see if it was a customer.

‘Their attitude has been disgusting. I’m really shocked by it all and I found it really quite distressing.’

Aldi said: ‘As a very last resort we had to move a vehicle that was  preventing an Aldi delivery truck from reversing into the loading bay.

The red £4,000 Ford Fiesta (pictured in the background) was pushed off the road and left with the driver¿s window in pieces and glass over the seat

The red £4,000 Ford Fiesta (pictured in the background) was pushed off the road and left with the driver¿s window in pieces and glass over the seat
Miss Wasiuta says the paintwork on her car was also scratched and her wing mirror was left turned in during the incident last Friday

 

Miss Wasiuta says the paintwork on her car was also scratched and her wing mirror was left turned in during the incident last Friday

‘Our store staff had searched for the owner of the vehicle for more than four hours.

‘They had also contacted the local police to try and obtain the registered owners details.

‘Unfortunately these were not available.

‘After every other option was taken into consideration, the car was then moved by Aldi staff.

‘The owner of the car returned at approximately 9pm, three hours after we moved it.

‘We are in communication with the car owner to rectify the damage caused, have offered to pay for all repairs and have apologised for any inconvenience.’

Miss Wasiuta has reported the incident to police who said it was being investigated ask criminal damage.

Lancashire County Council said: ‘It’s not an LCC highway. It’s a private road.’
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/

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Thousands Queue For Hours For Just 40 Aldi Jobs (PICTURES)

ALDI
Thousands of job hunters queued for three hours in a bid to get one of just 40 jobs on offer at the Aldi budget supermarket chain.

The job hunters queued up at the store in Bridgnorth, Shropshire, at 10am on Friday to wait for the interviews, which started at 1pm. The astonishing scene shows how Britain’s current job crisis means despite falling unemployment, four people are stillfighting for every vacancy.

mother-of-two who had queued since 10am was reported saying that it “looked more like auditions for X-Factor, not a job for Aldi.”

She added: “I had to wait three hours, but it was relief when I saw how many people really did turn up. I couldn’t believe it.

“Hopefully I got the job, but you never know, with over a thousand people there it is hard to judge. I don’t know if being one of the first was an advantage or not.

“I need this job to keep paying the bills and keep everything ticking over, including feeding my two children and getting them new school uniforms.”

aldi

The scenes at Aldi are not unique, after 1,700 applied for eight jobs at a new Costa Coffee shop in Nottingham. Despite the huge number of applications, employment minister Esther McVey still urged young people to be “realistic” about their abilities and apply for jobs at the chain.

A teenager, who joined the queue at midday outside Aldi, said: “I walked right up to the store and then noticed the queue – and my heart sank. I walked to the back and it just went on and on, I didn’t think it would ever stop.

“Before I got there I thought I would have a good chance of getting the job, but when I saw all those people I lost hope a bit.

“It is hard for young people like myself to get a job, there just isn’t the opportunities out there and people don’t want to give you a chance. I went for this job because you have to take what you can get, like I said, the opportunities are limited.”

Each jobseeker was given a mini-interview with management teams from Aldi branches before handing in their CV and contact details. The 40 positions on offer were split between West Midlands’ stores in Dudley, Stourbridge, Halesowen, Brierley Hill and Netherton.

Aldi area manager Leon Donald, said: “A previous event similar to this attracted around 1,500 people so we knew this event would be well-attended.”

Sourced from the huffingtonpost.com

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Aldi staff wrapped in film, chastised by rats. A shocking story of the Abuse of Trainee Managers

Former trainees at discount chain Aldi Süd say they were wrapped in clingfilm and chained to posts as a punishment for “being cheeky.” It is the latest in a string of abuse allegations to appear in a book written by a former manager.

“The foil was so tight I could hardly breathe,” said one trainee, who accuses his colleagues of smearing permanent marker over his face in a fraternity-style attempt at an initiation, sanctioned by supervisors.

He did not initially report the incident. “I was scared of being fired right away, as I was still on my trial period,” he said. Staff apparently also threatened to lock him in a minus 20-degree freezer if he was cheeky again.

The allegations appear in an updated edition of ‘Inside Aldi’ by former Aldi Süd manager Andreas Straub.

Among the allegations featured in the book are accounts of staff being bullied using rats and subjected to ‘psychological terror’ for speaking up for their rights. Straub accuses other German supermarket chains of similar mistreatment.

It is Straub’s second book about his former employee. The first, ‘Aldi, Einfach Billig,’ (Aldi, Simply Cheap) which is to be made into a film, accused the company of spying on employees and setting unreasonable performance standards.

Straub told The Local: “There was a culture of fear at Aldi Süd and nothing has changed since the publication of the [first] book. I hope this might lead to some changes.”

Earlier this year a former detective told Der Spiegel that the management of an Aldi store in Dornstadt in Baden-Württemberg asked him to install miniature cameras over the lockers in the staff changing rooms.

“I was tasked with reporting all irregularities,” the detective told the magazine in January. “So [I had to say something] if a member of staff was working too slowly, or if I heard about them having a relationship with another member of staff, or received other details from their private lives, for example their financial situations.”

Aldi has repeatedly denied spying on staff but told Spiegel Online it was “shocked” by the latest allegations and would “do everything” to investigate the reports.

In a statement to The Local, Aldi Süd said: “To our dismay, our internal investigation shows that the incident described does in essence represent the truth.

“We regret this incident in the distribution centre in Mahlberg, which according to our research, took place at the end of 2012/beginning of 2013 and are deeply concerned.”

Kate Ferguson

The Local (news@thelocal.de)

 

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