Grocery Retail Archives - Page 40 of 72 - I Hate Working In Retail

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Target. Where people pay a little more to avoid going to Walmart

Photo: From one of our followers, this made me laugh!!

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Every Little Helps’ – Tesco tweet to man who informed supermarket giant he’d found WASP in his food

Aaron Booth was preparing a meal for his girlfriend when he says he found the wasp in a bag of carrot, cauliflower and broccoli bought from a store in Sale

Sting in the tale: Aaron found wasp in food bag

A chef who tweeted Tesco bosses claiming he found a wasp in a ready meal received a tweet back saying ‘Every Little Helps’.

Aaron Booth, 20, was preparing a meal for girlfriend Tallulah Wheeler, 19, on Tuesday when he claims he found the insect in his microwave.

He believes it came from inside a bag of carrot, cauliflower and broccoli he bought from the Tesco store in Sale town centre earlier that evening.

However when Aaron tweeted the retail giant a picture of the wasp he received a curt response with the chain simply saying ‘Every Little Helps’ along with a smiley face.

 

Tesco Twitter Response

 

The phrase has been the firm’s slogan advertising slogan since 1993 and is synonymous with the brand.

Aaaron, who works in the kitchen at Wetherspoon’s Pub at the Chill Factore Ski slope in Trafford, said he expected a more sympathetic response.

He said: “We had been cooking the veg but the bag burst and when opened it the door there was a wasp in there.

“I’m certain it came from inside the veg because I had cleaned it just before I put it in.

“It was still alive, I don’t know how it survived.

“Me and my girlfriend are both scared of wasps so we had to get my mum to come and kill it.

“Tallulah was disgusted and wouldn’t eat the food afterwards. If the bag hadn’t burst we would have ended eating it.”

 

Wasp found in vegetables

Buzzfeed: Insect was in bag of food

 

However Aaron, from Partington, was left even more stunned when he took to Twitter to raise it with the company’s head office.

He said: “To be honest I found it quite funny. But I was surprised that that was all they said to me.

“I thought they might ask me to go into the store or offer me a refund.

“I work in a kitchen myself and if one of our customers said they’d found something like that in their food we’d be really apologetic and offer them free meals.

“So it’s not great customer service on their part really.”

 

Aaron Booth and girlfriend Tallulah with Tesco tweet

Afraid: Aaron and Tallulah had to call on his mum to kill wasp

 

A Tesco spokesman said: “We set ourselves very high standards for the safety and quality of our food and take all complaints seriously.

“Our Customer Service Team have apologised to Mr Booth and offered him a gesture of goodwill’.

 

 

Sourced from the dailymirror.co.uk

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Getting Walmart Workers Off Food Stamps Would Cost Customers Barely Anything

 

Would you be willing to spend one penny more for a box of macaroni and cheese if it meant thatWalmart workers would no longer need food stamps to survive? Because that’s all it would cost, according to an analysis by American Public Media’s Marketplace.

While it’s unclear how many of Walmart’s workers are on food stamps, as many as 15 percent of the company’s employees in Ohio are. Applying that same percentage to the rest of Walmart’s workforce, Marketplace estimated the company would need an extra $4.8 billion to lift its average wages across the U.S. enough to get all of its workers off public assistance.

Walmart workers cost the government about $300 million a year in food-stamp costs, according to Marketplace. A single 300-employee Walmart store may cost taxpayersanywhere between $904,542 and nearly $1.75 million per year, a study by Democrats in the U.S. Committee on Education and the Workforce found.

Marketplace gets to its $4.8 billion figure by using an average wage for Walmart sales associates of $8.81 an hour. This figure, which was also cited in the congressional report by House Democrats — comes from market-research firm IBISWorld. Three years ago, an analyst at IBISWorld calculated the average based on job listings in urban areas, and posts submitted to the employer review site Glassdoor showed entry-level Walmart workers earning between $7 and $14, an IBISWorld spokesman told The Huffington Post.

Walmart spokesman Kory Lundburg told HuffPost the $8.81 figure was inaccurate.

“We don’t know how they arrived at that number,” Lundburg said in a phone interview. “It’s so off it’s laughable that they even try to cite it.”

He said waged workers earn $11.83 an hour, on average, and that 99 percent of the company’s employees make above the minimum wage.

But, as HuffPost has previously reported, Walmart’s formula for calculating average wages is murky and may exclude many part-time and temporary workers, while including some supervisors. And most Walmart workers made less than $25,000 in 2012.

In any event, Marketplace estimated that Walmart would need to raise average wages for low-level employees from $8.81 to $13.83 to get its workers off food stamps. And that would cost, in total, $4.8 billion.

Walmart is a mammoth company, so it would only need to raise prices by about 1.4 percent to cover that cost, Marketplace estimated.

To see what all this means for your mac-and-cheese, let’s walk step-by-step through Marketplace’s calculation:

Sales associates in urban areas earned an average of $8.81 an hour, according to the IBISWorld research number cited by Marketplace

walmart

A single mom working at Walmart for that wage might be eligible for food stamps. A two-person household can earn as much as $20,449 per year and still qualify.

walmart

For this single mom to no longer quality for food stamps, she would need to earn about $13.63 per hour at an average number of retail hours.

walmart

Paying that to employees claiming one dependent and working 30 hours a week, a federal average for retail workers, would cost Walmart an additional $4.8 billion each year. And unless the company wants to eat that cost, it would pass it on to customers in the form of higher prices.

How much higher? On average, about 1.4 percent, by Marketplace’s estimate.

walmart

How would that affect Walmart shoppers in real life? Well, a box of macaroni and cheese, which ordinarily costs this much:

walmart

Would now cost this much:

walmart

So paying this much more per box of macaroni and cheese:

penny

Would save the government this much in food stamp costs each year:

foodstamps

Watch the full video, part of Marketplace’s new series “The Secret Life of a Food Stamp,” here

Sourced from thehuffingtonpost.com

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