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High School fast food employee writes an editorial about living wage -
Posted on 11/18/21 at 3:30 pm
Posted on 11/18/21 at 3:30 pm
Opinions
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Today at 12:26 p.m. EST
Daphne Crawford is a senior at North Oconee High School in Bogart, Ga.
When I hear about the “Great Resignation” and the government report last week that a record 4.4 million workers quit their jobs in September, nearly a million of them in the hospitality business (The Post recently reported on “the fast-food workers’ season of rebellion”), I just feel jealous.
I live in Georgia and work at a chain restaurant, where my weekly paycheck depends on the $7.25 minimum-wage-plus-tip-share combo. With taxes and other fees taking out a depressing amount, and inflation hitting 6 percent last month, the 40-hour workweek and the stress it brings make the job seem hardly worth it.
From customers berating me and my co-workers because we’re out of ranch dressing for their takeout order (we all know you have some at home) to being yelled at for things I can’t control (I didn’t overcook your steak; I’ve never cooked the steak), to closing up after a double shift at 11 p.m. and getting less in tips than you’d see in a street player’s guitar case on a Tuesday afternoon, I’m quickly running out of patience and the willingness to work.
On top of this, I’m a high school senior taking four Advanced Placement classes, dual enrolling at my local university, submitting college applications and trying to do enough extracurriculars to convince admissions officers that I’m the next Mother Teresa or Elon Musk.
Some friends tell me I should “just not work.” Really? In this economy? My social-worker mother and construction-manager father simply don’t make enough to pay — along with supporting my siblings and taking care of all their other financial responsibilities — for what might be tens of thousands of dollars in tuition. My average $350 weekly income is my measly attempt to make up the difference that federal student aid, scholarships, tuition assistance and student loans won’t cover.
We serve all kinds of people. Some of them I go to school with; some are stressed parents; some are kind and some are awful; some are retirees; some don’t know how many are in a dozen. From the restaurant worker’s side, the impact of each interaction with customers rests on two things: the tip amount and how the customer behaves.
We’ve received $5 tips on $180 orders, and we still remember the customer’s name. We’ve had a woman scream at us in a crowded parking lot during a Saturday night rush, and we still remember which car she was driving.
Don’t get me wrong. We have lots of good tips and see lots of good people, too. But these negative interactions are by far the most memorable — and they’re the ones that make us want to walk out midshift. They are the ones that make me go cry in the freezer, the ones that make me wonder whether my dream of going to a good college, even if expensive, is worth it.
So, a word to all those Americans collecting their restaurant orders during the pandemic (or, if pandemic rules allow, sitting in restaurant booths and mistreating the wait staff): Try sympathizing with a 17-year-old trying her best at a job that generates 100-plus orders on weekend nights and might require preparing $3,500 catering orders even though it makes zero difference to her paycheck.
Sorry if this seems angry or spiteful, or just a way to yell back at every nasty customer. Maybe it’s a way of telling my managers how done I am. Or maybe it’s just a message to the industry generally, because I’m so done with how unfair and degrading it is to the workers who make it run.
Editorial Board
The Opinions Essay
Global Opinions
Voices Across America
Post Opinión
Today at 12:26 p.m. EST
Daphne Crawford is a senior at North Oconee High School in Bogart, Ga.
When I hear about the “Great Resignation” and the government report last week that a record 4.4 million workers quit their jobs in September, nearly a million of them in the hospitality business (The Post recently reported on “the fast-food workers’ season of rebellion”), I just feel jealous.
I live in Georgia and work at a chain restaurant, where my weekly paycheck depends on the $7.25 minimum-wage-plus-tip-share combo. With taxes and other fees taking out a depressing amount, and inflation hitting 6 percent last month, the 40-hour workweek and the stress it brings make the job seem hardly worth it.
From customers berating me and my co-workers because we’re out of ranch dressing for their takeout order (we all know you have some at home) to being yelled at for things I can’t control (I didn’t overcook your steak; I’ve never cooked the steak), to closing up after a double shift at 11 p.m. and getting less in tips than you’d see in a street player’s guitar case on a Tuesday afternoon, I’m quickly running out of patience and the willingness to work.
On top of this, I’m a high school senior taking four Advanced Placement classes, dual enrolling at my local university, submitting college applications and trying to do enough extracurriculars to convince admissions officers that I’m the next Mother Teresa or Elon Musk.
Some friends tell me I should “just not work.” Really? In this economy? My social-worker mother and construction-manager father simply don’t make enough to pay — along with supporting my siblings and taking care of all their other financial responsibilities — for what might be tens of thousands of dollars in tuition. My average $350 weekly income is my measly attempt to make up the difference that federal student aid, scholarships, tuition assistance and student loans won’t cover.
We serve all kinds of people. Some of them I go to school with; some are stressed parents; some are kind and some are awful; some are retirees; some don’t know how many are in a dozen. From the restaurant worker’s side, the impact of each interaction with customers rests on two things: the tip amount and how the customer behaves.
We’ve received $5 tips on $180 orders, and we still remember the customer’s name. We’ve had a woman scream at us in a crowded parking lot during a Saturday night rush, and we still remember which car she was driving.
Don’t get me wrong. We have lots of good tips and see lots of good people, too. But these negative interactions are by far the most memorable — and they’re the ones that make us want to walk out midshift. They are the ones that make me go cry in the freezer, the ones that make me wonder whether my dream of going to a good college, even if expensive, is worth it.
So, a word to all those Americans collecting their restaurant orders during the pandemic (or, if pandemic rules allow, sitting in restaurant booths and mistreating the wait staff): Try sympathizing with a 17-year-old trying her best at a job that generates 100-plus orders on weekend nights and might require preparing $3,500 catering orders even though it makes zero difference to her paycheck.
Sorry if this seems angry or spiteful, or just a way to yell back at every nasty customer. Maybe it’s a way of telling my managers how done I am. Or maybe it’s just a message to the industry generally, because I’m so done with how unfair and degrading it is to the workers who make it run.
Posted on 11/18/21 at 3:31 pm to Eurocat
Sorry, I meant to put this in the McDonalds thread below. Sorry.
Posted on 11/18/21 at 3:32 pm to Eurocat
(no message)
This post was edited on 11/18/21 at 3:34 pm
Posted on 11/18/21 at 3:33 pm to Eurocat
What a bunch of whiny bullshite.
Posted on 11/18/21 at 3:33 pm to Eurocat
quote:
From customers berating me and my co-workers because we’re out of ranch dressing for their takeout order (we all know you have some at home)
I can only imagine the entitled attitude from this worker based on nothing more than this half a sentence.
This post was edited on 11/18/21 at 3:34 pm
Posted on 11/18/21 at 3:33 pm to Eurocat
quote:Oh so now we want to pay based on performance?
might require preparing $3,500 catering orders even though it makes zero difference to her paycheck.
Posted on 11/18/21 at 3:34 pm to Eurocat
quote:
I live in Georgia and work at a chain restaurant, where my weekly paycheck depends on the $7.25 minimum-wage-plus-tip-share combo. With taxes and other fees taking out a depressing amount, and inflation hitting 6 percent last month, the 40-hour workweek and the stress it brings make the job seem hardly worth it.
Sorry… if she is working in fast food and just making minimum wage right now… with other places offering sign on bonuses and 12 bucks and more for workers… she is:
1: A liar
2: An idiot
End of story.
Our local McDonald’s has a sign offering 500 dollar sign on and 11 bucks an hour. And it’s right down the road from a high school that has tons of eligible workers.
This post was edited on 11/18/21 at 3:42 pm
Posted on 11/18/21 at 3:34 pm to Eurocat
People tip fast food workers?
Posted on 11/18/21 at 3:37 pm to Eurocat
There's a reason those jobs suck and don't tend to pay well. The same reason every job pays what it pays.
If you are easily replaceable and can learn to do your job in a day or 2, you will never make much.
These jobs exist for young people. You learn you need to get marketable skills or be stuck doing them forever.
Also, dealing with people in general is usually disappointing.
If you are easily replaceable and can learn to do your job in a day or 2, you will never make much.
These jobs exist for young people. You learn you need to get marketable skills or be stuck doing them forever.
Also, dealing with people in general is usually disappointing.
Posted on 11/18/21 at 3:38 pm to Eurocat
Christ what an entitled pussy. 350 a week for a Senior in Highschool is not bad at all.
Posted on 11/18/21 at 3:39 pm to Eurocat
quote:
Eurocat
You can open a restaurant and have a $20 an hour minimum for your employees.
Posted on 11/18/21 at 4:21 pm to Eurocat
quote:
Daphne Crawford is a senior at North Oconee High School in Bogart, Ga.
Either does not exist or is a true blue liar (NPC). The NPC hits all the key phrases. Makes you just feel bad for the poor high schooler. Almost too much bullshite to unpack but lets give it a try.
Chain restaurant and only making $7.25/hr give me a break.
The stress of the 40-hour workweek. Who are you kidding that you work 40 hours per week and pull double shifts ending at 11:00 pm. If you are in school with the course work listed (dual enrolled) your not going to work until 4:00 or later during the week so 11:00 would be one shift.
Mom and Dad have decent paying jobs and $350/wk is more than $7.25/hr for 40 hrs. At least make sure your math adds up to your lies.
quote:
From the restaurant worker’s side, the impact of each interaction with customers rests on two things: the tip amount and how the customer behaves.
That coin has two sides and shitty attitudes like yours results in those types of tips.
I would go on but it's already, TLDR.
Just a bunch of lying bullshite.
Posted on 11/18/21 at 4:29 pm to Eurocat
If you don't like your current income, either quit or make yourself more marketable and do something else for a living. Either way, whining about it won't change a thing.
Posted on 11/18/21 at 4:29 pm to Eurocat
A living wage doesnt mean a brand new leased car, an overpriced apartment in the nicest part of the city, cable TV, the newest iPhone, a flat screen TV, etc
Thats the part that no one gets
Thats the part that no one gets
This post was edited on 11/18/21 at 4:30 pm
Posted on 11/18/21 at 4:29 pm to Eurocat
You work in fast food, don’t you?
Posted on 11/18/21 at 4:29 pm to Eurocat
I spent lots of time in the restaurant industry at every position in it. People like her are why I will never work in it again. Not shitty customers.
Posted on 11/18/21 at 4:30 pm to 93and99
Anyone else remember when that liberal bar owner admitted on here that he paid his employees shite wages and let them depend on tips? I’d love to find that thread
Posted on 11/18/21 at 4:33 pm to Eurocat
I know when I want to be informed about a potential public policy with implications for the entire nation's economy, there aren't many better places to go than a high school senior's blog.
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