Manager bans employees from sitting on chairs while working, leading employees to constantly take “fatigue breaks” as issued by the handbook: ‘Chairs came back the next Monday’

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  • Cashier at the supermarket standing in front of the register, represented by a male model.
  • Manager banned chairs during shifts so everyone started taking “fatigue breaks”

    Our store got a new manager a few months ago who was obsessed with "professional appearance." One of his first changes was removing stools from the registers because
  • apparently cashiers sitting down "look lazy." Didn't matter that some of the employees were older or had back problems. If you weren't actively standing,
  • he'd come over and make comments about "energy" and "customer perception."
  • So people started following policy exactly as written. Company handbook says employees can take short recovery breaks if physical
  • fatigue affects performance or safety. Normally nobody bothers because sitting at the register solved the problem already. But once the chairs disappeared?
  • Suddenly everybody was getting dizzy, sore knees, foot cramps, lower back pain etc.
  • Within like 2 weeks the front end became a disaster. Every 15 minutes someone was calling for a fatigue break and wandering off to sit in the break room for
  • 10 minutes because technically that was allowed. Lines got insane. Customers complained constantly. The manager tried denying the breaks until HR reminded him the policy existed for liability reasons.
  • Best part was when corporate visited and saw 4 empty registers during peak hours while half the staff was sitting in the back icing their knees. Chairs quietly came back the next Monday lol
  • A woman cashier (model) sitting at a store counter, scanning an item.
  • kirradoodle Our local grocery has chairs at all the checkouts. I think it's a great idea. Why make your people wear themselves out when the job entails staying in one spot? It's a hard enough job without sore feet, legs, and back.
  • Tychonoir I don't even understand how managers make these decisions. It's like they don't even put an ounce of thought into what will be impacted and how it will play out.
  • Time_Cranberry_113 If chairs are not professional, why do thrones exist? Why do judges have a chair? Why does the president have the Resolute Desk?
  • BostonPleaserBear I'm a customer at stores, and I *want* cashiers to be sitting and comfortable while they do their work. Why would a manager think that I want anything else?
  • twoonster2020 Managers who make remove chairs from staff like this should also have the chair in their office removed - as a customer I don't think it is professional for the sadistic manager to sit when they have made their staff stand - lead by example

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