Jeez, I made that sound awfully dramatic, didn’t I?
Did the place burn to the ground? Were we closed down by the OLCC
(Liquor Commission)? Did every major piece of equipment pick that day to
roll over and play dead?
No, nothing as earth-shattering as all that. I just
discovered that at the end of this month, I will be losing most of my
staff. Again. Out of nine girls on the payroll, I will, for all intents
and purposes, be losing six. One is going back to college as of the end
of the month (which I knew when I hired her), one is expecting a baby in
October and only wants to work through the end of this month. These two
departures, while a bummer, were not unforeseen, and I had anticipated
hiring one or two more girls to beef up the staff at the end of the
month.
However, when I walked into the kitchen Monday
morning, I was greeted with a huge pile of "schedule requests" from
everyone else. One girl—completely out of the blue—dropped the bomb that
she will be having surgery (don’t ask) next week and plans to be
out for a month. One of my "cooks in training"—again, without any
forewarning—decided to sign up for an "intensive" course at some career
college and informed me that as of the beginning of next month she will
only be available to work weekends. One of my high school students, who
will also be going back to school next month, requested off the day of
our community festival, which basically takes place right outside our
doors and causes us to be crazy busy. And my other "cook in training"
has been telling me for months that she was going back to school in the
fall, so I know her availability is going to be drastically reduced.
I was about to write that I cannot get a break when it
comes to staffing this restaurant. That’s not completely true; I have
two dependable, trustworthy employees who have been with me since I
bought the place. One of them has been at the cafe since the doors
opened in 2005. And without the other, my good and faithful "D", I know I
would have perished long ago. Unfortunately, it takes about 260 labor
hours a week (not including administrative time) to run the place. And
I’ve found that I can’t expect anyone to work actual full-time
hours…even "D" starts to burn out if I schedule her for more than her
normal 35-38 hours a week. And we need four people on shift during any
given rush period. So, obviously, my two decent employees and I cannot
do the job by ourselves. We do have one other girl who is not planning
to leave or go to school or have a baby. And she has been begging me for
more hours. But she is, of course, the most useless piece of dead wood
on the staff and I have been planning on cutting her loose at the first
available opportunity. Sigh!
We’ve been hobbling through the summer with these nine
girls on the payroll. It’s actually worked out well, because everyone
has asked for so much time off that they are getting all the hours they
seem to want. And there were enough bodies to staff the place
while I was gone for five days doing our Scandinavian thing. I suppose I
should be grateful…and I am.
But I just can’t seem to find the solution to
my labor puzzle. If I have more than eight staff members, everyone gets
so few hours that it’s hardly worth having them at all. It’s difficult
to train employees who work less than fifteen hours a week. You teach
them something, and by the time they have the opportunity to perform the
task again, they’ve forgotten how. My two high school girls were hired
in January. During the school year, I held them to less than fifteen
hours a week on purpose. So I ended up with two girls who were never
completely or properly trained. But I kept them on staff hoping they
would pick up more hours and more training, and hence be more useful,
during the summer. Then they both ended up taking so much vacation time
that they are STILL marginally trained and mostly unhelpful.
And I can’t beg, steal or borrow an experienced cook.
Check that…after the traumas I’ve lived through with the experienced
cooks I’ve had, I don’t even WANT an experienced cook. I’ll take a
knowledgeable apprentice any day of the week. Unfortunately, those seem
to be in short supply as well.
I had some mutinous thoughts this past weekend.
Stacking the constant barrage of setbacks and headaches that have come
with ownership of our very own restaurant against the relative ease and
smoothness with which we cranked out a café month’s worth of sales in
four days from our cramped but comfy little trailer… The eighteen-month
escape clause in our café purchase contract started looking mighty
attractive. "If we could just find three more events just like this," I
thought, "I’d ditch the restaurant in a heartbeat."
to be continued...later.
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