Convenience store toilet incident files...When a customer who uses it 5 to 6 times a day is warned, he shrugs off the complaint, saying “I don’t have a toilet at home” and “The LED from the ceiling gets stolen.”
0001@Old Man Friends Club ★.Jul. 26, 2024 (Fri) 15:22:29.17ID:gy/74Q499
It seems that when you work at a convenience store that many people use, you sometimes encounter some pretty outrageous incidents. A convenience store owner in her late 50s from Ibaraki Prefecture (service/sales/restaurants/annual income 6 million yen) makes a shocking confession. “Not only have the toilets been soiled, but they’ve also stolen items, such as replacing the LED light on the ceiling with a 100-yen light and taking the toilet paper.” LED light bulbs are quite expensive, so it’s painful when they are stolen. But there’s nothing you can do after the perpetrator has left. It seems that other customers are doing whatever they want in the toilets because there are no surveillance cameras. (Text: Amane Kotoha) “A woman who goes to the toilet every morning at around 5am while jogging.” “She charges her phone in the toilet’s socket and doesn’t come out for a long time, and the people living nearby the shop come to the toilet 5-6 times a day just to use the toilet, but when I told them off, they just say, ’I don’t have a toilet at home.’ Of course there isn’t,” the female convenience store owner said angrily. The truth is, they probably wouldn’t want to rent out their toilets in this condition. However, it seems that convenience store operators often have a policy of lending out their restrooms. A man in his late 40s (service/sales/restaurants/annual income 4 million yen) who works part-time at a convenience store in Kanagawa Prefecture said, “Every morning around 5am, a woman stops by the bathroom during her jog. He runs in without saying a word and runs out without saying a word. I’m not going to tell you to go shopping, but it’s polite to say something,” he complained, but since the convenience store’s management company has a policy of “please feel free to use the restroom,” he said, “I guess it can’t be helped.” Even though she knows that cleaning the toilets is part of her job, she still feels helpless about it. Continue reading in Career Connection News 2024/07/25.
>>13 If your store has daily sales of 1 million, 70% will be taken by headquarters, so 300,000 x 30 days = 9 million – even after deducting labor and other expenses, you’ll still have quite a bit left 600 a year might be on the low side.
Most convenience stores are the personal property of their owners. It’s fine if it’s a store directly managed and owned by the head office, but it’s too rude to go into a person’s home without permission, relieve yourself, and then leave without saying anything. Would you do the same thing at a married couple’s diner, tobacco shop, or flower shop? Normally, you wouldn’t.
Isn’t it common sense to say something? So when it’s really crowded and 10 people in a row say “Excuse me, can I use the restroom?” every 10 seconds, you don’t think anything of it?
In Omaezaki City, there are a surprisingly large number of people who have moved to the countryside and use public toilets and convenience store toilets.
Is it something like saving on water supplies? I wonder if that’s really going to save you money. I think you could make it by working a one-hour part-time job.
> A man in his late 40s from Kanagawa Prefecture (service/sales/restaurants/annual income 4 million yen) who works part-time at a convenience store, huh? No, wait a minute lol So the scenario is that someone in their late 40s has a full-time job and works part-time at a convenience store as a side job? It’s not like he makes 4 million yen just from working part-time at a convenience store.
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