Daily Southtown

US customers, workers see normalcy differentl­y

Pre-pandemic hours may be a thing of the past in many stores

- By Anne D’innocenzio

NEW YORK — Before the pandemic, Cheryl Woodard used to take her daughter and her friends to eat at a local IHOP in Laurel, Maryland, after their dance practice. But now they hardly go there anymore because it closes too early.

“It is a little frustratin­g because it’s not as convenient as it used to be,” said Woodard, 54, who also does most of her shopping online these days instead of in person because of stores limiting their hours.

Before the pandemic, consumers had gotten accustomed to instant gratificat­ion: packages and groceries delivered to their doorstep in less than an hour, stores that stayed open around the clock to serve their every need.

But more than 2½ years later in a world yearning for normalcy, many workers are fed up and don’t want to go back to the way things were. They are demanding better schedules — and sometimes even quitting their jobs altogether.

As a consequenc­e, many businesses still haven’t been able to resume the same hours of operations or services as they continue to grapple with labor shortages. Others have made changes in the name of efficiency.

For instance, Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer and private employer, announced over the summer that it doesn’t have any plans for its supercente­rs to return to its pre-pandemic 24-hour daily operations.

IHOP says a vast majority of its locations have returned to their pre-pandemic hours and some have even expanded them. But others, like the Laurel location that Woodward used to frequent, have cut back.

The changes are creating a disconnect between customers who want to shop and dine like they used to during pre-pandemic times and exhausted employees who no longer want to work those long hours — a push-pull that is only being heightened during the holiday shopping season.

“Nobody is winning,” said Sadie Cherney, a franchise owner with three resale Clothes Mentor boutiques in South Carolina. “It is so demoralizi­ng to see that you are falling short on both ends.”

Across all industries, the average number of hours worked per week per worker totaled 34.4 hours in November, unchanged from February 2020, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

But for the retail industry, it slipped 1.6% to 30.2 hours per week during the same period. Hours worked at restaurant­s were down by similar amount in October, according to the most recent data.

Meanwhile, the National Restaurant Associatio­n’s most recent monthly survey of 4,200 restaurant operators conducted in early August found that 60% of restaurant­s reduced hours of operation on the days they were open, while 38% closed on the days they would normally be open compared to right before the pandemic.

Cherney noted her stores returned to pre-pandemic hours last year but with the worsening labor shortages and higher labor costs, she has struggled to keep those same hours this year.

Her store in Columbia is open one hour later, but she had to offer wage increases to her workers.

For her two other locations in Greenville and Spartanbur­g, hours have been reduced for personal shopping appointmen­ts throughout the week, and no longer accept second-hand clothing from shoppers on Sundays.

Cherney noted customers often complain about long waits to process their second-hand offerings, while her staff is overextend­ed because they’re working 20% more than what they would like.

The end result: Cash flow and profitabil­ity have both taken a hit.

The worker shortages should remain acute into next year even as several big tech companies have reduced staff or have frozen corporate hiring. The economy added 263,000 jobs while the unemployme­nt rate remained at 3.7% in November, still near a 53-year low, according to the Labor Department. And while U.S. job openings dropped in October from September, the number ticked up 3% in retail.

But for every frustrated customer, there is a frustrated worker.

Artavia Milliam, 39, of the Brooklyn borough of New York City, is a visual merchandis­er at H&M in Times Square. She said she spends more of her time helping out on the sales floor than updating the mannequins because of the shortage of staff.

“It can get overwhelmi­ng,” she said. “Everyday, I encounter someone who is rude.”

 ?? KENA BETANCUR/GETTY ?? Black Friday shoppers wait in a long line Nov. 25 in East Rutherford, N.J. Many workers are declining the long hours they worked in pre-pandemic holiday seasons.
KENA BETANCUR/GETTY Black Friday shoppers wait in a long line Nov. 25 in East Rutherford, N.J. Many workers are declining the long hours they worked in pre-pandemic holiday seasons.

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