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AIBU?

To have said no this customer?

65 replies

LittleMissGerardButlersMinion · 02/03/2014 20:06

I work in the wonderful world of retail Hmm

Today a customer in the queue asked me to heat some baby food for her. I apologized and said I'm sorry we can't heat it for you, but can give you a flask of hot water for you to heat it. We are not allowed under health and safety.

She pulled a right face at me and huffed 'well that will take far too long' and stalked off!

Yes I know its annoying, and we have a microwave, but its right behind the counter, so can't let customers round to use it.

I wasn't doing it to be annoying!

Another customer asked for a knife so I smiled and said they are in the dishwasher they won't be a minute, she stalked off to her table. As soon as they came out I took one over, she just looked at me and didnt even say thanks.

I always try to be nice and treat customers how I like to be treated, but its so hard when they are rude Angry

OP posts:
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treaclesoda · 02/03/2014 23:31

yes, of course hot water is only as dangerous as a cup of tea, but there's a lot more of it if they give you a litre or more of it to heat the food in.

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anothernumberone · 02/03/2014 23:35

Long past the bottle stage now, but, genuine question, doesn't shaking the bottle after microwaving eliminate hot spots

Yes it does, liquids do not have hot spots when shaken. Conduction, convection and radiation are the means of heat transfer in a liquid and once they are shaken the heat dissipates using one of the above methods.

Food can have hot spots though.

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Whowouldfardelsbear · 02/03/2014 23:39

Thanks another number - thought as much.

I always microwaved and then shook - so glad I didn't potentially burn my DDs' mouths.

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perplexedpirate · 02/03/2014 23:42

A litre?! What's she heating, a roast ox?

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SomethingkindaOod · 02/03/2014 23:45

Knives disappear, teaspoons disappear, bloody napkins, the lot. I always suspected the customers walking off with them tbh, we caught a couple at the restaurant I worked at pinching a full place setting on more than one occasion....
Cutlery runs out in a cafe. Hardly worthy of a hissy fit or sarcasm, it happens. Baby food can't be heated in a catering microwave iirc as it heats things up too quickly.
YANBU.

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treaclesoda · 02/03/2014 23:45

well I'm only going on my own experience. Cafe refused to heat food for us but gave us water to do it ourselves, and what they gavd us was a massive container full of scalding hot water, I'd guess there was well over a litre in it, which we had to carry across the cafe then set on the table in front of a curious toddler. It struck me as much more dangerous than just heating the food.

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LittleMissGerardButlersMinion · 02/03/2014 23:48

Yes it is a catering microwave that zaps food!

If I was allowed to heat it I would have done, I wasn't trying to be obstructive, but likewise am not willing to lose my job over it. I half expected to see a thread about me on here from the mother :o

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SomethingkindaOod · 02/03/2014 23:49

I did actually once scald myself badly while sorting out hot water for a customer to heat baby food. My own fault and I'm glad it went over my hand rather than the customer but I knocked the jug and it went all over me. Restrained just about covers it, I managed to pass the jug to my colleague, ask her to refill it and walked very quickly to the toilets to submerge my hand in cold water. The customer complained that I wasn't polite enough to her...

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lilola · 02/03/2014 23:51

I call these people cuntstomers. heating baby food- I didn't make the rule. waiting a couple of minutes for a knife- SO FUCKING WHAT

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HadABadDay2014 · 03/03/2014 00:09

Why don't parent buy a cheap flash and put the baby food in there, stays lovely and hot.

Rather annoying to run out of knives but don't people make sure they have knifes/ forks before sitting down.

Op perhaps suggest to your boss that cutlery comes out with the food, not only is it more hyginic but makes more sense.

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AchyFox · 03/03/2014 00:46

"Health and Safety" is just shorthand for "potentially we'd be legally liable if something went wrong".

That HSE site is quite funny, thanks:

The enquirer was having an eye test using two different pieces of optical testing equipment. Whilst seated he was asked to move over to the second piece of equipment and when trying to move the chair several times found it to be very difficult. The reason for this was because the wheels had been removed due to 'health & safety'.

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nooka · 03/03/2014 01:15

Health and Safety legislation does not only apply to employees, but also to anyone else who might be hurt by your work activities. So yes it can apply to customers. There is also a big cross over with litigation fears, because if your activities hurt someone they may sue (and the HSE might go after you too if they think you've not met the obligations under the legislation).

In this case it sounds as if the business owner has done a risk assessment and decided that they don't want to run the risk that an employee heats up baby food, it gets too hot or has hot spots and the baby subsequently comes to harm. They have decided that the risk outweighs the potential business benefit. So their policy is not to heat up food in the microwave and employees are told not to do it. Whether the flask of hot water is a lower risk approach is another matter. It's probably more accurate to say that it's against the cafe's policy rather than 'under health and safety'.

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LucySnoweShouldRelax · 03/03/2014 01:36

Ooh ooh ooh, can I share my most dickhead customer story? The guy who, 45 minutes after we had closed, when asked if he could move so we could tidy away the folding furniture in our smoking area where he was sitting (the very last thing we needed to do before we finished) - having a fag, his drink finished long ago - he answered "I'm an artist, I don't respond to demands"

Unfortunately Health and Safety prevented me from giving him boxing his ears.

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needaholidaynow · 03/03/2014 03:46

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

TyneTeas · 03/03/2014 19:58

: )

If you liked the HSE myth site www.hse.gov.uk/myth/myth-busting/index.htm

you might also enjoy this one notalwaysright.com/

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