Peatys wrote: » It's 7 in the morning.
__..__ wrote: » Have you never been up at 7 before?
__..__ wrote: » Good on them. Bring people in and then leave them at work. I bet companies love that. Double the work today because the workers cant go home.
arleitiss wrote: My workplace is closed today but I was due to go get citizenship at convention centre, would you say that's still on? I mean thousands people would need to be notified but there is 0 information (as usual)
Peatys wrote: » Of course, but don't blame a storm that's not hitting the west coast for hours yet
_Kaiser_ wrote: » Yea read that tweet from them last night and it's just ridiculous. Their earlier one where they were thinking about it was just as bad. It's the entire problem this morning. Well run companies will have made actual decisions and informed staff one way or the other. The rest are taking the typically Irish "be grand" approach and won't have a notion how to handle it if indeed problems arise later in the day.
Mr.S wrote: » You really start to see the great places to work now
flaneur wrote: » Pretty windy in Cork City at this stage. It’s not all that bad, but still as bad as a typical storm. This is only the prelude by the looks of the technical data over on the other thread.
squarecircles wrote: » Joanna Donnelly on Rte radio says,west and northwest will get worst of the winds
tkd93 wrote: » We are all on laptops so the power going likely wont stop us. Would not mind but not a single email or text.
ASOT wrote: » All Dunnes are closed, madness.
cyclops999 wrote: » With red zone declared nationwide will you're car insurance cover you in the event of an accident during storm if driving.
Mr.S wrote: » Nothing stopping you leaving early though, no matter what your boss says.
Necrominus wrote: » I've had no contact from my workplace. None. Going off the Department of Justice tweet we're closed but it would be nice for a manager to take some form of responsibility and let staff know.