jimgoose wrote: » We don't necessarily, no. "Taking back the High Street" is all well and good, but taking it back from a giant American corporation run by evil, soulless lizard people from Andromeda IV and replacing it with a concern run by a much bigger lighten fucker who happens to be from Galway isn't necessarily such a great idea either. :pac:
ciano1 wrote: » Worked there for a few years during college. I can't think of many employers that pay less than minimum wage but Supermacs is one. I also did a brief stint in McDonalds and they were far more generous.
EmmetSpiceland wrote: » Apologies, J. Probably should have said Galway people.
ciano1 wrote: » When I worked there, minimum wage was still €8.65. It was written into the contract that 50c/hr was to be deducted from your wages for 'Staff food' (Regardless of whether or not it was eaten). We were allowed to take €7.50 worth of food per shift. There was also a mandatory €3 per week charge for the uniform. Do the maths....
silver2020 wrote: » I would guess that was a franchise and that may have been years ago as you cannot make a deduction that would bring you under minimum wage these days
silver2020 wrote: I would guess that was a franchise and that may have been years ago as you cannot make a deduction that would bring you under minimum wage these days
The €350 payment was a good idea, and definitely avoided what would have surely been some unrest as people were forced to live on beans and toast if they didn't get it, or alternatively, people would have rushed back to work. I think our relatively low death rate is probably one of the (unacknowledged) benefits of the payment as it kept people out of the workplace when it was important to stay away.
Ave Sodalis wrote: » I worked for a shop not that long ago that did this. They deducted a few euro every week for uniform rent. There were staff there 10 years or more still paying uniform rent. They're still doing it.
Better Than Christ wrote: I laughed when I applied for my current job and the advert boasted of a 'free uniform'. It never occurred to me that some companies charge their employees for the 'privilege' of wearing one.
Ave Sodalis wrote: » Yup, it's pretty common!
Sunny Disposition wrote: » McDonagh has some neck to be portraying himself as the little guy facing the might of McDonald's and lecturing the State on where i's going wrong, while at the same time charging his own employees for food they don't want.
Better Than Christ wrote: » He's a massive hypocrite too - back in the '90s, someone opened a fast food restaurant in Bray and called it SuperJack's (it would have been around the time of the 1994 World Cup and had a crudely drawn image of Jack Charlton in the window). Anyway, McDonagh objected and they had to change the name to FastJacks.
Woke Hogan wrote: » I’d need a superjacks after eating the boiled ****e Pat McDonagh serves.
RollieFingers wrote: » Supermacs is rotten, septic food - avoid.
EmmetSpiceland wrote: » Ah here, say whatever you like about Mr. McDonagh, but “Supermacs” have some decent burgers. Breakfast isn’t bad either.
EmmetSpiceland wrote: » Country folk love that, W. You’ll always hear them “banging on” about good ol’ Pat was standing behind the checkout on a busy Saturday night.