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When I worked in ASDA on the Fish Counter we used to start clearing up about an hour before the store closed.
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This really annoyed me today.. in fact, every time it happens it ****es me off.
I work in a supermarket, I shan't disclose which one, because I don't wish to be judged, or put my employer to shame, as I'm sure other supermarkets do the same.
It's few days after the Christmas period, so we were overstocked in the past few days. I got into work this morning, to find that there were 2 cages (big thingies we pull around the shop floor) full of potatoes that went out of date yesterday. Granted, they had been reduced the day before, to try and sell more, but they were still out of date.
Now... We aren't allowed, by law, to sell out of date products. So I had to stand there, for half an hour, throwing PERFECTLY FINE bags of potatoes into wheelie bins. Potatoes that would have lasted another 2-3 weeks and been edible. I filled five wheelie bins. FIVE.
I wanted to refuse!!
That could have fed homeless people. Simple potatoes. That could have gone to a food bank, to help those in need of extra food. That could have had an extra week on the shelf life written on the bag, and sold, just as the day they came into the shop.
The way I see it is, if you would eat it, its in date. We have milk in our fridge that's a week out of date. It smells fine, and tastes fine. As soon as I saw it was out of date, I didn't think "Oh no, I MUST throw this perfectly fine milk in the bin and waste my money!"
I understand that "Ooh if they get ill, they'll sue us". But something as simple as potatoes?! Why can't they just slap an "Eat at your own risk" sticker on it and be done with it?
I know there's probably a lot more to it, laws, ethical issues and such. It just really ****es me off to see this every single week at work.
I'm interested to your thoughts and explanations in regard to this criminality.
EDIT: When I say 'Out of date' I mean the 'Display until' date you find on fruit and veg products.
sounds like you work for Tescos, as they are well known for binning everything
the supermarket chain i work for, rewrap best before products the day after, so we dont bin loads of stock like you do

[FnG]magnolia;25561877 said:Can you explain this in more detail?
Depends on your definition of good. 1% loss of stock may be good but will look like a lot if you stacked it up all next to each other.
Supermarkets compete pretty fiercely with each other and spend loads of money on supply chain management. They are the best at that compared to pretty much every other industry.
Good business suggestion
sounds like you work for Tescos, as they are well known for binning everything
Something you might be surprised at...
I would bet, however, that the homeless people that benefit from that charity, would have eaten as many of those sandwiches they could have gotten their hands on, health and safety wouldn't have even crossed their mind.
I would expect the same thing, another case when health and safety is a waste of time.
Although if you really want to be wound up over good food going to waste it is icelands policy. When I worked there for all of 3 weeks the procedure is to throw powered bleach onto all the food so it can't be eaten. One of the big reasons I left along with packing in working for retail full stop.

This really annoyed me today.. in fact, every time it happens it ****es me off.
I work in a supermarket, I shan't disclose which one, because I don't wish to be judged, or put my employer to shame, as I'm sure other supermarkets do the same.
It's few days after the Christmas period, so we were overstocked in the past few days. I got into work this morning, to find that there were 2 cages (big thingies we pull around the shop floor) full of potatoes that went out of date yesterday. Granted, they had been reduced the day before, to try and sell more, but they were still out of date.
Now... We aren't allowed, by law, to sell out of date products. So I had to stand there, for half an hour, throwing PERFECTLY FINE bags of potatoes into wheelie bins. Potatoes that would have lasted another 2-3 weeks and been edible. I filled five wheelie bins. FIVE.
I wanted to refuse!!
That could have fed homeless people. Simple potatoes. That could have gone to a food bank, to help those in need of extra food. That could have had an extra week on the shelf life written on the bag, and sold, just as the day they came into the shop.
The way I see it is, if you would eat it, its in date. We have milk in our fridge that's a week out of date. It smells fine, and tastes fine. As soon as I saw it was out of date, I didn't think "Oh no, I MUST throw this perfectly fine milk in the bin and waste my money!"
I understand that "Ooh if they get ill, they'll sue us". But something as simple as potatoes?! Why can't they just slap an "Eat at your own risk" sticker on it and be done with it?
I know there's probably a lot more to it, laws, ethical issues and such. It just really ****es me off to see this every single week at work.
I'm interested to your thoughts and explanations in regard to this criminality.
EDIT: When I say 'Out of date' I mean the 'Display until' date you find on fruit and veg products.
it doesn't drive sales away though. Most people are stupidly tight on such arbitrary dates and chuck good food away at home. Most people don't buy stuff that is out of date in a day or two, Because they want it to last a week.
Theres always stacks of almost out of date food left unsold as most people aren't interested, unless its snack food, which they can eat instantly (like the bakery isle)
Something you might be surprised at is year or so back when the coffee place I was working at got in there order of food for the day, sandwiches/cakes etc.
We were delivered double by mistake. that's 400 packets of sandwiches, 200 gingerbread men, 300 paninis.. you get the point.
As you can expect we weren't able to sell double the normal delivery and the food has to be thrown out each day so everything is fresh that day. So looking at a stockroom of a metric ton of food we rang up a few charities, churches that provide food to the homeless.
Quite happy to run the stuff down to them in my car and they could take a much or as little as they liked. 12 calls and the same thing over and over again...
"we can only accept food that is brand new and has to be bought from a store by members of the charity for health and safety reasons, however you are free to donate money to help us"
So after packing a few bags for our selfs for the week the rest of it filled 2 Biffa bins. Which we have to be padlocked. Needless to say the padlock was left off that night so anyone that benefited from it good for them.