This is part question, part rant.
Last week when the "Epic Snowstorm" was brewing to hit our area our bosses were talking like it was going to be a huge opportunity for sales. Mind you in the Retail Tire biz, winter storms do create a nice boost in sales during a very dry ($ wise) time of the year.
I could practically hear them salivating when the State of Emergency was called in VA before a single flake hit the ground. They instructed us to open 30 minutes early on last Saturday and to anticipate "heavy customer flow"
Obviously the storm hit Saturday like a bitch slap from old man winter. In my store, only my Service Manager showed up because he lives 2 blocks away while every other technician called out due to being burred. I was excused from going in by our Area Director considering my drive to work is 60 miles one way. The "heavy customer flow" was non-existent, not one person even wandered near our store.
The kicker was that to top it all off was that we would later get blamed (every store in the area) for not taking advantage of the situation and making some huge sales boom. Yes, in the middle of a blizzard we were supposed to convince people to venture out and buy tires.
Whats more interesting is that our area encompasses 3 states, DE being one. DE had called a State of Emergency, but those stores remained open. Theoretically if an employee refused to come in because of conditions, could they can him because of it? If said employee did try and make it in and had been stopped by the police for being on the road what recourse would he have for just trying to get to work?
I have a feeling I know the unfortunate answers (Yes find a way to get here or else; Not our fault you were driving during SoE) But I figure someone on here would know better than I.