NY Times October 27, 2012
A Part-Time Life, as Hours Shrink and Shift
By STEVEN GREENHOUSE

SPRING VALLEY, Calif. — Since the Fresh & Easy grocery chain was founded 
five years ago, it has opened 150 stores in California and positioned 
itself as a hip, socially responsible company.

A cross between Whole Foods and Trader Joe’s, the company brags that its 
house brands have no artificial colors or trans fats, that two-thirds of 
its produce is grown locally and that its main distribution center is 
powered by a $13 million solar installation.

But in one crucial respect, Fresh & Easy is just like the vast majority 
of large American retailers: most employees work part-time, with its 
stores changing many of their workers’ schedules week to week.

At its store here, just east of San Diego, Shannon Hardin oversees seven 
self-checkout stations, usually by herself. Typically working shifts of 
five or six hours, she hops between stations — bagging groceries, 
approving alcohol purchases, explaining the checkout system to shoppers 
and urging customers to join the retailer’s loyalty program, all while 
watching for shoplifters.

“I like it. I’m a people person,” said Ms. Hardin, 50, who used to work 
as an office assistant at a construction company until times went bad.

But after nearly five years at Fresh & Easy, she remains a part-time 
worker despite her desire to work full-time. In fact, all 22 employees 
at her store are part-time except for the five managers.

She earns $10.90 an hour, and with workweeks averaging 28 hours, her 
yearly pay equals $16,500. “I can’t live on this,” said Ms. Hardin, who 
is single. “It’s almost impossible.”

While there have always been part-time workers, especially at 
restaurants and retailers, employers today rely on them far more than 
before as they seek to cut costs and align staffing to customer traffic. 
This trend has frustrated millions of Americans who want to work 
full-time, reducing their pay and benefits.

“Over the past two decades, many major retailers went from a quotient of 
70 to 80 percent full-time to at least 70 percent part-time across the 
industry,” said Burt P. Flickinger III, managing director of the 
Strategic Resource Group, a retail consulting firm.

No one has collected detailed data on part-time workers at the nation’s 
major retailers. However, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has found that 
the retail and wholesale sector, with a total of 18.6 million jobs, has 
cut a million full-time jobs since 2006, while adding more than 500,000 
part-time jobs.

Technology is speeding this transformation. In the past, part-timers 
might work the same schedule of four- or five-hour shifts every week. 
But workers’ schedules have become far less predictable and stable. Many 
retailers now use sophisticated software that tracks the flow of 
customers, allowing managers to assign just enough employees to handle 
the anticipated demand.

“Many employers now schedule shifts as short as two or three hours, 
while historically they may have scheduled eight-hour shifts,” said 
David Ossip, founder of Dayforce, a producer of scheduling software used 
by chains like Aéropostale and Pier One Imports.

Some employers even ask workers to come in at the last minute, and the 
workers risk losing their jobs or being assigned fewer hours in the 
future if they are unavailable.

The widening use of part-timers has been a bane to many workers, pushing 
many into poverty and forcing some onto food stamps and Medicaid. And 
with work schedules that change week to week, workers can find it hard 
to arrange child care, attend college or hold a second job, according to 
interviews with more than 40 part-time workers.

To be sure, many people prefer to work part time — for instance, college 
students eager for extra spending money and older people earning money 
for presents during the holiday season.

But in two leading industries — retailing and hospitality — the number 
of part-timers who would prefer to work full-time has jumped to 3.1 
million, or two-and-a-half times the 2006 level, according to the Bureau 
of Labor Statistics. In retailing alone, nearly 30 percent of 
part-timers want full-time jobs, up from 10.6 percent in 2006. The 
agency found that in the retail and wholesale sector, which includes 
hundreds of thousands of small stores that rely heavily on full-time 
workers, about 3 in 10 employees work part-time.

Retailers and restaurants use so many part-timers not only because it 
gives them more flexibility, but because it significantly cuts payroll 
costs.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, part-time workers in 
service jobs received average compensation of $10.92 an hour in June, 
which includes $8.90 in wages plus benefits of $2.02. Full-time workers 
in that sector averaged 57 percent more in total compensation — $17.18 
an hour, made up of $12.25 in wages and $4.93 in benefits. Benefit costs 
are far lower for part-timers because, for example, just 21 percent of 
them are in employer-backed retirement plans, compared with 65 percent 
of full-timers.

At the Fresh & Easy store here, Ms. Hardin is forever urging her boss to 
give her more hours, she said, but instead, “they turn around and hire 
more people.” Some weeks, her boss gives her an extra shift when a 
co-worker is sick or on vacation.

Officials of Fresh & Easy, which is owned by Tesco, the largest 
supermarket company in Britain, declined to be interviewed. But the 
company noted that its entry-level pay was $10 an hour, substantially 
higher than at most retailers, with quarterly bonuses on top of that. 
Also, the company said it offered excellent benefits, including health 
insurance to anyone averaging more than 20 hours a week.

Ms. Hardin said her recent quarterly bonuses averaged less than $200, 
and while she appreciated the health insurance, she often could not 
afford the co-pays to see a doctor.

To supplement her income, she moonlights 15 or so weekends a year as a 
security guard at San Diego Chargers and San Diego State football games. 
But she still has such a hard time making ends meet, she said, that she 
has gone to the movies just three times in the last five years. Nor does 
she own a television.

“A couple of people offered me a used TV, but I can’t afford cable,” she 
said. “I have a tooth that’s falling apart, but I can’t afford the crown 
for it.”

Juggling Schedules

At the Jamba Juice shop at 53rd Street and Lexington Avenue in 
Manhattan, along with the juice oranges and whirring blenders is another 
tool vital to the business: the Weather Channel.

The shop’s managers frequently look at the channel’s Web site and plug 
the temperature and rain forecast into the software they use to schedule 
employees.

“Weather has a big effect on our business,” said Nicole Rosser, Jamba’s 
New York district manager.

If the mercury is going to hit 95 the next day, for instance, the 
software will suggest scheduling more employees based on the historic 
increase in store traffic in hot weather. At the 53rd Street store, Ms. 
Rosser said, that can mean seven employees on the busy 11-to-2 shift, 
rather than the typical four or five.

Such powerful scheduling software, developed by companies like Dayforce 
and Kronos over the last decade, has been widely adopted by retail and 
restaurant chains. The Kronos program that Jamba bought in 2009 breaks 
down schedules into 15-minute increments. So if the lunchtime rush at a 
particular shop slows down at 1:45, the software may suggest cutting 15 
minutes from the shift of an employee normally scheduled from 9 a.m. to 
2 p.m.

Karen Luey, Jamba’s chief financial officer, said the scheduling 
software “helped us take 400, 500 basis points out of our labor costs,” 
or 4 to 5 percentage points, a savings of millions of dollars a year.

At Jamba Juice, which has 770 outlets, managers used to piece together 
their stores’ weekly schedules on an Excel spreadsheet. It took managers 
about two hours to slot in 25 to 30 employees, all generally part-time 
except for the store manager and one or two shift managers. With the 
Kronos software, scheduling takes just 30 minutes.

The software keeps tabs on when workers are available, their skills and 
who makes the most sales per hour. While such software is a powerful 
tool, management’s judgment is still important, said Aron J. Ain, 
Kronos’s chief executive. “The budget is how many people you need at a 
certain time,” he said, “but the magic is deciding who is to work at 
what time.”

The rise of big-box retailers like Walmart, with their long operating 
hours and complex staffing needs, has contributed to the increase in 
part-timers.

Mr. Flickinger, the retail consultant, said when Walmart spread 
nationwide and opened hundreds of 24-hour stores in the 1990s, that 
created intense competitive pressures and prompted many retailers to 
copy the company’s cost-cutting practices, including its heavy reliance 
on part-timers.

Susan J. Lambert, an expert on part-time work and a professor of 
organizational theory at the University of Chicago, said the use of 
part-timers had also escalated because of the declining power of labor 
unions. “They set a standard for what a real job was — Monday through 
Friday with full-time hours,” she said. “We’ve moved away from that.”

Many corporations place store or restaurant managers under strict limits 
about what their payroll or employee hours can be each week, usually 
based on a formula tied to sales. These formulas usually give managers 
little flexibility to increase the hours assigned.

David Henson, a former assistant manager at a Walmart in Thief River 
Falls, Minn., said part-timers would sometimes come into his office on 
the brink of tears.

“A lot of them were single mothers. They said they weren’t earning 
enough to support their families,” he said. “They desperately wanted 
more hours, but we weren’t able to give them.”

Some, Mr. Henson said, were eager to take second jobs. But if they said 
they were unavailable during certain hours, then the managers and 
scheduling software would reduce their hours further, he said. Many 
workers concluded that it was simply not worth it.

David Tovar, a Walmart spokesman, said that less than half of Walmart’s 
hourly employees were part-time and that the company provided better 
wages and benefits than many competitors. But he acknowledged that 
part-time employees with less availability were typically assigned fewer 
hours.

Katherine Lugar, executive vice president of the Retail Industry Leaders 
Association, said that the industry’s scheduling practices worked well, 
and that retailers did their best to accommodate employee needs. “Happy 
employees provide better service,” she said.

She noted that millions of Americans preferred part-time work. “Many 
individuals come to retail because it is flexible, like the working mom 
who wants to work when kids are in school, or the graduate student,” she 
said.

When the Hours Fade

The day after Desmond Anthony graduated from Western Carolina 
University, he moved to Manhattan with the dream of becoming a Broadway 
actor and singer.

He knew he had to support himself with something else, and by Week 2, he 
had applied for 20 retail jobs, including one at the sprawling Express 
store in Herald Square, an emporium of slim jeans, sequined T-shirts and 
booming music.

“When I first walked into Express, I said, ‘Oh my God, this place is 
awesome and there’s music and it looks like a happening place,’ ” Mr. 
Anthony said.

Express offered him a job the next day. Mr. Anthony, 6-foot-4 and with a 
booming voice and big smile, said that after receiving just four hours 
of training, he began alternating as a greeter, cashier and sales floor 
assistant.

At first, he usually worked five days a week, often racking up 30 hours. 
But after several months, he said, he and many co-workers had their 
weekly hours cut to 12 or 15 and occasionally none at all.

“I’d go to the managers and say, ‘What is the issue? Am I not pulling my 
weight?’ ” he said. “And they’d say, ‘We just don’t have enough money.’ ”

“ ‘So how am I supposed to support myself? ’ I asked, and they said that 
was not their problem.”

Mr. Anthony said it was hard to survive. At $8.25 an hour, 15 hours a 
week equaled about $500 a month. His share of the monthly rent was $800, 
with several hundred more for utilities, phone and subway fares. Some 
days he went hungry, he acknowledged, and he repeatedly turned to his 
parents for help.

He and his co-workers held out hope that, come the holiday season, their 
hours would pick up. “But then they hired 15 more workers,” he said.

The store’s schedule for each coming week, he said, was supposed to be 
posted on Wednesdays, but often didn’t go up until Friday or Saturday. 
With so little notice, he sometimes had to scrap plans for auditions.

At one point, he said, his weekly schedule dwindled to two assigned days 
and two or three days when he was supposed to call the store in the 
morning to see whether managers wanted him to come in that day.

Mr. Anthony quit last February, upset that Express had given him an 
annual raise of just 25 cents an hour. He now works at a Zara apparel 
store on Fifth Avenue, which, he said, gives him 30 hours a week and 
does more to accommodate his scheduling needs.

Express says that about 85 percent of its employees are part-time. “It’s 
really more for flexibility than for anything else,” said Michael Keane, 
the company’s executive vice president for human resources. “It helps 
our ability to match associate staffing to traffic levels.”

Mr. Keane said many young people were eager to work part-time there, 
attracted by a hip atmosphere and the clothing discounts for employees.

With regard to Mr. Anthony’s complaints, Barbara Coleman, an Express 
spokeswoman, said stores aimed to post worker schedules a week or two in 
advance. “An associate will be notified in advance if they are scheduled 
for a call-in shift,” she said.

As for the hiring surge that upset Mr. Anthony, Ms. Coleman said, as the 
holidays approach, Express typically increases its part-time work force 
by nearly 20 percent to accommodate extended hours and the rush of shoppers.

In New York’s fiercely competitive retail world, Mr. Anthony’s 
experience is not unusual. Workers at Abercrombie & Fitch, Nine West and 
Bed Bath & Beyond told similar stories.

A 2011 survey of 436 employees at retailers in New York City, as diverse 
as luxury establishments on Fifth Avenue and dollar stores in the Bronx, 
found that half of the city’s retail workers were part-time and only one 
in 10 part-time workers had a set schedule week to week. One-fifth said 
they always or often had to be available for call-in shifts, according 
to the survey, which was overseen by researchers at City University of 
New York.

“We’re seeing more and more that the burden of market fluctuations is 
being shifted onto the workers, as opposed to the companies absorbing it 
themselves,” said Carrie Gleason, executive director of the Retail 
Action Project, an advocate for retail workers that helped conduct the 
survey and is financed by foundations and the Retail, Wholesale and 
Department Store Union.

That union wants more labor deals like the one it has at Macy’s flagship 
store in Herald Square in Manhattan. Although that store has many 
part-timers, the more senior workers can reserve days off and learn 
their schedule six months in advance.

Mr. Flickinger, the retail consultant, said companies benefited from 
using many part-timers. “It’s almost like sharecropping — if you have a 
lot of farmers with small plots of land, they work very hard to produce 
in that limited amount of land,” he said. “Many part-time workers feel a 
real competition to work hard during their limited hours because they 
want to impress managers to give them more hours.”

Ms. Rosser, the Jamba Juice district manager, amplified on the advantages.

“You don’t want to work your team members for eight-hour shifts,” she 
said. “By the time they get to the second half of their shift, they 
don’t have the same energy and enthusiasm. We like to schedule people 
around four- to five-hour shifts so you can get the best out of them 
during that time.”
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to