Detroit Free Press: Fear and loathing in the service industry as metro Detroit restaurants begin reopening
Aug 13, 2020
By Mark Kurlyandchik
Since finally receiving her unemployment in late April, Simone Green has been collecting $760 a week while not working her job as a training server at Buddy’s Pizza downtown.
Buddy’s reopened for dine-in service June 8 with the state-mandated regulations aimed at controlling the spread of COVID-19 in place, but Green is in no rush to get back to work.
“I would make $760 in two days,” said the 54-year-old lifelong Detroiter and front-of-house restaurant veteran. “So for others who have political power to say that we don’t want to go back to work — that’s a lie. I’m not staying home for my $760. I’m staying home because it’s not safe!”
With Michigan’s dining rooms slowly beginning to reopen across hard-hit metro Detroit after a three-month COVID-induced hibernation, the dawn they’re waking up to is casting fresh light on the issues that have long-plagued the restaurant industry, namely the way it treats front-line staff.
As Michigan’s 350,000 laid-off hospitality workers begin returning to work, some are questioning why they’re being called back so quickly during a health crisis when benefits like quality health care and paid sick leave are rarely made available to them.
And while business owners and lobby groups have had a say in how the state reopens through committees and political might, some service workers feel like their concerns aren’t being heard.
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