I witnessed something odd today at a local grocery store. I was on line and at one point the cashier called their manager to take over and left.
Then I overheard the customer who was next in line, asking the manager why the cashier left. The manager mentioned something about a break.
The customer then said that whenever they were on line and were about to complete their purchase with this particular cashier, the cashier would call for someone to replace them and leave. Then the customer asked if they did something wrong to upset the cashier. The manager assured them they did nothing wrong and took care of their purchase.
Now here is where it gets weird.
As soon that customer left. The cashier returned and took over the line. As far as I could tell, there was no interaction with the cashier and that customer. There was no conversation, there were no words or any argument. The cashier simply left and the came back when that particular customer was done with their purchase.
I am aware that in cases where there is a conflict with a customer, the standard procedure is that the cashier leaves, while the manager intervenes. But what happened today does not fit the bill because there was no altercation between the two.
Is it legal for a cashier to consistently refuse service to a particular customer by walking away from their register and having someone else take over that customer's purchase?
Then I overheard the customer who was next in line, asking the manager why the cashier left. The manager mentioned something about a break.
The customer then said that whenever they were on line and were about to complete their purchase with this particular cashier, the cashier would call for someone to replace them and leave. Then the customer asked if they did something wrong to upset the cashier. The manager assured them they did nothing wrong and took care of their purchase.
Now here is where it gets weird.
As soon that customer left. The cashier returned and took over the line. As far as I could tell, there was no interaction with the cashier and that customer. There was no conversation, there were no words or any argument. The cashier simply left and the came back when that particular customer was done with their purchase.
I am aware that in cases where there is a conflict with a customer, the standard procedure is that the cashier leaves, while the manager intervenes. But what happened today does not fit the bill because there was no altercation between the two.
Is it legal for a cashier to consistently refuse service to a particular customer by walking away from their register and having someone else take over that customer's purchase?