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Whole Foods Employee's Resignation E-Mail Takes No Prisoners

201107_wholefoods.jpg
(m. v. jantzen's flickr).

Well then! Lots of people have gross things to say about the supermarket Whole Foods but it seems one (former) employee in Toronto has a whole lot to say about the retailer lovingly referred to as Whole Paycheck. As a goodbye salvo he wrote a doozy of a resignation letter which he sent to the entire company last week. To nobody's surprise that letter is now making the rounds online (first on Gawker). What are we talking about here? Well, this is how it starts: "My experience at Whole Foods was like an increasingly sped up fall down a really long hill. That got rockier with every metre. And eventually, just really spiky ... With fire, acid and Nickleback [sic] music."

The epic 2,000-word-plus missive touches on problems at the market including its hypocrisy when it comes to buying local (unless they can find foods cheaper elsewhere) and the "fake culture" the company tries to create amongst its workers along with the usual gripes you would expect out of any retail operation. And then—because when you are quitting why not burn all bridges, right?—the letter's author caps it all off with a series of personalized attacks on some of his co-workers, including the guy who goes to the gym too much ("We get it, we get it. You go to the gym. Nobody is impressed. In fact we all just laugh at your inferiority complex.") and the store's resident chauvainist ("Stop calling them "mamma" don't refer to them as "beautiful"... for christs sake, just keep all pet names off the table. You are NOT complimenting women, you are being open about not knowing knowing their names, and lazy enough to not read a name-tag.")

All in all, as you can see below, it is a pretty good exit. But not quite quitting on a Taco Bell sign good. What's your favorite part?

Dear Whole Foods Market,

My experience at Whole Foods was like an increasingly sped up fall down a really long hill. That got rockier with every metre. And eventually, just really spiky ... With fire, acid and Nickleback music. I was hired about five or six years ago. I appreciated and respected what the company said it's philosophies were at that time. The "core values" essentially. However, it didn't take long to realize what complete and utter bullshit they are:

Oh, you don't recycle properly? (Caring about our communities and our environment)

Oh, you throw out enough food to feed a lot of hungry university students. (Caring about our communities and our environment)

Oh, you're asking me to put latex gloves on the sales floor so customers can throw a pair out for every handful of gummy bears they take? (Caring about our communities and our environment)

Oh, you've installed massive television screens all over the store, sucking up energy and polluting the environment with tacky advertisements. (Caring about our communities and our environment, Supporting team member happiness and excellence)

Oh, you waste an absurd amount of energy, ink and paper in your offices for useless bureaucratic nonsense. (Caring about our communities and our environment, Supporting team member happiness and excellence, )

Oh, you just write off 10-20% of the product that you buy for your bulk department because the bins look nice. (Caring about our communities and our environment).

Oh, you sometimes intentionally order too much just to guarantee a full shelf, knowing full well the product will most likely be thrown out? (Caring about our communities and our environment)

Oh, you don't actually audit or evaluate each product you sell? (Caring about our communities and our environment, We sell the highest quality natural and organic products available)

Oh, you force team members to come in to work, on their day off, once a month, at 7 in the morning, knowing a lot of them live an hour away and the TTC isn't completely running that early in the morning and then force feed them useless updates on the company and embarrassingly artificial pep talks ([Redacted] once compared Whole Foods Market to religion... had to throw that in there. That was definitely a "Did she really just say that moment.")? (Supporting team member happiness and excellence, Caring about our communities and our environment)/

Oh, you buy poorly made, ugly t-shirts for your employees that will just be thrown in the trash and pretend they're gifts when they're really just advertising tools? (Supporting team member happiness and excellence, Caring about our communities and our environment)

Oh, the food here is really quite awful on average? Almost everything that prepared foods makes is terrible. The pizza used to be pretty good but the slices have shrunk, the toppings are sparser and it's usually extremely overcooked. The sandwiches are the stuff of nightmares. (It's amazing what advertising can make people think. It can even trick their senses.) (We sell the highest quality natural and organic products available)

Oh, you let some customers abuse your employees and then actually reward the customers for their behaviour and then trample on the integrity and honour of your abused employees? (Supporting team member happiness and excellence)

Oh, you practice discrimination by offering "healthier" employees better discounts? And you think having different rules for new smoker employees versus old smoker employees is a good idea? (Supporting team member happiness and excellence)

Oh, you purchase products from Israel (Or any distant country) if they're slightly cheaper than local alternatives? (Caring about our communities and our environment)

Oh, you've somehow created the worst computer program I've ever used to run your entire buying system? IRMA is some Windows 95 era stuff, guys. I could design a significantly better interface in 30 minutes on a pad of paper. I know several students who could create a superior program in their spare time. Was someone actually hired to create that thing? Was it the Realplayer dudes? Even Captain Picard couldn't facepalm hard enough to express the amount of failure in that... that, thing... (Supporting team member happiness and excellence)

Oh, you push employees into greater responsibilities without compensation? Often having them essentially do all the work of a higher position without the pay? (Supporting team member happiness and excellence)

Oh, you ambush employee's [sic] using two managers when you want to write someone up? No warning. No representation. All reasons and excuses fall on deaf ears. (Supporting team member happiness and excellence)

Oh, you'd rather attempt to create some sort of fake "culture" with signs and forced meeting than let it happen naturally by letting employees socialize lightly as they work? (Supporting team member happiness and excellence)

Oh, you like to manage "systems" instead of people? You don't hold critical thinking and discretion in high regard? You encourage blindly following rules? I.e., no recourse in challenging write ups. Employees given cold shoulder when they attempt anything like this. (Supporting team member happiness and excellence)

Oh, you want us to politely call and let you know if we'll be late... but you'll still write us up when we arrive? Kind of a dick move, guys. (Supporting team member happiness and excellence)

Oh, you actually think being 20 minutes late matters? You know Whole Foods Market is just a grocery store, right? (Supporting team member happiness and excellence)

Oh, you don't believe inflation exists? Cost of living raises aren't given here? (Supporting team member happiness and excellence)

I notice a trend... Honestly, I could go on and on and fill out the details but since most people will just dismiss this email I should probably not put too much effort into it. I should have kept a blog…

Now the employees have lost a lot of their former power and the store is being sucked into some centralized monster. Quality is being thrown out in favour of the people at the top having to do a little less work. Competition is being destroyed and you're not even pushing that many healthy products. Every second endcap is potato chips or pop or some sort of salt filled snack (Promoting the health of our stakeholders through healthy eating education). A lot of the stuff in Whole Body doesn't even work or has absolutely no credible evidence to back any claims up. You're kind a faux hippy Wal-Mart now. Great. Job.

Dear [REDACTED],
How you haven't been fired by now is a massive mystery to, not just me, but many people. You probably belong in a psychiatric ward. If you didn't have such a constant negative impact on everyone around you I might just feel sorry for you. BUT, you've hurt too many people. You create a hostile work environment with your flashes of insane anger and passive (I hesitate to use the word passive...) aggressive behavior. Please, just leave and piss all over the patio at [REDACTED]'s again. Maybe [REDACTED] will help this time. Her childish, two-faced personality suits you quite well. The fact that you still have a job is also a massive failure by your department's leaders as well. I'd be ashamed of being such push-overs who refuse to support good people if I were them. Quite ashamed.

Dear [REDACTED],
I don't think you could calm down enough and become a happy, tolerable person if you were to do yoga in a hot spring while high on ecstasy. Daily. For the rest of your life. Just wouldn't happen. I haven't met a single person working under you or who has worked under you who doesn't loath the way you treat people. Your job doesn't matter AT ALL. Get over it, relax and start treating people with a shred of respect. Chances are, you'll improve a lot of lives. Possibly even your own. I do have a suspicion that you're a sociopath though. Especially now, after seeing your reaction to you-know-who's hospital visit. If that is the case, this was futile. May I suggest some acting classes? You're not very good at pretending to be a complete, emotional, sincere human being.

Dear [REDACTED],
You win a lot of awards in my book. Best at being a chauvinist. Least likely to realize he's about to walk into someone. Just another sign that shows how inconsiderate and egocentric you are. Or, if you do realize you're plowing through people... well, I won't get into that... Best at ruining the entire meat department vicinity by blasting terrible music. Do you ever think about the people around you? By the way, how did you manage to spit on the back hallway's floor with your head so far up your ass? I guess I can at least forgive you for never learning employee's names because of that. It's probably difficult to hear up there.

For the love of god, learn to respect women. You have no idea how insulting and aggravating it is to be around someone who is so condescending to all the women you work with. Stop calling them "mamma" don't refer to them as "beautiful"... for christs sake, just keep all pet names off the table. You are NOT complimenting women, you are being open about not knowing knowing their names, and lazy enough to not read a name-tag. Lazy, or you are just that self centered? You have no clue. Take notice of people around you. If you are dumping work on them without real communication we are going to think you are a dick. Take the holiday table for example. You have nothing to do with it, take credit for it and can barely remember the people who run it so smoothly. Who do you think you are?

Dear [REDACTED],
You confuse the hell out of me. Sometimes you seem like a reasonable person and then sometimes you refuse to support your employees and in some cases even treat them quite terribly. Unfortunately, you've been hanging out mostly in Terrible Person territory lately. You're not welcome there! [REDACTED] owns it. You show little to no support for your team members and turn everything into a boy's club. You rant and bitch and moan to the wrong people, because it always get back to the people you rant and bitch and moan about. Quit rolling your eyes and let people speak. You might actually like and understand more of your employees this way. Respect your employees and the precious time that they are giving up to work for you. Perhaps take some time yourself and relearn the core values you are supposed to hold so dear. Stop taking your personal life out on everyone and have some compassion for the team members you disregard so much.

Dear [REDACTED],
Your dot idea was a really, really stupid idea. Try to learn how an operation works before trying to "fix" it. All of your suggestions so far have been outdated, time consuming, poorly thought out nonsense. You aren't impressing anyone or increasing your chances of moving up in the company with these terrible attempts at seeming proactive and full of "ideas." You're just frustrating to work with. Also, I think you should stand a little further back from people when you talk to them.

Dear [REDACTED],
We get it, we get it. You go to the gym. Nobody is impressed. In fact we all just laugh at your inferiority complex.

Dear [REDACTED],
Stop being such a cowardly weiner, hiding behind your emails and that awful hallway grin. Try communicating with people under you. Face to face when it's possible. If you're overworked you need help. Especially if your lack of time is affecting other people's jobs and the store/company.

Dear [REDACTED]/[REDACTED]/Anyone else who visits our store,
Do you guys realize that the store NEVER looks as good as it does when you arrive? When word spreads that you're coming to inspect the store almost every team leader begins running around like Brampton teens on PCP. They whip their employees into a frenzy. They sweep anything under the bed that they think you won't like. They attempt to make the store look like nobody ever shops there. This stops us and them from doing actual productive work which in turn impacts sales and creates a lot of pointless stress. Then you arrive, hand out your almighty advice. The team leaders grovel at your feet and follow your advice. Then you leave and they put everything back the way it was. Undo a lot of what you suggested. Oh, I'm sure there are things happening that I don't see. But you really do waste a lot of time. Even making our efforts regressive sometimes. Meanwhile, if I'm awesomely efficient at my job and take a moment to chat with a fellow employee, I'm bitched at. Seems to me a costly double standard.

Consider checking some of the "stats" and "facts" used in your in store education. They're often faulty logic, myths, misconceptions and lies used by so-called "environmentalists". I agree we're currently destroying our environment and I'm quite liberal and all for natural living. But evidence and credible sources very often disagree with the propaganda spouted to us at Whole Foods. It's just a little too extreme and biased sometimes which I believe just discredits the environmentalist movement in general, sadly.

Dear everyone else,
As I've said above a few times: you work at a grocery store. Go ahead and relax. Also, Whole Foods will try to make you feel like they are doing you a huge favour by employing you. It's really a mutual agreement or transaction. Don't fall for the guilt trips. Call in sick if you need to, etc.. There are laws in place to stop them from taking advantage of you. And if you're thinking "This is just the way it is. Suck it up!". You're the biggest part of the problem. I'm afraid we can't be friends.

Just enjoy life. It's pretty short, you know?

Good luck,
[REDACTED]

Contact the author of this article or email tips@gothamist.com with further questions, comments or tips.

Comments [rss]

  • D.B
    I've been in that person's shoes. Worked a shitty handful of jobs in my past . Dealt with the BS, Took a lot shit, But you know what , Through it all I remembered to continue my education and keep an eye out for another job in the process . This person's problem was that they didn't have an outlet to pour off some of there emotional overrun from the job ! I learned that you don't bring the home life too the job , And you don't bring it home !  Everything else is secondary . Just focus on the paycheck ( However small it maybe) Remember, They are the ones paying you  !
  • The resignation letter is one I would have liked to write, with modifications, to a couple of my former employers.  I've had some good jobs and I've had some bad ones, sometimes in the same company, sometimes at the same time.
      I will let you know one thing.  In some cases, unions ARE a good thing.  I know of a company much like Whole Foods where the employees were less than the lab mice in importance.  But the employees tried to unionize, which would have helped immensely, but the company did an outstanding job of union bashing, including firing the two leaders on questionable charges, threatening a couple others, and sending out a letter about how terrible thing unionizing would be. And this was a company that said they were going to make 15% growth that year and employees got an average performance review and a 2% wage increase.  Some of the 'bosses' were terrific, most of the supervisors were hideous. It took one 6 months to announce my promotion. Benefits were good though. (Pay was not in line with rest of industry though.)
  • Technomystic
    It may sound old-fashioned and perhaps an oversimplification, but when I was working for others, it was considered a mutual contract. I will work for you and you will compensate me, that's the "deal". If I didn't like the terms of the "deal", I quit and went to work somewhere else that had a better "deal".
    This person did quit, albeit quite late, so congratulations for that, but the whining...it's just insufferable!
  • HateTheGOP
    These managers and team leaders are interchangeable with those at Mass Mutual Financial Group in Springfield, MA.  Terrible people all.
  • Because I agree, in part, with your assessment of corporate Whole Foods as no longer being committed to their original core values, you might have had me with this rant.  That is, until the "Oh, you actually think being 20 minutes late matters? You know Whole Foods Market is just a grocery store, right?" statement.  YES...being 20 minutes late matters.  It means that those who showed up on time are picking up your slack.  It means that you have no real work ethic.  You lost all credibility with that statement.  Now, you're merely another whining employee.
  • I plan to shop at Trader Joes instead.  It's closer anyway.
  • C Bauer
    Sounds like this twat was late quite a few times.  I would have fired him, rather than keeping his worthless ass for 5-6 years.

    Oh, woe is me.  I'm a slacker.  I'm a loser.  I haven't moved up at all in the store for 5-6 YEARS. 

    Hey, LOSER, get a clue.  If you look back at all the problems you've probably had with other people/companies over the years, the one common factor in all of those situations is... YOU.

    http://despair.com/dysfunction...
  • justpicky
    Shame on this company make sure I don't visit it .   Whole Foods has a bad Reputation .
  • drreed
    Love it but now it's time for this redacted to grow up. Our jobs and careers make up a large part of our identities. After each passing year, the realization that we aren't ever going to become the Prime Minister, an astronaut, rockstar, or leading corporate CEO, we start to become more and more of what we really are -employees of a grocery store. No, people are not going to suddenly stop what they are doing and realize it's a grocery store and those are canned goods, and that it's not totally serious. It is totally serious. In my town, almost 1000 applicants showed up for a national grocery chains job fair, and they only had 5 or 6 "assistant manager trainee" type jobs. You're in the wrong place if you think somebody's going to pay you to be a big thinker. Even when they do its after you've paid your dues, learned something, and sucked-up to the right people. Welcome to adulthood, and every job you're ever going to have because the rest of it will be just like this! Study engineering and learn to turn imagination into reality. Your cynicism is far too well honed to need more classes in the humanities building.
  • mikeyc2010
    I employ about 300 people and I can tell you personally, having dealt with this very situation, this very personality in many employees, I can say this person's issues are not with Whole Foods, but with themselves. 

    We have no explicit or even vague reason why employee X decided to blow up, quit their job and then attack not only the company but the other employees. I have a feeling they were not doing their job as expected, being tardy, expecting to do as little as possible and still get paid for the same or equal amount of work that fellow workers ARE doing, etc. and management was down their backs about them failing to do their job.  So they were soon to be fired anyway. I'd put money on it. 


    I think that the letter is getting such publicity is really sad, on two levels:

    1. because it is such a huge embarassment to the writer,
    2. because it really does not represent Whole Foods in a broad scope, from the internal knowledge I have with friends who work for the company.  *from cashier to upper management.

    People are people wherever you are, and in large companies like this you're going to have those people who are rude, disrespectful and abusive to subordinates. Acceptable? No.  Happens? Yes.

    BUT - You don't have to take it from anyone. Simply move through the proper channels to voice your grievance and work it until you have reached the top.  You can solve your problem(s) much better by going that route, as opposed to blowing up, wasting "five or six years" of time invested, putting yourself in the ranks of the unemployed and attacking your former fellow workers.

    Sad for you.  Probably a relief for the everyone at the store you worked at. 



  • While I certainly am opposed to discrimination, it is not discrimination when an employee, for whatever reason, cannot effectively do their job.    If you're a cashier, but can't count your drawer, then you can't do your job.    If you have ADHD and because of that, can't stay behind the cash register and instead run around the store (I'm not saying you actually do this), then you can't do your job.    If you don't have arms, you can't be an inventory person in a warehouse.    If you don't have legs, you can't be a professional basketball player.   I don't have the strength or stamina to be a stunt man or a construction worker.    That's not discrimination, it's reality.

    You seem to write well.   Maybe you should get a job where most of your duties involve writing and communication skills.

    As for the OP, while some of his complaints may be valid, he/she lost me when he complained about being written up for being 20 minutes late.    Calling to say that you're late doesn't excuse you from being late.   It might be different in an office environment where one is doing independent work.   But not in a retail environment where someone being late may result in lesser service to the customers.       In addition, this person's attitude seems to be that everyone besides them is either incompetent, hypocritical or a jerk.       This person strikes me as someone who is always going to blame other people for their own failings.

    Having said that, I do believe that there is a problem in this country with large chains paying sub-standard wages, destroying the middle-class.   And Whole Foods, while marketing itself as a healthful and organic chain, has always sold plenty of non-organic "traditional" food.     As with absolutely any retail, it's "buyer beware" and always has been.  That doesn't make it a bad store as long as everything is properly labeled, which it is.


  • Although the bad-mouthing may be unnecessary to get the
    point across, I am a former employee of Whole Foods here in the UK and I can
    most certainly understand why this employee is upset. I am using this
    opportunity to reveal my story with Whole Foods to the public- one which I had
    considered taking the company to court for.


    In 2009/2010 while working for Whole foods I experienced
    discrimination and employee abuse from upper management for having a learning
    disability. Originally I took the job not only because I believed in their ethos,
    but more because I thought that the job was fit and manageable for my
    condition. I am someone who suffers from a severe case of Dyslexia coinciding
    with minor effects of adult ADHD. At the time of my employment I was only aware
    of the ADHD but after receiving a bad report in the first 3 months for my
    multi-tasking, cash-count and till handling skills, I then felt it was
    necessary to advise upper management of my condition. I never expected to
    struggle at the job.


    Following my statement, I was advised to get a report sent
    to them from my GP and assured the company of my plan to seek out treatment.
    However, during this process more write-ups about my performance were taking
    place and I had felt that my team leader wasn’t taking the issue seriously enough.
    Many meetings with her resulted in me feeling patronised and made to feel
    stupid. When I tried to express this to upper management they did not help.


    Once the report came in I then proceeded to get a company
    called Remploy behind me. Remploy support people on the workplace with learning
    difficulties. Whole Foods, Remploy and myself had organised a working routine
    where I was meant to be allocated a certain amount of breaks and a check list
    of responsibilities that didn’t involve too much multi-tasking. We signed a
    contract.


    Within 2 weeks the agreement collapsed. Upper management
    were not checking up on the team leader, and the team leader (who treated me as
    a hassle for her) failed to implement the plan. My complaints were not being
    heard and it seemed as though the team leader had been given too much extended
    work to be able to deal with her team. But still, I was receiving more
    write-ups and warnings of dismissal.


    During an instance where I had fallen ill due to the stress
    and had to call in sick, I was unfairly attacked for being a liar as I was seen
    walking up the high street. What they didn’t know was that I had left the house
    to get a prescription as well as getting air. When I returned to work after 2
    days, the week went on to proceed with being patronised in front of a customer,
    and yelled at for going to the toilet (even though I had another employee cover
    me). The company seems to be so paranoid of their employees on the shop floor
    that they are continuously trying to search for problems and in contrast the
    shop floor employees feel so discouraged they are afraid to do wrong by upper
    management. This creates an uncomfortable atmosphere.


     Following these
    mishaps, I expressed how I felt about my mistreatment to the team leader and
    with no empathy she then suggested that, despite all the evidence, my condition
    was a poor excuse not to work properly. This resulted in an argument whereby
    she suspended me and told me that she will call me back when she needs me to
    come to work. Upper management finally got involved again and asked us both to
    write statements about the occurrence.   My statement explained my concerns
    constructively and hers carried with it personal opinions displaying such words
    as ‘ego-centric’ and ‘incapable’.


    I finally returned to work but within a few weeks was told
    that because of my condition, I was no longer going to be able to work the
    position and would have to reapply for another position on the shop floor more
    suitable. They would not give me a direct transfer stating that it was company
    policy. They also said that there were no openings at that particular branch (which
    was close to home) but that they[CONT]  would  happily organise interviews for other
    branches. I eventually started a new full-time position with a different branch
    but after a month or so still struggled. The new branch were aware of my
    condition and had promised I was able to go part-time.


    I waited almost 2 months and my schedule still remained full
    time hours. I grew more and more mentally unstable due to the stress that I
    eventually had to walk out on the job. I spent the next 8 months of my life
    undergoing CBT therapy after becoming severely depressed and out of work. Eventually
    after a series of testing, they had discovered I have Dyslexia and by the time I
    tried to file a law suit against the company, too much time had passed and my
    chances were low. I am now back at University under the Disability Student’s
    Allowance act receiving all the support I need to get back into working world.


    The only union-organisation who were willing to help defend
    my case were the IWW but unfortunately whole foods workers seem too scared to
    join any union, even though it is their legal right to do so. For any employees
    who would like to be heard properly I would recommend getting in touch with them.
     www.IWW.org .


     




  • Although the bad-mouthing may be unnecessary to get the
    point across, I am a former employee of Whole Foods here in the UK and I can
    most certainly understand why this employee is upset. I am using this
    opportunity to reveal my story with Whole Foods to the public- one which I had
    considered taking the company to court for.



    In 2009/2010 while working for Whole foods I experienced
    discrimination and employee abuse from upper management for having a learning
    disability. Originally I took the job not only because I believed in their ethos,
    but more because I thought that the job was fit and manageable for my
    condition. I am someone who suffers from a severe case of Dyslexia coinciding
    with minor effects of adult ADHD. At the time of my employment I was only aware
    of the ADHD but after receiving a bad report in the first 3 months for my
    multi-tasking, cash-count and till handling skills, I then felt it was
    necessary to advise upper management of my condition. I never expected to
    struggle at the job.



    Following my statement, I was advised to get a report sent
    to them from my GP and assured the company of my plan to seek out treatment.
    However, during this process more write-ups about my performance were taking
    place and I had felt that my team leader wasn’t taking the issue seriously enough.
    Many meetings with her resulted in me feeling patronised and made to feel
    stupid. When I tried to express this to upper management they did not help.



    Once the report came in I then proceeded to get a company
    called Remploy behind me. Remploy support people on the workplace with learning
    difficulties. Whole Foods, Remploy and myself had organised a working routine
    where I was meant to be allocated a certain amount of breaks and a check list
    of responsibilities that didn’t involve too much multi-tasking. We signed a
    contract.


    Within 2 weeks the agreement collapsed. Upper management
    were not checking up on the team leader, and the team leader (who treated me as
    a hassle for her) failed to implement the plan. My complaints were not being
    heard and it seemed as though the team leader had been given too much extended
    work to be able to deal with her team. But still, I was receiving more
    write-ups and warnings of dismissal.



    During an instance where I had fallen ill due to the stress
    and had to call in sick, I was unfairly attacked for being a liar as I was seen
    walking up the high street. What they didn’t know was that I had left the house
    to get a prescription as well as getting air. When I returned to work after 2
    days, the week went on to proceed with being patronised in front of a customer,
    and yelled at for going to the toilet (even though I had another employee cover
    me). The company seems to be so paranoid of their employees on the shop floor
    that they are continuously trying to search for problems and in contrast the
    shop floor employees feel so discouraged they are afraid to do wrong by upper
    management. This creates an uncomfortable atmosphere.


     
    Following these
    mishaps, I expressed how I felt about my mistreatment to the team leader and
    with no empathy she then suggested that, despite all the evidence, my condition
    was a poor excuse not to work properly. This resulted in an argument whereby
    she suspended me and told me that she will call me back when she needs me to
    come to work. Upper management finally got involved again and asked us both to
    write statements about the occurrence.   My statement explained my concerns
    constructively and hers carried with it personal opinions displaying such words
    as ‘ego-centric’ and ‘incapable’.



    I finally returned to work but within a few weeks was told
    that because of my condition, I was no longer going to be able to work the
    position and would have to reapply for another position on the shop floor more
    suitable. They would not give me a direct transfer stating that it was company
    policy. They also said that there were no openings at that particular branch (which
    was close to home) but that they[CONT]  would  happily organise interviews for other
    branches. I eventually started a new full-time position with a different branch
    but after a month or so still struggled. The new branch were aware of my
    condition and had promised I was able to go part-time.


    I waited almost 2 months and my schedule still remained full
    time hours. I grew more and more mentally unstable due to the stress that I
    eventually had to walk out on the job. I spent the next 8 months of my life
    undergoing CBT therapy after becoming severely depressed and out of work.

    Eventually
    after a series of testing, they had discovered I have Dyslexia and by the time I
    tried to file a law suit against the company, too much time had passed and my
    chances were low. I am now back at University under the Disability Student’s
    Allowance act receiving all the support I need to get back into working world.



    The only union-organisation who were willing to help defend
    my case were the IWW but unfortunately whole foods workers seem too scared to
    join any union, even though it is their legal right to do so. For any employees
    who would like to be heard properly I would recommend getting in touch with them.
     www.IWW.org .


     


  • Technomystic
    I assume that most of us are sorry for you that you have good reasons for not being able to pull your own weight in your job, nonetheless your inability puts a huge stress on your co-workers and employers. Please be mindful of the problems you cause and be more forgiving of team leaders and such who have to give you special treatment. Their jobs are hard too and many of them have underlying psychological and physical challenges (maybe privately) that make it difficult to "go the extra mile" to cover for you.  Maybe a government job where good performance isn't really mandatory would be a better fit for you.
  • Speaking as someone who has worked in a retail environment as a cashier, then customer service rep, then as a Human Resources Administrator, I think Whole Foods is lucky to be rid of this guy!  The letter speaks volumes about him as a person and gives a biased, single perspective on a successful company with many satisfied employees.  He doesn't sound like anyone I would have enjoyed working with on the sales floor, nor would I have appreciated the immaturity he displayed in the way he left the job.
  • This former employee sounds like a real jerk
  • Laura_Dean
    "Oh, you actually think being 20 minutes late matters? You know Whole
    Foods Market is just a grocery store, right?"  This statement says a lot more about the story's author than he or she would like to admit.
  • brwnmamba
    how do Whole Foods' practices stand against other chains such as Trader Joe's? Target?

    I can't critique that much, it's not like I'm growing the food myself.

    I can sympathize with being treated unfair, but something about the tone of these messages imply the employees are above the work: not a great work ethic.

    Whole Foods company is EMPLOYING PEOPLE -- I'm sure there are a lot of other people in this country that would love to be paid more than minimum wage in an air conditioned store with good lighting and opportunities to work at other WF stores if you move.

    That said, I agree that some of the commenter tend to see more white employees, but that might depend on the location. Most of the Whole Foods' I have visited in NY, CA and FL tend to have a mixture of folks working there; but I have always been to one in or close proximity to a major city with lots of diversity.

    In terms of buying organic, and the racial composition of non-white Whole Foods shoppers this tends to slant toward white but I think this is slowly changing -- Whole Foods isn't cheap.

    signed -- a sometimes Whole Foods shopper not a regular one


  • TishTash
    What the hell are you talkin' about?!
  • PWCoxuckers
    If you hadn't mentioned the fact you were talking about Whole Foods, I would've thought you were referring to PriceWaterhouseCoopers.
  • I can assure you, I won't be shopping at Whole Foods and will copy this on my twitter and facebook accounts. Obviously it's a poorly run outfit when you have someone this angry. If your going to leave might as well unleash your true feelings, I wonder if Whole Foods knows this letter was placed on the internet. I'd be concerned...
  • R.U. kidden
    naw, people get this pizzed anywhere no matter WHO's running the joint.  There's a malcontent in every bunch.
  • jolie t
    Whole Foods is waaaaaaay overrated.  I also heard that WF aggressively enters many of their customers on a facial recognition database b/c they think they are either shoplifting, or are suspicious characters.  Once you get on their database - it goes viral.  I once bought "organic spinach" - from CHINA - at WHOLE FOODS. LOL.  Total sleaze.
  • guest777777777
    Wow, you are an idiot! You can't really believe that!
  • Peanut_Butter
    The facial recognition database, if true, would be a smart method to counter shoplifting, from their point of view.
  • jolie t
    Whole Foods has a right to protect their stores & rightfully so.  However, they DO NOT have the right to be judge, jury & executioner.  We have courts & DUE PROCESS exactly & intended for just that. If people shoplifted, they should be tried in a court of law. If guilty, then so be it.  What happens if the person is innocent?
  • melizer
    So they don't arrest you if you are caught shoplifting?  They just take innocent people out back and execute them if they set foot in the store and their face is matched in their database?  You're right - that's outrageous!
  • Eoiri
    Israel has as little/much to do with this as any other country in the world. Don't you see that? We're all connected. Please don't create more any more conflict in the world, but rather create peace. That said, I hope you get a better job elsewhere!
  • AlexTheOriginalPartyDog
    Posting this twice does not lessen the stupidity of the message.
  • Eoiri
    Israel has as little/much to do with this as any other place in the world does - don't you see that? We're all connected. Please think before you create more conflict rather than try to be peaceful. But otherwise, hope you find better work elsewhere!
  • that was great!
  • TheRealCannibal
    This guy is like the shitty Julian Assange of Whole Foods.  

  • "Picky-Leaks"
  • To say what's on his mind? You probably wish you thought of it.
  • TheRealCannibal
    In the past when I was unfairly treated as a retail employee I first tried to use internal channels to file complaints, it that didn't work I called 311, the better business bureau, or department of social services, or the state division of human rights.  I documented any problems, had registered letters to supervisors notorized before sending, spoke to lawyers and eventually settled out of court.


    So, no, I don't "wish I thought of" some ineffective, egotistical, unprofessional rant.  I prefer to handle my shit.

    Nice try, thanks for playing
  • It is the same story with any large company with multiple stores. Does anyone think that working at Whole Foods is any different than working at Walmart, Target, Best Buy, McDonalds etc? We should support or locally owned stores. (If we can find any)
  • Guest
    Locally owned stores and businesses fuck over their employees the exact same way.
  • Some do but some others are great.
  • Guest
    True and that was part of my point.  Some big businesses don't fuck over their employees (I've heard, from current and former employees, that people who work for Bloomberg are well taken care of).  It's not fair to lump them all together.  


    ________________________________
  • I was generally referring to large chain store type of businesses. I know plenty of large corporations that would be wonderful to work for. I just don't like supporting Duane Reade, Target, Home Depot and their ilk.
  • lightstays
    Whole Foods wastes an absolutely insane amount of food. Automatic trashing for anything that is an hour past its expiry date.

    There are also regular ass-fuckings in their bathroom at Union Square.
  • TheRealCannibal
    All supermarkets are supposed to throw out expired food.  Thats why theres a date on it.  

    As for ass fuckings in the bathroom, that goes for ANY and EVERY bathroom in NYC.  Or did you just move here?
  • lightstays
    There's a difference between throwing out a loaf of bread encrusted in blue and green mold that would make you vomit, and, say, throwing out a perfectly good gravlax and caviar spread in front of a starving homeless person and then locking the dumpster behind you. The latter is more the Whole Foods style.

    And, yes, as a long-term resident, I am very aware of the ubiquity of ass-fucking locations in high-end supermarkets.
  • TheRealCannibal
    Are you really that stupid that you dont understand why there are expiration dates on food and why supermarkets adhere to them?

    Help yourself to all the moldy bread and botulism you can eat.
  • lightstays
    When the hammer of Thor has deemed to your profligate ass unfit for modernity and your retirement accommodations have been prepared on the coast of Somalia, you will understand the meaning of food conservation.
  • TheRealCannibal
    ... So you ARE that stupid....
  • mary88grace
    ...and who had to work their shift an extra 20 minutes because of lateness!?!  Maybe someone could return the favor to Redacted! Wal-Mart=worse than anything else! I know Whole Foods gives a lot away to food pantrys; maybe U students go to them, even in Canada.
  • "it's" in paragraph one also needs a [sic] next to it -- should be "its."
  • Though I'm not sure.  In Canadian English (I know this was the case is more medieval English), "it's" might be correct in that case.
  • Ragingsemi
    why would I want to read this entire letter?
  • What, like that time you peed on [redacted]'s porch, Ragingsemi? And why don't you read people's nametags? And why....
  • Ragingsemi
    I'm sorry but what the fuck are you talking about?
    Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
  • harveyharevi
    Oh, you should not have redacted the author's name! Oh!
  • Caffiend
    Oh, and this differs from any other disgruntled retail workers mindset how exactly? (Overestimating the OP's common sense threshold)

    Seriously though, as a retail manager, I hate it when employees get to this point. Clearly you have someone that had the best of intentions when beginning, and thought they were really good. They probably were. However somewhere down the line they kept finding ways to let the job get to them. Before it got this far, someone should have noticed it and either worked with the coworker to get into another position, or encourage them leave. Either way, this isn't the type of response that is generated overnight. FAIL on both sides.
  • Bonobo_Stud
    Lulz at "discrimination" against smokers.  Working at Whole Foods might be at about the right IQ level for this guy.
  • rightnyer
    The problem is that liberal society has taught people to think that all discrimination is bad. Obviously, some discrimination is good.
  • billy789
    WHOLE FOODS, THE OBAMA OF SUPERMARKETS!!!
  • Relaxasaurus
    "...Whole Foods was like an increasingly sped up fall down a really long hill"
    "...the company said it's philosophies were at that time."

    Wat? I thought Canucks were supposed to be smerter than us.
  • billy789
    WHOLE FOODS, THE WAL-MART OF FOODS!!!
  • longacre
    Walmart sells groceries now, so Walmart is the Walmart of foods.
  • randomtransplant
    It is essential, when composing a fuck you to the man, to include elements of mismanagement the man is either unaware of or cannot defend. Other than a sentence fragment of 'explosive anger', this letter doesn't contain one single thing which isn't already being implemented by Whole Foods by design.

    They know your retail job sucks. Its retail at a corporation. Wanna see some fucked up HR discrepancies? Be happy you arn't a member of the graveyard cleaning contractors. Or an employee of Walmart.

    This is just like those old meme's about the Starbucks barrista rants...high on arrogance and niavetiey, low on comedic value.

    This kid is no Upton Sinclair, I'll say that much.
  • Exactly! If this guy were indeed bothered by systemic problems with Whole Foods outlets/buyers/PR/corporate management, he would have left all the silly, petty, bitch-ass ad hominem stuff alone. The fact that he even sent out this grandiose break-up note on leaving the company is a bad sign--and almost certainly a harbinger of future interpersonal workplace issues for him.

    I personally don't like the fake-snobbish self-image of Whole Foods, am unimpressed with their selection and am not a customer. (Farmer's markets, yes - Whole Foods, hell no.) But this character seems scarcely more professional than any of the individual people he calls out in his public note. NEVER send such a note when you leave a job: Swallow your grievances like an adult and move on, son...
  • Peanut_Butter
    *naivete
  • randomtransplant
    This is me shaking my fist at the guy hogging up the employee toilet.
  • Peanut_Butter
    If it's any consolation, I like the Upton Sinclair line.
  • Kirk Faulkner
    And what's this I hear about them fucking up their TPS reports?
  • Mr. Know-It-All
    Dear [REDACTED],
    Welcome to, oh, the world of work? Oh, where being 20 minutes late does, uh, matter? Oh, and where whiny, disgruntled, hypercritical employees are never happy? Oh, and where the job of for-profit corporations is not to feed university students and stroke your ego but rather to make, uh, profit?

    Have fun at Target.

    Good luck,
    [REDACTED]
  • Guest
    At least he'll be better compensated at Target.
  • guest777777777
    I am a very well compensated Whole Foods team member. Target will never come close to paying their team members what WFM team members make. Retail is retail, it sucks. No matter where you go. It is exactly what it is.
  • Not likely.
  • this is a much better way to go out.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...
  • "Oh, you throw out enough food to feed a lot of hungry university students."
    Really? straight to the university students...f*ck all those hungry homeless and people really struggling! you know...the ones who cant afford to GO TO A UNIVERSITY
  • BoogieDown
    Um, it's Canada.  Virtually everybody can afford to go to university.
  • LICnative
    I'm going to go out on a limb here. I think the guy is unhappy at work.
  • NlGGAZ
    This guy has some pretty impressive passive aggressive skills. That nickelback insult is amazing!
  • AlexTheOriginalPartyDog
    Totally agree.  I did love the Nickleback comment.
  • FreeDumb1
    i eat food from my garden
  • FreeDumb1
    ha ha ha haa dumb asses
  • Now we know why Mr. Mackey opposes allowing his employees to unionize -- they might actually force him to clean up his act!

    "The union is like having herpes. It doesn't kill you, but it's
    unpleasant and inconvenient, and it stops a lot of people from becoming
    your lover."

    Really, Mr. Mackey? I rather think being called "mamma" and "gorgeous" by a male supervisor is a lot more like herpes than a union that would protect me from that kind of sexual harassment in the workplace. I think I'd rather have herpes than work for a schmuck who thinks it's okay to "push employees into greater responsibilities without
    compensation, [o]ften having them essentially do all the work of a higher
    position without the pay."

    If even only half of all the above is true, if I worked for you, I'd organize in a heartbeat, and I'd DARE you to try to stop me.
  • angry_pickle
    "sexual harassment in the workplace" is illegal under federal laws.  You don't need a union.

    "push employees into greater responsibilities without
    compensation," .  Welcome to the real world where many white collar workers work overtime for no extra pay.  I remember working as a consultant at GM when the whole place cleared out at 5pm no matter what was happening because they were unionized.  It was bizarre.

  • randomtransplant
    In the 'real world' you get pushed into union - only work knowing that X number of people have to die before you have a chance to interview for the chance to get into the union in the first place. Its alot like white collar office work.
  • Minabee
    "Just enjoy life. It's pretty short, you know?"

    If the shortest life is half the length of this letter, that's still pretty long.
  • whitecastlerock
    someone seems a little disappointed...
  • tkdnyc
    Oh, so you couldn't resign with a much shorter scalding letter?
  • BottomlessChips
    WAHHH
  • So Whole Foods is like every other national retail operation?  Who would have guessed?
  • Peanut_Butter
    What's a "metre"?
  • Like centre, or theatre.  We're wacky like that.
  • Guest
    And humour and colour and armour.
  • I've dropped the "u" since moving here.
  • Guest
    I love those spellings, but we ain't allowed to do it.
  • Spellcheck won't allow it.
  • thedude44
    dont forget potatoe
  • TheRealCannibal
    and "duuche"
  • Okay, now you're just making shit up.
  • TheRealCannibal
    I guess you have to separate yourselves from Americans some way, since no one can tell the difference
  • Uh, Canadians spell the exact way we Americans would be spelling if we still had Kings and Queens.  It is us (Americans) whose spelling changed when we got our independence. 

    So, it's us who just "had" to be different.  Canadians do, in fact, spell the absolute correct way.
  • BoogieDown
    It was Americans who changed the original spellings of these words, not Canadians.  I always suspected that Americans did this to further separate themselves from their former rulers.
  • ibivi
    Most computers have US English as their default setting.  So the Canadian spelling which is based on English spelling always gets flagged as typos.  We are a bilingual country, English and French.  Canada has adjusted many things to sync up to American life but not everything.  I am perfectedly prepared to have Canada be a republic and drop the monarchy.  If I have to swear allegiance to anyone I would rather swear it to a Canadian, not some old woman in England.
  • I'm still pissed Noah Webster bastardised the English language…
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