Is there any way of getting my bosses to fix the air conditioning?

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I work in fast food, and after speaking to a lot of my colleagues I've found that I'm not the only one at work who feels it is too hot.
We do have air conditioning, but the managers all admit it does not work.



I've asked many times to be put on a cooler station, such as by the window or door, but they keep sticking me in the hottest places. I do not work in the kitchen, so I can only imagine the discomfort they have.



I go through 2 cans of spray and 3 roll on deodorants a week to keep myself fresh, otherwise I get in trouble for the smell.



I feel I'm being treated wrongly, and no one else there is making a stand, I have mentioned this a few times, but my boss does nothing.



This week alone, 2 employees have been sent home after throwing up due to heat, 2 have fainted from the heat, and many call in sick from heat exhaustion after doing a shift the day before.



What can I do? Can I report the heat conditions? Is there any other action I can take.



As it is fast food, I obviously can't bring a fan into work, so please, I hope someone can help me here.







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  • Are you working at a larger chain fast food outlet? Can you approach HR?
    – Jane S♦
    Jul 1 '15 at 21:51










  • I am, however I work in a franchisee owned by an individual, and I have no way of contacting him
    – Anonymous due to contract
    Jul 1 '15 at 21:54







  • 13




    You work in fast food but not in the kitchen and people are fainting from the heat? If the restaurant is that hot, surely it is putting off customers. It seems likely that you're losing customers because they're not going to come enjoy a meal in a sauna. Beyond that, you'd probably be looking at reporting the employer to whatever workplace safety bureau your state/ country/ etc. has (OSHA in the US osha.gov)
    – Justin Cave
    Jul 1 '15 at 22:07






  • 9




    Depending on the jurisdiction there may be laws that apply. Canada's Federal regulations for food preparation workers specify 18°C min./29°C max. (that's about 84°F max). Workers also have the right to refuse to work in dangerous conditions. But reporting your employer should not be your first or even second step.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Jul 1 '15 at 22:17







  • 1




    @Anonymousduetocontract I would be curious to hear what you decided to do and if you were able to make any changes happen.
    – David K
    Jul 8 '15 at 20:10
















up vote
15
down vote

favorite












I work in fast food, and after speaking to a lot of my colleagues I've found that I'm not the only one at work who feels it is too hot.
We do have air conditioning, but the managers all admit it does not work.



I've asked many times to be put on a cooler station, such as by the window or door, but they keep sticking me in the hottest places. I do not work in the kitchen, so I can only imagine the discomfort they have.



I go through 2 cans of spray and 3 roll on deodorants a week to keep myself fresh, otherwise I get in trouble for the smell.



I feel I'm being treated wrongly, and no one else there is making a stand, I have mentioned this a few times, but my boss does nothing.



This week alone, 2 employees have been sent home after throwing up due to heat, 2 have fainted from the heat, and many call in sick from heat exhaustion after doing a shift the day before.



What can I do? Can I report the heat conditions? Is there any other action I can take.



As it is fast food, I obviously can't bring a fan into work, so please, I hope someone can help me here.







share|improve this question






















  • Are you working at a larger chain fast food outlet? Can you approach HR?
    – Jane S♦
    Jul 1 '15 at 21:51










  • I am, however I work in a franchisee owned by an individual, and I have no way of contacting him
    – Anonymous due to contract
    Jul 1 '15 at 21:54







  • 13




    You work in fast food but not in the kitchen and people are fainting from the heat? If the restaurant is that hot, surely it is putting off customers. It seems likely that you're losing customers because they're not going to come enjoy a meal in a sauna. Beyond that, you'd probably be looking at reporting the employer to whatever workplace safety bureau your state/ country/ etc. has (OSHA in the US osha.gov)
    – Justin Cave
    Jul 1 '15 at 22:07






  • 9




    Depending on the jurisdiction there may be laws that apply. Canada's Federal regulations for food preparation workers specify 18°C min./29°C max. (that's about 84°F max). Workers also have the right to refuse to work in dangerous conditions. But reporting your employer should not be your first or even second step.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Jul 1 '15 at 22:17







  • 1




    @Anonymousduetocontract I would be curious to hear what you decided to do and if you were able to make any changes happen.
    – David K
    Jul 8 '15 at 20:10












up vote
15
down vote

favorite









up vote
15
down vote

favorite











I work in fast food, and after speaking to a lot of my colleagues I've found that I'm not the only one at work who feels it is too hot.
We do have air conditioning, but the managers all admit it does not work.



I've asked many times to be put on a cooler station, such as by the window or door, but they keep sticking me in the hottest places. I do not work in the kitchen, so I can only imagine the discomfort they have.



I go through 2 cans of spray and 3 roll on deodorants a week to keep myself fresh, otherwise I get in trouble for the smell.



I feel I'm being treated wrongly, and no one else there is making a stand, I have mentioned this a few times, but my boss does nothing.



This week alone, 2 employees have been sent home after throwing up due to heat, 2 have fainted from the heat, and many call in sick from heat exhaustion after doing a shift the day before.



What can I do? Can I report the heat conditions? Is there any other action I can take.



As it is fast food, I obviously can't bring a fan into work, so please, I hope someone can help me here.







share|improve this question














I work in fast food, and after speaking to a lot of my colleagues I've found that I'm not the only one at work who feels it is too hot.
We do have air conditioning, but the managers all admit it does not work.



I've asked many times to be put on a cooler station, such as by the window or door, but they keep sticking me in the hottest places. I do not work in the kitchen, so I can only imagine the discomfort they have.



I go through 2 cans of spray and 3 roll on deodorants a week to keep myself fresh, otherwise I get in trouble for the smell.



I feel I'm being treated wrongly, and no one else there is making a stand, I have mentioned this a few times, but my boss does nothing.



This week alone, 2 employees have been sent home after throwing up due to heat, 2 have fainted from the heat, and many call in sick from heat exhaustion after doing a shift the day before.



What can I do? Can I report the heat conditions? Is there any other action I can take.



As it is fast food, I obviously can't bring a fan into work, so please, I hope someone can help me here.









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 30 '16 at 13:03









Draken

8,39573847




8,39573847










asked Jul 1 '15 at 21:48









Anonymous due to contract

7613




7613











  • Are you working at a larger chain fast food outlet? Can you approach HR?
    – Jane S♦
    Jul 1 '15 at 21:51










  • I am, however I work in a franchisee owned by an individual, and I have no way of contacting him
    – Anonymous due to contract
    Jul 1 '15 at 21:54







  • 13




    You work in fast food but not in the kitchen and people are fainting from the heat? If the restaurant is that hot, surely it is putting off customers. It seems likely that you're losing customers because they're not going to come enjoy a meal in a sauna. Beyond that, you'd probably be looking at reporting the employer to whatever workplace safety bureau your state/ country/ etc. has (OSHA in the US osha.gov)
    – Justin Cave
    Jul 1 '15 at 22:07






  • 9




    Depending on the jurisdiction there may be laws that apply. Canada's Federal regulations for food preparation workers specify 18°C min./29°C max. (that's about 84°F max). Workers also have the right to refuse to work in dangerous conditions. But reporting your employer should not be your first or even second step.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Jul 1 '15 at 22:17







  • 1




    @Anonymousduetocontract I would be curious to hear what you decided to do and if you were able to make any changes happen.
    – David K
    Jul 8 '15 at 20:10
















  • Are you working at a larger chain fast food outlet? Can you approach HR?
    – Jane S♦
    Jul 1 '15 at 21:51










  • I am, however I work in a franchisee owned by an individual, and I have no way of contacting him
    – Anonymous due to contract
    Jul 1 '15 at 21:54







  • 13




    You work in fast food but not in the kitchen and people are fainting from the heat? If the restaurant is that hot, surely it is putting off customers. It seems likely that you're losing customers because they're not going to come enjoy a meal in a sauna. Beyond that, you'd probably be looking at reporting the employer to whatever workplace safety bureau your state/ country/ etc. has (OSHA in the US osha.gov)
    – Justin Cave
    Jul 1 '15 at 22:07






  • 9




    Depending on the jurisdiction there may be laws that apply. Canada's Federal regulations for food preparation workers specify 18°C min./29°C max. (that's about 84°F max). Workers also have the right to refuse to work in dangerous conditions. But reporting your employer should not be your first or even second step.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Jul 1 '15 at 22:17







  • 1




    @Anonymousduetocontract I would be curious to hear what you decided to do and if you were able to make any changes happen.
    – David K
    Jul 8 '15 at 20:10















Are you working at a larger chain fast food outlet? Can you approach HR?
– Jane S♦
Jul 1 '15 at 21:51




Are you working at a larger chain fast food outlet? Can you approach HR?
– Jane S♦
Jul 1 '15 at 21:51












I am, however I work in a franchisee owned by an individual, and I have no way of contacting him
– Anonymous due to contract
Jul 1 '15 at 21:54





I am, however I work in a franchisee owned by an individual, and I have no way of contacting him
– Anonymous due to contract
Jul 1 '15 at 21:54





13




13




You work in fast food but not in the kitchen and people are fainting from the heat? If the restaurant is that hot, surely it is putting off customers. It seems likely that you're losing customers because they're not going to come enjoy a meal in a sauna. Beyond that, you'd probably be looking at reporting the employer to whatever workplace safety bureau your state/ country/ etc. has (OSHA in the US osha.gov)
– Justin Cave
Jul 1 '15 at 22:07




You work in fast food but not in the kitchen and people are fainting from the heat? If the restaurant is that hot, surely it is putting off customers. It seems likely that you're losing customers because they're not going to come enjoy a meal in a sauna. Beyond that, you'd probably be looking at reporting the employer to whatever workplace safety bureau your state/ country/ etc. has (OSHA in the US osha.gov)
– Justin Cave
Jul 1 '15 at 22:07




9




9




Depending on the jurisdiction there may be laws that apply. Canada's Federal regulations for food preparation workers specify 18°C min./29°C max. (that's about 84°F max). Workers also have the right to refuse to work in dangerous conditions. But reporting your employer should not be your first or even second step.
– Spehro Pefhany
Jul 1 '15 at 22:17





Depending on the jurisdiction there may be laws that apply. Canada's Federal regulations for food preparation workers specify 18°C min./29°C max. (that's about 84°F max). Workers also have the right to refuse to work in dangerous conditions. But reporting your employer should not be your first or even second step.
– Spehro Pefhany
Jul 1 '15 at 22:17





1




1




@Anonymousduetocontract I would be curious to hear what you decided to do and if you were able to make any changes happen.
– David K
Jul 8 '15 at 20:10




@Anonymousduetocontract I would be curious to hear what you decided to do and if you were able to make any changes happen.
– David K
Jul 8 '15 at 20:10










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
30
down vote













Yes, you need to act on this. If people are fainting and being sent home from heat exhaustion, then that is a safety concern that needs to be addressed immediately. If you want to give your manager one last shot at fixing this, then go to them with your concerns for the safety of the group, not that you think you are being treated unfairly. However, certainly don't feel bad about skipping this step and going straight to someone higher.



You can try contacting the franchise owner, but that may not have any more effect. The corporate HR should also have a phone number you can call. In either case state that the working conditions are unsafe and illegal - those words should scare someone into taking some action quickly in the hopes of avoiding a lawsuit.



As @DJClaworth suggested, if you are a member of a union, talk to them too. The primary purpose of unions is to advocate for workers' rights, and the right to a safe work environment is certainly one of them.



You can also go to the authorities. In the United States, you can file a complaint through OSHA, and other countries have similar organizations. I recommend a phone call rather than a webform, because it often results in a quicker response. Also know that if your employer does learn it was you who reported them, you do have protections.



Please don't wait. People have been getting sick already; it's only a matter of time before something worse happens.






share|improve this answer






















  • This is, in my opinion, the only way to proceed. You can try talking to your boss, but they likely don't care (or they would have fixed it already). If you talk to your boss and then lodge a complaint, they'll probably know it was you. OSHA claims to be confidential, just be prepared for someone at your workplace to find out it was you that reported them. It's unlikely they'll get your name, but have a back up just in case.
    – 404usernotfound
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:29











  • @404usernotfound Good point. I added a link to whistleblower rights and protections.
    – David K
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:36









protected by Community♦ Jul 5 '17 at 3:02



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Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



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1 Answer
1






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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
30
down vote













Yes, you need to act on this. If people are fainting and being sent home from heat exhaustion, then that is a safety concern that needs to be addressed immediately. If you want to give your manager one last shot at fixing this, then go to them with your concerns for the safety of the group, not that you think you are being treated unfairly. However, certainly don't feel bad about skipping this step and going straight to someone higher.



You can try contacting the franchise owner, but that may not have any more effect. The corporate HR should also have a phone number you can call. In either case state that the working conditions are unsafe and illegal - those words should scare someone into taking some action quickly in the hopes of avoiding a lawsuit.



As @DJClaworth suggested, if you are a member of a union, talk to them too. The primary purpose of unions is to advocate for workers' rights, and the right to a safe work environment is certainly one of them.



You can also go to the authorities. In the United States, you can file a complaint through OSHA, and other countries have similar organizations. I recommend a phone call rather than a webform, because it often results in a quicker response. Also know that if your employer does learn it was you who reported them, you do have protections.



Please don't wait. People have been getting sick already; it's only a matter of time before something worse happens.






share|improve this answer






















  • This is, in my opinion, the only way to proceed. You can try talking to your boss, but they likely don't care (or they would have fixed it already). If you talk to your boss and then lodge a complaint, they'll probably know it was you. OSHA claims to be confidential, just be prepared for someone at your workplace to find out it was you that reported them. It's unlikely they'll get your name, but have a back up just in case.
    – 404usernotfound
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:29











  • @404usernotfound Good point. I added a link to whistleblower rights and protections.
    – David K
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:36














up vote
30
down vote













Yes, you need to act on this. If people are fainting and being sent home from heat exhaustion, then that is a safety concern that needs to be addressed immediately. If you want to give your manager one last shot at fixing this, then go to them with your concerns for the safety of the group, not that you think you are being treated unfairly. However, certainly don't feel bad about skipping this step and going straight to someone higher.



You can try contacting the franchise owner, but that may not have any more effect. The corporate HR should also have a phone number you can call. In either case state that the working conditions are unsafe and illegal - those words should scare someone into taking some action quickly in the hopes of avoiding a lawsuit.



As @DJClaworth suggested, if you are a member of a union, talk to them too. The primary purpose of unions is to advocate for workers' rights, and the right to a safe work environment is certainly one of them.



You can also go to the authorities. In the United States, you can file a complaint through OSHA, and other countries have similar organizations. I recommend a phone call rather than a webform, because it often results in a quicker response. Also know that if your employer does learn it was you who reported them, you do have protections.



Please don't wait. People have been getting sick already; it's only a matter of time before something worse happens.






share|improve this answer






















  • This is, in my opinion, the only way to proceed. You can try talking to your boss, but they likely don't care (or they would have fixed it already). If you talk to your boss and then lodge a complaint, they'll probably know it was you. OSHA claims to be confidential, just be prepared for someone at your workplace to find out it was you that reported them. It's unlikely they'll get your name, but have a back up just in case.
    – 404usernotfound
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:29











  • @404usernotfound Good point. I added a link to whistleblower rights and protections.
    – David K
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:36












up vote
30
down vote










up vote
30
down vote









Yes, you need to act on this. If people are fainting and being sent home from heat exhaustion, then that is a safety concern that needs to be addressed immediately. If you want to give your manager one last shot at fixing this, then go to them with your concerns for the safety of the group, not that you think you are being treated unfairly. However, certainly don't feel bad about skipping this step and going straight to someone higher.



You can try contacting the franchise owner, but that may not have any more effect. The corporate HR should also have a phone number you can call. In either case state that the working conditions are unsafe and illegal - those words should scare someone into taking some action quickly in the hopes of avoiding a lawsuit.



As @DJClaworth suggested, if you are a member of a union, talk to them too. The primary purpose of unions is to advocate for workers' rights, and the right to a safe work environment is certainly one of them.



You can also go to the authorities. In the United States, you can file a complaint through OSHA, and other countries have similar organizations. I recommend a phone call rather than a webform, because it often results in a quicker response. Also know that if your employer does learn it was you who reported them, you do have protections.



Please don't wait. People have been getting sick already; it's only a matter of time before something worse happens.






share|improve this answer














Yes, you need to act on this. If people are fainting and being sent home from heat exhaustion, then that is a safety concern that needs to be addressed immediately. If you want to give your manager one last shot at fixing this, then go to them with your concerns for the safety of the group, not that you think you are being treated unfairly. However, certainly don't feel bad about skipping this step and going straight to someone higher.



You can try contacting the franchise owner, but that may not have any more effect. The corporate HR should also have a phone number you can call. In either case state that the working conditions are unsafe and illegal - those words should scare someone into taking some action quickly in the hopes of avoiding a lawsuit.



As @DJClaworth suggested, if you are a member of a union, talk to them too. The primary purpose of unions is to advocate for workers' rights, and the right to a safe work environment is certainly one of them.



You can also go to the authorities. In the United States, you can file a complaint through OSHA, and other countries have similar organizations. I recommend a phone call rather than a webform, because it often results in a quicker response. Also know that if your employer does learn it was you who reported them, you do have protections.



Please don't wait. People have been getting sick already; it's only a matter of time before something worse happens.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jul 2 '15 at 16:28

























answered Jul 2 '15 at 12:43









David K

20.8k1075110




20.8k1075110











  • This is, in my opinion, the only way to proceed. You can try talking to your boss, but they likely don't care (or they would have fixed it already). If you talk to your boss and then lodge a complaint, they'll probably know it was you. OSHA claims to be confidential, just be prepared for someone at your workplace to find out it was you that reported them. It's unlikely they'll get your name, but have a back up just in case.
    – 404usernotfound
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:29











  • @404usernotfound Good point. I added a link to whistleblower rights and protections.
    – David K
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:36
















  • This is, in my opinion, the only way to proceed. You can try talking to your boss, but they likely don't care (or they would have fixed it already). If you talk to your boss and then lodge a complaint, they'll probably know it was you. OSHA claims to be confidential, just be prepared for someone at your workplace to find out it was you that reported them. It's unlikely they'll get your name, but have a back up just in case.
    – 404usernotfound
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:29











  • @404usernotfound Good point. I added a link to whistleblower rights and protections.
    – David K
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:36















This is, in my opinion, the only way to proceed. You can try talking to your boss, but they likely don't care (or they would have fixed it already). If you talk to your boss and then lodge a complaint, they'll probably know it was you. OSHA claims to be confidential, just be prepared for someone at your workplace to find out it was you that reported them. It's unlikely they'll get your name, but have a back up just in case.
– 404usernotfound
Jul 2 '15 at 13:29





This is, in my opinion, the only way to proceed. You can try talking to your boss, but they likely don't care (or they would have fixed it already). If you talk to your boss and then lodge a complaint, they'll probably know it was you. OSHA claims to be confidential, just be prepared for someone at your workplace to find out it was you that reported them. It's unlikely they'll get your name, but have a back up just in case.
– 404usernotfound
Jul 2 '15 at 13:29













@404usernotfound Good point. I added a link to whistleblower rights and protections.
– David K
Jul 2 '15 at 13:36




@404usernotfound Good point. I added a link to whistleblower rights and protections.
– David K
Jul 2 '15 at 13:36





protected by Community♦ Jul 5 '17 at 3:02



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?


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