Viewing 40 posts - 81 through 120 (of 616 total)
  • CORONA VIRUS, Hows your company/workplace doing
  • siwhite
    Free Member

    My wife and I are both Police Sergeants in a small rural Force.

    Worrying times ahead – we are already cut to the bone (wifey had one Police car for 350 square miles last night) and with sickness predictions that will get lots worse. Likely they will have to redeploy all the shiny-arsed office dwellers into doing some real work for a change.

    Lots of talk about cancelled rest days, 12 hour shifts etc, but with two toddlers at home that won’t be easy / possible for us.

    Sadly, our workload will only increase. The feral underclass will carry on as normal, mental health (often 70% of our work) may increase and bored couples stuck at home will argue and fight.

    The talk in the media of extra powers to detain those infected is simply farcical – we don’t have the capacity to deal with current workloads, let alone rounding up everyone with a cough.

    TheFlyingOx
    Full Member

    Things change fast. That me now stranded in Israel. Flights are available to USA every 2 weeks, but from there I’m no better off cos I still can’t get to UK. We’re to be segregated from Israeli nationals too. What fun.

    PiknMix
    Free Member

    I got an email telling me to buy some antibacterial wipes and use them on door handles and other regularly used surfaces every shift change. Also I have to use my shoulder, feet or elbow to open doors.

    Fair to say, given previous threads, I have zero confidence in senior management dealing with this competently.

    tuboflard
    Full Member

    I work for the local transport authority, so public transport but not direct delivery. We’re very fortunate as we get a guaranteed income from the local authorities so financially we’ll be fine. The local bus and tram operators though could well go the wall if passenger numbers collapse. We pay them subsidies for pensioner and disabled travel but it’s only to cover their costs so I can see some of the smaller bus companies struggling very quickly.

    kilo
    Full Member

    Civil service here, possibly that we will get redeployed from shiny-arsed office dwellers into doing some real work for a change (supporting front line police most likely) bit of a logistical ‘mare that may be beyond our managers and my job is very niche and not sure if they’ll send me off to do some work or not. Not able to work from home, all the teams I’ve been on before banned wfh. Mrs Kilo is a director in the city, they are going to one week wfh one week in office. Major issue will be commute in, not sure how healthy the tube will be.

    pictonroad
    Full Member

    I can happily work from home as a Project Manager in the Environment Agency. What will massively impact mine and everyone else’s capacity to do so is our atrocious IT.

    All our laptops are 2012 or earlier and we’re on Windows 7. Some poor decisions have delayed the windows 10 rollout to 2021 or later. All our suppliers are trying to work with sharepoint, Office 365 & Skype to keep projects moving, computer says no.

    durhambiker
    Free Member

    Went self employed doing chip timing for races at the back end of last year. Currently kicking myself repeatedly for doing so. So far this weekend heard from 3 events that I was due to time in May telling me that they’re no longer going ahead, and suspect tomorrow I’ll be hearing from a lot more.

    h4muf
    Free Member

    Construction here ( Major earthworks company)
    Obviously can’t work from home so can see me being I’m trouble in a couple of weeks.

    crazy-legs
    Full Member

    I work for the local transport authority, so public transport but not direct delivery. We’re very fortunate as we get a guaranteed income from the local authorities so financially we’ll be fine.

    Transport here as well but sub-national, not local. Financially fine as we’re funded by DfT. Our IT is mostly very good (sadly the same can’t be said of many people’s ability to use it to its full potential…)

    Much as the organisation likes to shout about agile workforce, remote working etc it does make life a whole lot more complicated and time consuming than it needs to be.

    However that’s relatively small fry compared to some on here – sympathies to those who are worse off.

    theboatman
    Free Member

    I’m an ANP and have been reassigned to one of the mobile testing car’s to whip around and test folk for the virus as required. I half expect at some point to be back on a ward as things get worse.

    Main issue for me would be schools shutting, and the impact of childcare.

    vinnyeh
    Full Member

    Was supposed to start work for Sky on Monday in London, returning to work after 12 years off- have decided to pass on rejoining the workforce.
    Wife started a new job 6 weeks ago, was very fortunate to get a permanent role after a decade plus contracting- IT program manager for a global shipping co. rolling out their new general ledger to 70+ countries worldwide- was supposed to be loads of international travel, which she hates, now working from home, which the company hates.
    Hopefully the line of business will mean the job is secure, but until she’s confirmed in role at 3 months there’s only one weeks notice, and I can’t see any other work out there.

    fatoldgit
    Full Member

    On site Service technician type role ( single site – no travel ) here so wfh is not really practical, apart from catching up with a few on line training sessions and paperwork which would take all of a day or 2
    Good news is company ( multinational US owned ) has already announced that anyone having to stay at home will be on fully paid leave of abscence
    Bad news for site is work is drying up as non essential travel has been banned, so sales folks are not getting contracts and clients are not visiting to place work.
    Good news for my role is we get our hands on the idle equipment to do the routine work maintenance more easily

    Except ,…. being in Pharma research 1 area is really getting busy and ironically at the same time hoping it’s only for a real short time … can you guess what it is yet ?
    Fully expect to si at some point though ☹️

    asbrooks
    Full Member

    I’m an engineer working for a company supplying components to the rail industry.

    We are an international company having many offices around the world, including to areas which are already in quarantine.

    We were sold last year to an investment company who now have a three year plan to double our turnover during that period. There plans are to sell the company off after that period. So there are worries there.

    Now with the virus, the advice is to not to go into work if we are showing signs of symptoms. Myself, I can work from home, however the guys who work in the manufacturing plant don’t have that luxury nor do they have the same sickness benefits I have.

    I won’t even mention the B affect..

    My wife is a teacher who comes into contact with many more people than I do, therefore the chances of her contracting the virus before me is statistically far greater than me contracting it first. But the schools remain open. Someone has to babysit our kids while the rest of us keep the economy ticking over.

    stompy
    Full Member

    We live in rural Croatia so have effectively been self isolating for last 7 years 🙂

    Our reclaimed timber business is on site so I wfh everyday, no issues there. The very pressing issue is exporting our product…. With borders closed and international transport cut we will struggle to deliver.

    Saying that we live pretty self sufficiently…. Food in the ground, water in our own well, wood fired heating and several generators on site. We have enough stock to work through though so can stockpile finished products….. We should be ok for a year at least should it all go tits up big style.

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    Civil service here, possibly that we will get redeployed from shiny-arsed office dwellers into doing some real work for a change (supporting front line police most likely)

    Not something that occurred to me right away – but as a freelancer in a sector that can expect to be on its arse for a while… I should give some thought to what I can do / how I can make myself available to sectors and services that are under strain

    chakaping
    Free Member

    Specialist courier here, no chance in hell of working from home. If we stop doing our job it will be headline news and I’m genuinely not joking when I say that the general public will panic.

    Hearse driver?

    wait4me
    Full Member

    Printing press operator in a large commercial printers.

    We are very busy right now, I’m actually in on overtime right now. But I am extremely pessimistic. As far as containment should the virus hit us we have no hope. Multi touch points throughout the production process so even with regular hand washing I can’t see any outcome other than the place shutting down if we get an infection.

    Then long term I think it’s looking grim. Always a weather vane for the economy I think we will be impacted by the inevitable recession. My hope in the survival of the fittest that we may just scrape by, but we are a big company with huge overheads so I fear the worst.

    Being through redundancy a number of times I’m trying to drip feed the younger lads with advice about mortgage insurance, savings and just preparing for the worst. Probably think I’m joking as most of them have only known good times.hope I’m wrong.

    cynic-al
    Free Member

    My team.works with vulnerable people, visiting them at home or meeting at events.

    Looks like all visits/events will be cancelled soon and WFH too.

    There won’t be much to do!

    gingersquirrel
    Full Member

    I own a small manufacturing company. I’m currently sat in my vehicle planning tomorrow’s staff meeting. I have 15 staff and only two with an office based role.

    I am very worried about the business and my staff. We have been trading for seven years and I have never had to consider this type of situation.

    If we can keep manufacturing and installing our product, we will be fine. The company has good cash flow and a very busy order book. The second we stop manufacturing / installing then we will very quickly run out of money. The reality is we could survive maybe 2-3 weeks before we would be bust!

    I am looking for info on what the government is planning in order to support small business if we are forced to isolate. We would require a very large interest free loan to cover the running costs for an extended period. The thought of yet more dept to the business and pressure to repay any sizeable loan is daunting.

    If a member of staff gets the virus then they will obviously have to self isolate. Will everyone else have to go home?

    Another concern is the supply of materials. Most of ours come from Europe. I am yet to panic buy in a supermarket however I was forced into purchasing extra materials last week as there were difficulties with my normal suppliers. This increases the cash flow issue.

    If any other people or small business owners can offer me any advice, it would be greatly received.

    chakaping
    Free Member

    Freelance press photographer selling images regionally, across the UK and internationally. Very, very busy at the moment (this is a perfect storm for the media) .

    While I’m no longer working in news, it’s good to see my former colleagues busier than ever and people trusting journalists again at a time when there’s uncertainty about whether the authorities are playing with a straight bat.

    Catching up with an old friend last week, she is very glad she is no longer health correspondent for a big national news org though!

    WildHunter2009
    Full Member

    Site investigation company and a small one. Phones and emails have been a bit quiet but nothing big yet. Company doesn’t appear to have any plans. I can work from home in as much as finish reports and audit work but if we can’t do to sites we could be in trouble.
    Construction industry as a whole seems to be ignoring it from what I can see.

    supernova
    Full Member

    OP – can’t help you in any way, but I can tell you that we appreciate what you’re doing. Thank you.

    smogmonster
    Full Member

    Work for a private Ambulance service and Medical training company. Ironically it could both destroy the company or be its biggest opportunity. If any of our staff catch Covid-19 it of course means that the office shuts, and quarantine of any staff affected. We’ve already had cancellations on the training side of things – if any trainers are infected it of course also means no training can take place. The problem is the stalling of income in this case. Like any business, there are lots of outgoings and cash flow is king…already companies who owe us money are stalling on payments. We are hearing talk of pay cuts, reduced hours even the end of the business. I’m a nurse and definitely making plans just in case…my CV is out with various nursing agencies and i have interviews this week.
    I previously worked in the oil industry, and hearing from former colleagues, the sh1t is truly hitting the fan….

    As an aside, ive cancelled my orders for a new Nukeproof Mega and Whyte Wessex road bike, just in case my job goes under. So my LBS has lost £6500 of business……..the downward spiral begins unfortunately.

    Hob-Nob
    Free Member

    Big tier one OEM supplier to the automotive industry, worldwide company, big in the military sector 7.5Bn euros turnover with healthy profits, but 14,000 employees and a lot of overheads means we ‘could’ go pop in 3 months. Little bit scary.

    More locally, in the UK we are having a leadership team meeting tomorrow, as company policy is to send everyone home who can work in that environment. Difficult as anyone not in manufacturing can in theory, but the logistics are huge. We shall see what comes of tomorrow.

    Personally, I’d rather be at home now, I’m 40 & considered high risk as I’m asthmatic and had the lovely experience of pneumonia twice already because of it, which has been great as I’m still young.

    I’m Head of sales for the UK and have big internal & external teams, there will be a lot of questions tomorrow.

    leegee
    Full Member

    Outdoor gym equipment, I’m the Design Engineer. There’s only 15 of us and generally only 6-12 of us in the office at a given time. It’s been talked about a lot and tommorow our IT guy is coming in to make sure everyone is able to work from home, I’ll take my PC home as I need Solidworks.

    We are have lots of new orders and installs planned. We have some amazing prototypes which arrived last week and were to be installed at a gym close to the office this week, I’ve been working on these for 15 months.

    Our manufacturer is a huge company in Newcastle and our contact there told me that the management have told them its business as usual even though one person is in isolation. The owner rules that place with an irion fist but I think he may have to relent.

    I wasn’t worried until I read gingersquirrel’s post above. My bosses are awesome and they must have the same concerns as him.

    tuboflard
    Full Member

    Transport here as well but sub-national, not local. Financially fine as we’re funded by DfT. Our IT is mostly very good (sadly the same can’t be said of many people’s ability to use it to its full potential…)

    Presume TfN @crazy-legs? As you say, I feel very fortunate that work is safe and can choose to work from home if I need to, and almost indefinitely if needed.

    I really hope that others more directly affected on here are able to deal with the impact and that it’s over as quickly as is safe.

    maycontainnuts
    Full Member

    Self employed in construction, on the face of it I’ve work in front of me well into June. Whereas usually its only a couple of weeks max.
    I’m expecting things to come to a grinding halt soon (As of Friday Morgan Sindall still using fringerprint turnstyles on site entry and exit FFS).

    Luckily I’ve cut my overheads as much as possible and only employ 1 other. Will try my best to keep them on as he’ll be buggered otherwise.

    As above any thoughts of new bike bits, changing cars, holidays have all taken a back seat for now which in turn hits down the line

    Alex
    Full Member

    Some scary scenarios here. Almost any size business seems to be at risk. Or if you’re in the NHS etc then massively overwhelmed.

    90% of my work if for UK universities. It’s been a really busy 3 months since the start of the year. My diary was stacked until end May with at least 50% of my time on site. That’s all changed – quite rightly – over the last week. Most universities are reasonably well set up for remote working, but we do like our workshops and conferences!

    I expect I’ll lost about 50% revenue for 3 months at least. That’s fine, as a (very) small business we plan for work drying up and could last a year with 0 revenue if we were very careful. I’m changing a whole bunch of things I do to work remotely. It won’t be perfect, but if the university still wants to do it, I’ll do what I can to provide it!

    I realise I’m lucky compared to most. Who’d want to be a senior administrator/director in a big corp/uni/govt dept right now? Only difficult choices and hard to know the right ones.

    On the upside, I’ve a jungle to turn back into a garden and nice bikes to ride on my doorstep. I’ve been saying for years I’m going to work less, earn less and enjoy other stuff more. Looks like this year will be my chance to test it!

    beej
    Full Member

    Work for Microsoft supporting a handful of very large customers. Travel is restricted for us and most of the customers aren’t allowing visitors now unless it’s for essential reasons. Worldwide we’ve shifted tens of thousands of office-based people to working from home, Seattle (and King County where our HQ is) is a COVID19 hotspot.

    I’ve spent some time this week sharing remote working info plus we’ve pushed out some additional tools/made a bunch of stuff free. I expect there’ll be more of this, combined with helping out if there are any significant technical issues.

    captain_bastard
    Free Member

    Self employed working as an event electrician. Work has dropped off a cliff, and doesn’t look like i’ll be doing anything for quite some time. Self employed so zero income. Normally have lots of avenue for work; festivals, big sporting events, film premiers, list goes on, mostly UK but plenty of opportunities in Europe or further afield.

    Would never of envisaged a situation where everything is cancelled.

    started looking for other work but given the wider situation people are understandably holding off hiring

    Upside? be able to get out on the bike loads

    jaylittle
    Free Member

    Support staff in a high school, not a great deal for me to do if we are required to work from home. Some of our staff and pupils have already had to self isolate for 2 weeks due to passing through northern Italy during half term.
    The missus works for the NHS and visits elderly patients, she may be drafted in to work on hospital wards if required. Both very fortunate that we’ll still receive wages.
    A friend at ASDA head office has been told to work from home on as of Tuesday.

    theboyneeds
    Free Member

    I work in a small industry closley aligned to planning/construction and estates management (arboricultural consultancy).

    The industry was just coming out of the Brexit slump and now this will halt a lot of things. I’m not clear as to how this will effect us as a company as we can wfh but we rely on some office based staff so there’ll be an impact when the virus hits us. I forsee a couple of months with reduced pay to keep things going until the worse passes. No new shiny bike bits for a while!

    Worrying times.

    tartanscarf
    Full Member

    Haven’t read all the replies above but it’s worrying times. More than that in fact.

    We run our own small accommodation business here in Glencoe. Like all rural tourism and hospitality business things are run right to the bone financially and winter is always a massive cash drain. We are massively down already in terms of bookings coming up. We also face the very real prospect of a Uk lockdown at some point where no one can travel. That results in 100% loss of income for however long that is. That’s not sustainable for any length of time at all and we will be out of business and a home.

    We have already slashed staffing by 2/3. All ironing etc is now done onsite increasing workload dramatically.we have cancelled all projects and non essential dd’s from the business and personally. I’m selling what I can (lovely touring caravan if anyone is after
    One!).

    At the moment insurance doesn’t cover anything as they have not adopted CV as a notifiabke disease. If/when they do it will only cover us if we specifically are locked down as a hotspot.

    There’s a very real prospect of us and lots of others going out of business with the resultant loss of jobs, homes and of course peoples hard earned holidays.

    Totally realise there’s a public health issue here too. We are terrified to be honest. The disruption and impact to us all is going to be world war levels imo.

    That’s me, over out and out. Stay safe folks.

    iolo
    Free Member

    I’m a tour guide in Austria. I had a full calendar and was looking forward to a very lucrative year. Everything cancelled. Austria is on lockdown. f uck

    gallowayboy
    Full Member

    Im a facilities coordinator (ie caretaker) for the National Trust. We are currently cashing in as people flock to the outdoors to gather in our cramped humid and probably viral cafe. “fairly” generous employer, but i’ll soon find out more about that as I will probably be isolated for a few months as my 89 yo mother currently lives with us.
    Long term, my job will be fine, but the NT will struggle if revenue streams (cafe’s, shops, car parks, memberships) are severely affected, and I suspect there will be a contraction in staffing before a gradual rebuild.

    reluctantjumper
    Full Member

    Hearse driver?

    No, that’s guaranteed work though! Actually have a clause in my contract that says I cannot say on social media exactly what we courier around and more specifically which company but it’s high value goods that cannot go via DPD/Parcel force/Hermes etc. We’re banned from striking by the government as issues show up within 3 days, the public would know about it then all hell would break loose. We’re already having issues with our specialist despatch centres struggling to get deliveries out on time as the European contingent of our workforce (was roughly 20%) has mainly gone back due to Brexit and hiring people to replace them takes a minimum of 3 months. The nature of the work means we see hundreds of people every day at customer sites it’s only a matter of time before problems arise. We’re on a knife edge right now and it is going to get worse.

    mattbee
    Full Member

    Rope access technician working mainly in building maintenance.
    Our biggest regular job is working on the Spinnaker Tower in portsmouth. Wasn’t too concerned at first but now we’ve had a confirmed case in the city and with talks of restrictions to public movement etc I am getting to be.
    Just needs access to places like the Spinnaker to be stopped and we could be forced to shut down.
    Added to that is the fact that other clients are delaying works to see what happens themselves.
    We’ve already had a terrible few weeks because of the weather so this could push us over the edge.
    Wife is an ACP in A&E so she certainly won’t be short of work and there’s a good chance she will have to do some locum shifts to replace my income if things do turn out as bad as I fear…

    project
    Free Member

    When i started this thread last night thought id get a half dozen responses some, telling me not to worry, sadly i was totally wrong, its going to be anything from horrendous to life changing for almost all of us.

    But as can be seen a lot of companies are planning for whatever might happen,and some will not be able to cope,air industry,events,manufacturing,police and nhs.

    Going to be a lumpy bumpy 2020,and thanks for all the honest responses, which im sure will help other companies plan for the future.

    We work in older peoples homes,usually over 60 plus, oldest 101,fitting doors,locks and fixing things to walls,and general maintenance 2 small jobs for next week.

    seadog101
    Full Member

    WE’re starting to see things effect us now.

    I’m the first ‘victim’ of the virus on the ship. My opposite number was due out on Thursday, but was in Italy on is leave (Doh!), so has to be symptom free for 14 days before the company will fly him out. So I have an extra week on the ship. No much of a hardship to do that, but it’s the knock on effect of being here that extra time.

    We fly out from Guyana via Trinidad/Barbados/Pananma, whether those routes will still be open is another matter when it come to crew change day.

    One of the ships is en route from Peru to Canaries, planned crewchange off Rio now cancelled so some guys will be on for a very long trip. No as bad as regular seafarers, but when you expect 4 week hitches, and they become 8-9 things get very ansty.

    mooman
    Free Member

    Jiffy bag courier?

Viewing 40 posts - 81 through 120 (of 616 total)

The topic ‘CORONA VIRUS, Hows your company/workplace doing’ is closed to new replies.