Opinion

Workers just want to do their job, not be on the front lines of public safety

My stores and the workers who mak𓂃e a living there are supposed ♌to serve a single purpose: help our communities and ensure they have fresh food, groceries and produce. 

We strive to make the shopping experience not just easy but pleasant, peaceful and🍎 nice.

These are the same essential workers who kept New Yo𓂃rk City alive during the worst of the pandemic.&nbs♎p;

But imagine you are a worker at a super💜market. ❀You just want to do your job and come home.

You did not sign up for anythingꦯ more, and the last thing our workers want to be is the front lines of public safety, but all too often, they are finding themselves doing just🔯 that. 

Security focus 

The videos from the Collective Act🦂ion to Protect Our Stores coalition — of which I am a mem🅺ber — show how often retail theft can turn violent. Some retail workers have been attacked, beaten or threatened.

This is terrifying for them🎀 — and oftentimes workers feel like they always have to l🌌ook over their shoulder whenever there is an issue in the stores. 

Security guards and man, allegedly a shoplifter, with merchandise wrestling outside Nordstrom Rack department store on 6th ave
The videos show the workers have been attacked, beaten or threatened. Stefano Giovannini

Yet the last thing we want is our workers being harmed while they are just trying to do their jobs, which is why many stores — even ones with tight margins — have invested in their own secur♛ity.

This security is meant to protect our st🎀ores, our workers and our customers. 

Retail workers are not trained in self-defense, and we should not be forced to turn our𝓀 workers int🍰o warriors. 

Among the many things stores have done is include more secu🀅rity cameras that cover blind spots in our stores, so we can both see if someone is stealing but also if one of our workers is in danger.

Many stores have hired additional personnel to keep a 𓂃physical eඣye on the stores. 

We ha꧒ve been forced to place behind counters high-valued at-risk items that are constantly ♌being stolen.

And m🐬any stores have been forced to hire security guards who are trained for these types of situations. 

We don’t want to turn our stores into places in need of more securiꦺty. 

We don’t want to inconvenience ඣshoppers by having💯 them ask for items that are kept under lock and key. 

And of course we don’t want to beꦚ forced to spend money that could be invested into the stores in more security, but for too many stores, the amount of violent action taken against our workers necessitates it♌. 

Tougher penalties 

We greatly appreciate the work the New York City Police Department does to keep us safe, and we know Mayor Adams takes retail theft seriously.

Their report on retail theft had good su𝓀ggestions that will make our stores safer. 

But the sad truth is too many workers have been attacked, too many stores have been robbed, and too many customers have been placed in danger, which is why we need the state to step up with tougher penalties for recidi𓆏vist 𒅌shoplifters and those who attack retail workers. 

Albany legislators have a chance to get this right, and with a few days lꦺeft in ses☂sion, there is no time left to spare. 

Nallely De Jesus is the owner of Associated Supermarkets in The Bronx.