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  • Report:  #1388511

Complaint Review: Dunkin' Donuts - Foxboro Massachusetts

Reported By:
Jlsmith - Foxboro, Massachusetts, USA
Submitted:
Updated:

Dunkin' Donuts
127 main street Foxboro, 02093 Massachusetts, USA
Web:
N/A
Tell us has your experience with this business or person been good? What's this?

 This store is horrible. The manager here is so rude. He treats his employees so disrespectfully. He doesn't speak good English and he's just plain old rude to everyone. He should not work there if he can't respect his employees that is not how a manger should act. This employees work hard everyday and they all always look so miserable to be at work because of him.



1 Updates & Rebuttals

Anonymous

Washington,
USA
Manager is also part of exploited labor

#2Consumer Comment

Fri, October 13, 2017

In the good old days, the Library of Congress (LOC) in Washington, D.C.

used to have a full service cafeteria in the basement dining room off

the corridor. Like many institutions (hospitals, universities, etc) the

cafeterias have been replaced with corporate franchises. This happened

several years ago here. To save a little money meaning not having to

extend benefits or protections, these workers have been replaced by the

fast-food workers.

Instead of a full-service cafeteria all they have now is Dunkin Donuts

and Subway.

But it beats all to see all these younger LOC workers lining up as

willing commercial Dunkin Donuts patrons. I really dislike DD with a

passion. It goes back to a family friend (Chinese American lady) who

tried to open her own franchise back in the 90s in Renton, WA. She had a

background in nursing but wanted to try working in business. It was a

disaster,and it wasn't because she didn't try or didn't work her knickers off. (I

know because she would stay at our house). It was because of the rank

racism, it's institutional, with DD.

For some reason imho DD really thrives with a base of square, hunky-dory

types who are steeped in the dialectics of catholic white privilege.

There's a classism embedded with a woman who can't bother making coffee

for herself and who has the time to waste standing in line for 15

minutes to get some pumpkin donut balls (typically only two) at DD here

to start off her morning. It's actually a thinly disguised social scene

where we get to see them in their pretty shoes, Macy's dresses, plaid

shirts, khaki slacks and whatnot.

In Renton, you got the Irish blue collar Jack and Jill types who just

didn't like seeing anything run by anyone who didn't fit the stereotype

of their class. That meant the manager should not have been a

Chinese-American female (even if the negative stereotypes all but

encourage exploitation as sex-workers for overpaid).

Today imho DD still plays up to the stereotypes somehow with their

commercials or commercialism. For instance, the charcoal donut ad in

Thailand featuring a black-faced Thai "jez funning."

I don't believe they support their employees very well either, as

generally is the case with fast-foods, meaning their workers may not

receive deserve overtime, or vacation pay, or full-time benefits. If you

check the BBB you will notice, for instance, as of today they only have

a C+ rating due to failure to respond and they are not BBB accredited.

There are, in fact, numerous low-star reviews about Dunkin Donuts at the

Consumer Affairs website. In fact, I also find their coffee to not have

much taste, and their donuts like puff pastry.

Here the DD workers also are rude to LOC guests. I had a coupon for $.25

cents off coffee, and the worker said it wasn't good here. She didn't

even check with her manager until I insisted. Then she just stood there

and expected me to walk away after she said the coupon was no good. She

did not even ask that I might want to order coffee anyway. She just stood

there and did not say anything. When I tried to prompt her, saying,

"Aren't you going to ask what I might like?" She looked at me very huffy

and nonplussed and acted as if that was totally out of line. Then she

looked over my head and around at the other people in line (mostly LOC

workers) who also participated in gaming me by pretending I was asking a

very rude question.

Obviously, like at a Southern ball, she thinks all she has to say is

"Next?" With a willing line of dupes, I guess that is all she has to do,

is act like a matron doling punch servings out of the punch bowl.

The environment here is part-and-parcel with Dunkin Donuts and Subway,

this is why I mention it. If in past years, we had a cafeteria where

cafeteria workers assiduously milled around the open service islands,

cleaned the tables, and made small talk with the workers and guests,

that was part of the sense of a camaraderie. Everyone participated in

making it feel like a welcoming place. People had more choice and

independence. The food was more authentic. It had real class. People

also cared more about the food workers.

Today, it is more like a rank-and-file prep-school meetup. It blows me

away that the LOC workers can't see the writing on the wall. They think

they are the grand exception to all that is happening in the private

sector and everywhere else because they are part of the privileged jet

set. They are well-paid enough to not think about the big picture.

Rather than dwell on the jobless recovery and privatization of the

middle class job sectors, they can diddle away their time reminiscing

about the Great Depression and New Deal. Maybe they regard it as part of

sinecure that they only need to work 8 hours, somewhat leisurely, and

then go home. (Boy are they out of touch if they think it's just all

about learning some ball-room dancing and watching old-timer movies from

the early 20th century.)

The DD workers hate the $1.00 coffee machine outside in the nearby snack

room in the hallway. The DD worker saw me use this machine on a later

date (to avoid them of course) and she purposely plunked herself down

nearby in front of the machine to partially block people's way to

discourage them from buying coffee from the coffee machine.

I can't imagine what it takes to make the DD workers love their job like

that, except that they are completely brainwashed. They sure don't act

like they respect people, themselves, or anyone else. In fact, it sort

of reminds me of how MerryMaids employ corporate brainwashing to make the maids love

their exploitative jobs.

In closing, here's an example in the NY Daily News about an employee

harassing a customer (colored worker harassing a female patron of color

http://www.grubstreet.com/2016/06/dunkin-donuts-gets-backlash-over-workers-racism.html).

And here's the photo of the Thai blackfaced donut ad

(http://www.nydailynews.com/life-style/dunkin-donuts-apologizes-racist-thai-campaign-article-1.1442463)

as if to insinuate that being black is just a joke, a flavor of the day.

Happy Dunkin!

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