I worked a closing shift last night along with five other associates and the softlines ASM.
Around the last hour and a half before we close, the closing manager is supposed to go around checking to see if we need register replenishments or cash pickups. The softlines ASM was not responding when we called for her over the PA system.
One of us checked the office, she was not there. Another checked the parking lot, her car was gone.
Closing time rapidly approached and we didn't know where she went. We all came to the conclusion that she finally had enough and left because she has been telling everyone for weeks how much she hates being here at Sears and how she "didn't go to college for this s--t (she's in her late twenties).
So we were frantic because it was almost time to close the store and we had no one with keys to lock the doors or codes to arm the alarm system. We close at 9:00 but the doors were still unlocked. So we had the idea of pulling up a chair to each "entrance" to guard the doors. We found giant zipties in the stockroom (seriously!!!) to find a way to secure the doors somewhat. We also called the police to let them know what had happened and to have an officer swing by the store to check on things so no one broke in and robbed us.
No one had any way of contacting any other manager. We had no choice but to stay in the store. Thankfully, by 11:30, mall security arrived to ask us why our mall entrance was not secured. We explained the situation and the security guard got in touch with mall management who had the store manager's number. Since the store manager lives about 75 miles away, it wasn't until 2:00 AM when the store manager arrived to close the store. When he was in the cash office to check the cash bags in, sure enough her keys were in the drop box.
It's real frustrating that this had to happen. I have a husband and two young kids that were worried about me. I had been at the store since noon, the others around a similar amount of time. I can understand being frustrated with Sears so much to be driven to quit, but is it really that bad to go to the lengths of abandoning store associates right before close, leaving us stranded before another manager was able to lock the doors? All the way until 2:00 in the morning?
I hope she reflects back on what she had done. Things are bad but she could have just quit after she closed the store.