bjAnonymous wrote:I understand the age demographic in ll lo question may have personal/social events to attend on Friday and Saturday nights.
Can the stores receive a fine from mall management for not honoring mall hours?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fun fact!
If the store serves as an ‘anchor’ to the mall or has a main entrance to the mall, they get double fined for closing early. Or opening late
Staff shortages are less likely to be an issue with their opening and closing because they have a larger pool than the stores that run with just a couple of people at a time.
+1 I don’t think Macy’s or Nordstrom is going to close early, but the random small specialty stores might. I also noticed that stores open later these days. If you get to the mall when it first opens at 10 am or whatever, a fair few stores will still be closed until 11.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fun fact!
If the store serves as an ‘anchor’ to the mall or has a main entrance to the mall, they get double fined for closing early. Or opening late
Staff shortages are less likely to be an issue with their opening and closing because they have a larger pool than the stores that run with just a couple of people at a time.
Anonymous wrote:I’m glad someone posted about this because it’s a peeve. I keep encountering stores that usually close at 7 or 8 closing 30-60 minutes early in a regular basis. If I’m trying to shop after work and on the night when my kids don’t have an activity or I don’t have evening work commitments, it can be almost impossible or take weeks of hit-or-miss attempts. There are plenty of things that aren’t easily ordered online or offer free in-store returns but expensive return shipping. I miss the pre-Covid hours.
We were recently in a part of Asia with a huge mall culture and stores were open until 9:30-10:00 pm even on weekend nights. It was more convenient to go to *another continent* for my usual cosmetics stock-up and the kids’ back-to-school shopping than to go to my walkable-from-home, massive outdoor shopping center in the US.
Anonymous wrote:Fun fact!
If the store serves as an ‘anchor’ to the mall or has a main entrance to the mall, they get double fined for closing early. Or opening late
Anonymous wrote:![]()
None of them have any remotely interesting personal lives. When they are off they just stare at their phones. They even stare at their phones when they are at work and are supposed to be working.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to work retail at a mall and there were huge fines for not being open mall hours. Covid seemed to change that, so it wouldn’t surprise me at all to find stores closing early now.
I was at Tysons corner yesterday with my daughter. I saw at least two stores closed with a sign saying out to lunch. To me the indicates a staffing shortage. I would be surprised if the mall fines stores because if they do the stores would probably try to find another location
That is embarrassing especially for a higher end shopping mall such as Tysons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to work retail at a mall and there were huge fines for not being open mall hours. Covid seemed to change that, so it wouldn’t surprise me at all to find stores closing early now.
I was at Tysons corner yesterday with my daughter. I saw at least two stores closed with a sign saying out to lunch. To me the indicates a staffing shortage. I would be surprised if the mall fines stores because if they do the stores would probably try to find another location
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's work to do after closing the doors to customers, like tidying and restocking. I have noticed a lot of stores now start that work 30 minutes prior so they can actually walk out at closing time; they do not want to be ringing up a line of people at closing time, they want to be gone.
It's not just mall stores or those with teen employees.
Customers will come in 5 minutes before closing and leave a mess behind. I saw it over and over again in retail.