The idiocy (and selfishness) of panic buying

Sainsbury’s email.
They are taking action.


I wrote to you last week to tell you about some of the steps we are taking to support increased demand for food and other essential items.

After I wrote to you last week, many of you replied. You wrote to share your concerns about our elderly and vulnerable customers and to ask if we can do more to restrict the number of items each person can buy. I have listened to feedback from you and from Sainsbury's colleagues across the country and wanted to share some of the extra steps we are taking to make sure everyone has access to the items that they need:

A number of you suggested that we reserve an hour in stores for elderly and vulnerable customers. In response to this request, we will set aside the first hour in every supermarket this Thursday 19th March, for elderly and vulnerable customers. I hope that you can respect this decision and will work with us as we try our best to help those that need it the most. If you or an elderly family member, friend or neighbour would like to shop during this hour, please check online for your local supermarket opening hours.

We will also help elderly and vulnerable customers access food online. From Monday 23rd March, our online customers who are over 70 years of age or have a disability will have priority access to online delivery slots. We will contact these customers in the coming days with more details.

For any online customer who can travel to our stores, from Monday 23rd March, we will operate an expanded 'click and collect' service. We are significantly increasing the number of collection sites across the country over the coming days in preparation for this. Customers can place their order online as usual and pick it up from a collection point in the store car park. We believe this will also work for people who are self-isolating.

As we work to feed the nation, we are also focusing all of our efforts on getting as much food and other essential items from our suppliers, into our warehouses and onto shelves as we possibly can. We still have enough food for everyone - if we all just buy what we need for us and our families.

To help us get more essential items onto the shelves, from this Thursday 19th March, we will be closing our cafes and our meat, fish and pizza counters in supermarkets. This means we can free up warehouse and lorry capacity for products that customers really need. It will also free up time for our store colleagues to focus on keeping the shelves as well stocked as possible.

I mentioned last week that we had put limits on a very small number of products. Following feedback from our customers and from our store colleagues, we have decided to put restrictions on a larger number of products. From tomorrow, Wednesday 18th March, customers will be able to buy a maximum of three of any grocery product and a maximum of two on the most popular products including toilet paper, soap and UHT milk. We have enough food coming into the system, but are limiting sales so that it stays on shelves for longer and can be bought by a larger numbers of customers.
 
Police should raid random houses.

anyone with a ridiculous hord of loo rolls and other teams should be given a heavy fine.
 
I called in morrisons on way home from work.
Lazy bastards cant even be arsed to re stock the shelves.
Not going in there again.
At a guess it might be because of the difficulties staff woulf have trying to put ut on the shelves and the idiots try to grab it.
Our Morrison's is like a rugby scrum on a Sunday when the reductions are being put on the shelves. And it is always the.people who appear able to pay the full whack.
Every time l pass the food bank box l wonder if people take the in demand items that thoughtful people have put in.
 
Sainsbury’s email.
They are taking action.


I wrote to you last week to tell you about some of the steps we are taking to support increased demand for food and other essential items.

After I wrote to you last week, many of you replied. You wrote to share your concerns about our elderly and vulnerable customers and to ask if we can do more to restrict the number of items each person can buy. I have listened to feedback from you and from Sainsbury's colleagues across the country and wanted to share some of the extra steps we are taking to make sure everyone has access to the items that they need:

A number of you suggested that we reserve an hour in stores for elderly and vulnerable customers. In response to this request, we will set aside the first hour in every supermarket this Thursday 19th March, for elderly and vulnerable customers. I hope that you can respect this decision and will work with us as we try our best to help those that need it the most. If you or an elderly family member, friend or neighbour would like to shop during this hour, please check online for your local supermarket opening hours.

We will also help elderly and vulnerable customers access food online. From Monday 23rd March, our online customers who are over 70 years of age or have a disability will have priority access to online delivery slots. We will contact these customers in the coming days with more details.

For any online customer who can travel to our stores, from Monday 23rd March, we will operate an expanded 'click and collect' service. We are significantly increasing the number of collection sites across the country over the coming days in preparation for this. Customers can place their order online as usual and pick it up from a collection point in the store car park. We believe this will also work for people who are self-isolating.

As we work to feed the nation, we are also focusing all of our efforts on getting as much food and other essential items from our suppliers, into our warehouses and onto shelves as we possibly can. We still have enough food for everyone - if we all just buy what we need for us and our families.

To help us get more essential items onto the shelves, from this Thursday 19th March, we will be closing our cafes and our meat, fish and pizza counters in supermarkets. This means we can free up warehouse and lorry capacity for products that customers really need. It will also free up time for our store colleagues to focus on keeping the shelves as well stocked as possible.

I mentioned last week that we had put limits on a very small number of products. Following feedback from our customers and from our store colleagues, we have decided to put restrictions on a larger number of products. From tomorrow, Wednesday 18th March, customers will be able to buy a maximum of three of any grocery product and a maximum of two on the most popular products including toilet paper, soap and UHT milk. We have enough food coming into the system, but are limiting sales so that it stays on shelves for longer and can be bought by a larger numbers of customers.
Well done Sainsbury's. I wish Tescos would be half as good. I couldn't get a delivery in the next three weeks so had to settle for a collection at the end of the month. I hope they have the collection.point sited to help any one trying for isolation
They certainly know how to make people feel isolated.
 
Police should raid random houses.

anyone with a ridiculous hord of loo rolls and other teams should be given a heavy fine.
There arent going to be many working mate, the front line exposure to this is going to see to that. People need to stop ringing the police for petty bullshit too.
 
Police should raid random houses.

anyone with a ridiculous hord of loo rolls and other teams should be given a heavy fine.

I'm not sure why this is funny, sorry for laughing.

"Drop your kecks and get on the fucking ground now! Let me inspect the cleanliness of your arse! Are you arguing? Say hello to the taser!!"

Sign me right up.
 
Plenty of soap on amazon,ordered a couple of days ago and arrived today,ordered some loo roll ages ago,they say friday it will arrive but we will see
 
Spoke to my elderly neighbour this morning and he'd tried to get to tesco for 7am yesterday only to find it bare of most things. They have no soups, beans, potatoes etc, the usually that they'd be buying.

Going to try and keep an eye out for a couple of things they need now but wary of that's how it all begins anew. Hope they can get themselves to a sainsburys tomorrow morning or something.

I truly hope this is just a short term supply and demand thing, and there is no anticipated effect in the coming months of a reduced workforce on supply
 

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