Hurricane Florence: Eight emergency response tips
Businesses along the Carolina coast will be impacted hardest
As residents in the South prepare for Hurricane Florence, scheduled to make landfall on Thursday, legal experts say restaurants should have an emergency response plan that covers everything from employee scheduling to understanding insurance coverage.
Forecasters say coastal flooding and winds could result in devastating damage.
“Life-threatening, catastrophic flash flooding and significant river flooding is possible over portions of the Carolinas and Mid-Atlantic states from late this week into early next week, as #Florence is expected to slow down as it approaches the coast and move inland,” according to a tweet by the National Weather Service Weather Prediction Center.
Life-threatening, catastrophic flash flooding and significant river flooding is possible over portions of the Carolinas and Mid-Atlantic states from late this week into early next week, as #Florence is expected to slow down as it approaches the coast and move inland. pic.twitter.com/jAltDb2tHA
— NWS WPC (@NWSWPC) September 11, 2018
Nation’s Restaurant News talked to Ogletree Deakins, a South Carolina-based labor and employment law firm that represents employers.
Here’s what attorney Hal A. Shillingstad is suggesting restaurants consider before, during and after a major natural disaster.
Triage tasks: Review your emergency response plan. If you don’t have one, “this isn’t the week to write your response plan,” Shillingstad said. But, you can triage tasks by dividing responsibilities among managers. One group, for example, should be responsible for operating the business during the storm (if the company decides to do that). Another group should be a crisis management team. That team deals directly with preparation and fallout tied to the storm, and its first consideration should be communication with employees.
Employees and scheduling: The restaurant should have a clear plan for communicating with their workforce. Regular messages should be sent updating staff on scheduling, hours of operation, and employee assistance programs (such as contact numbers for emotional support programs or counseling). If you’re going to close the restaurant, prompt communication with hourly employees is especially important because restaurants “don’t want hourly employees to show up and expect to be paid,” Shillingstad said. A crisis phone number should be provided for employees to ask questions. Communicate by email, phone, text or through the company’s scheduling app.