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  • MeganChaudhari
    Participant

    Primary Objective: If you live in West Seattle, don’t cross the bridge – come work for the Best-Loved Drug Store in the Northwest! There is a reason our customers say “Oh – I love Bartells”! This is the entry level position to our management program. You will be in training to become an Assistant Store Manager and will effectively assist the Store Manager in the operation of a profitable, safe, clean retail drugstore. The wage range for this position is $18.00 to $20.00 per hour. You will assist in maintaining positive employee and customer relations at all times because, after all – that’s what has set Bartells apart in the industry for years! Who wouldn’t want to be a part of that? Come join us!

    Reports to: Store Manager

    Major Responsibilities and Duties Which May Be Considered Essential:

    In the absence of the Store Manager and the Assistant Store Manager, the Second Assistant has full responsibility for the operation of the store.
    Must properly execute refunds and exchanges in a positive and timely manner in order that good customer service levels are maintained. Insure that customers are acknowledged and assisted with their needs quickly and courteously.
    Must assist the Store Manager in maintaining balanced inventory levels of clean salable goods. Must be familiar with current ad products, prices and locations to assist customers in locating merchandise.
    Must provide product and service information as needed.
    Must set a professional example by enforcing policies such as attendance, proper dress and grooming code, customer service, and proper cash handling and exercising reasonable control of expenses.
    Must assist the Store Manager in creating and maintaining good morale through an Open Door policy, constant two-way communication, cooperation and effective on-going training of all store personnel. The Second Assistant has the authority to direct the work of all employee associates except for the technical aspects relating to the practice of Pharmacy.
    Must deal with issues in a tactful, courteous and professional manner.
    Must be able to prioritize & delegate tasks. Must monitor & follow up in a timely manner with store associates on delegated tasks to insure proper completion.
    Must support the Bartell Merchandising Guide standards.
    Must safeguard the store’s assets to include handling daily store cash deposits, petty cash funds and each register’s cash flow. Insure that cash drops are performed in a timely & secure manner during the course of the day. May on occasion take daily store deposit to the bank.
    Must on occasion, operate a cash register proficiently.
    Must have reliable transportation and be available for transfer to different Bartell Drugs stores in the Puget Sound area as needed.
    Must be able to stock merchandise at all levels of the shelving in the store in a timely manner.
    Other duties as assigned
    Qualifications and Skills Required:

    High school diploma or equivalent preferred.
    Six months of prior retail experience preferred.
    Must be at least 21 years of age.
    Must demonstrate courteous and professional interpersonal communication skills towards customers, supervisors and fellow employee associates.
    Must be able to quickly and accurately perform addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division of whole numbers, decimals, fractions, percentages, and dollars.
    Must be able to read, write, speak, and comprehend conversational English.
    Must be able to work independently with minimal direction.
    Physical Requirements:

    Frequent reaching at all levels to stock shelves and/or operate a cash register. Frequent repetitive hand movements and fine finger manipulation to operate a cash register. Occasional repetitive arm movement to stock shelves. Constant handling and grasping of merchandise, containers, cartons, and/or money.
    Must frequently bend or stoop to stock below waist-height shelves and to remove merchandise from carts. Crouching, twisting, or pivoting at the waist and kneeling or squatting to low shelves also required.
    Must be able to frequently lift 20-40 lbs. from floor to chest. Frequently lift 1-2 lbs. from floor to 7 feet.
    Must frequently carry 1-2 lbs. for 5 to 10 feet. Occasionally carry 20 to 40 lbs. for 15 feet.
    Must be able to push/pull 25 to 40 lbs. of force occasionally.
    Must on occasion climb ladder or step stool.
    Must be able to stand for long periods of time with walks of short distances at a brisk pace.
    Must be able to quickly and accurately perform addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division of whole numbers, decimals, fractions, percentages and dollars.
    Must be able to operate a handtruck, grocery cart, stock carts, electronic cash register, pricing guns, box crushers, box cutter, conveyor belt, Camera department computer, MSI ordering machine, telephone, intercom, and various POS equipment where applicable

    If interested, please email ariel.chin@bartelldrugs.com or Apply Online

    gxnx
    Participant

    Make West Seattle an island of Paradise, rows of palm and coconut trees.

    #976354
    thegreatoutdoors
    Participant

    Lost Keys….. Hi neighbors! Went to Me-Kwa-Mooks park on Beach Drive today and I lost/misplaced my keys. I had my 5 and 7 year old grandkids with me (as I do 3days/week since school closures) and things get hectic. Anyway…..I either lost them around the rope swings on the trail, in the grassy area, or (don’t laugh) I might have left them in my passenger front door key slot. My car is older and requires a key to open. I’m posting a picture of my spare key to help. It says Chrysler on it but I don’t believe the key that I lost did. But otherwise it’s identical. There were several other keys on it as well.

    If you have found them, would you message me, please? Although it’s an older car the key still has a computer chip in it which makes it costly. Thanks, neighbors….

    #976065
    Censored.wsb
    Participant

    Lock downs or grouping the ill together in hospitals may not be the best medicine .
    Lock down slows the spread. But There’s more to it then just this.

    I can’t explain here because its too complex. and I don’t understand it. you should read about it.

    The Covid-19 in china began in December. If you look at You Tube videos, find ones with crowds and notice when they to start wearing masks, I think it happened notably in December. Or was it November?

    Did the virus escape from a lab?

    #976064
    VBD
    Participant

    What you are ignoring is that the flu season began last fall and peaks between December and February. Many parts of the US did not have their first case of COVID-19 until just a month ago (Washington was first in late Jan, both Michigan and Louisiana didn’t have their first case until March 11). So the rate of deaths is much higher for COVID-19, even with the aggressive social distancing efforts. Had we not taken any steps to slow transmission things would be a LOT worse.

    The answer to your question of what can be done; simple. Vaccines. Flu deaths would be much higher without them, and if that were the case, social distancing would be prudent. Deaths at the this time in the US is 32,917 for COVID-19. Everything we are doing is clearly working, but can’t stop the spread completely. As it is, COVID-19 is very likely to exceed the number of flu deaths, and would certainly dwarfed the flu had we done nothing.

    #975824
    2 Much Whine
    Participant

    I don’t think Nikola Tesla suffers from Mysophobia – he died in 1943. Howard Hughes died in 1976 and Saddam died in 2006 so they’re probably not suffering from it at the moment either.

    In case you haven’t heard, the state of Washington is being used as a positive example of how to handle the virus. We have not activated the National Guard (unlike 29 other states) AND the governor limited groups to 50 people (unlike 14 other states that have limited gathering to 10-25 people). Things are bad, don’t get me wrong, but they aren’t as bad as you make it sound.

    Nearly two-thirds of respondents (62%) to a recent poll say the actions taken by individual states – which to this point have included school closures, bans on large gatherings and, in some cases, shelter-in-place directives – have been appropriate. One in four says states have not gone far enough in curbing the spread of the disease, while only 9% believes states have gone too far.

    So, once again, soarringcam, you’re in the minority with your obtuse views of society. It’s my guess that Governor Inslee is less afraid of dirt and germs, as you imply, and more afraid of the unnecessary death of his constituents. I’ll take that any day.

    #975802
    Censored.wsb
    Participant

    Inslee is waiting for Tweet from Trump.
    His name should be added to list below.
    Some well-known people who suffer from mysophobia include Howard Stern, Nikola Tesla, Howard Hughes, Howie Mandel, and Saddam Hussein

    JulesB
    Participant

    It’s not a scam. It’s regularly done, at least, I’ve done in the past where I’ve been stationed previously, with no issue with their state DMV. Not everyone is out to “get” you.

    As stated in the ad:
    Please note: Buyer will accept the vehicle plus two key fobs, and Bill of Sale, after payment to me (cashier’s check only/bank check).

    I’m not asking anyone to float me anything; the buyer gets the car and the keys, and the bill of sale. When the title comes in from the financing company, I sign it over to the buyer so they may register it at the DOL in WA state.

    #975648
    ScottyR
    Participant

    About 3 to 5 yards over near the Morgan Junction

    This is decent organic soil. It’s mainly years and years of cedar tree debris that has decomposed over the years. I have about 3 to 5 yards. If you have a truck, you can back it up to the bottom of our front stairs.

    You have to navigate a set up stairs, so buckets is probably easiest. If you brought some plywood or some sort of shoot, you could probably dump wheelbarrow loads from the top of the stairs into your truck bed. So the process would be shovel into wheelbarrow, wheel 20 ft, drop into bed. Repeat.

    I have a wheel barrow,buckets and shovels you may use.

    Message me at 2 Zero six 390 One Seven zero zero
    Let me know when you would like to stop by and I will text back with my address.

    Soil

    • This topic was modified 6 years ago by ScottyR.
    • This topic was modified 6 years ago by ScottyR.

    Hi, I’m Sam Kothe, a 13 year old maker whose most recent project is building a small, simple mass spectrometer, a scientific instrument to detect what elements make up a substance. I’ve wanted to build some sort of apparatus like it (e.g., a nuclear fusion reactor, which I completely designed and parted out previously but which was vetoed by my mom) but cost has always been a major concern.
    A mass spectrometer would likely cost under $100 to build except for the oscilloscope, required for reading out the graph of the data, which would triple the cost at $200 (including shipping, which is often 2-3x the listing price) even for the cheapest of used scopes on eBay – far beyond my budget.
    I would likely need to borrow the scope for roughly 4-5 months, until I’ve completed the project. Thank you so much for your consideration, this has been a dream of mine for quite some time.
    Thanks,
    Sam

    P.S. I’m following an article in the American Journal of Physics that can be found here: https://sci-hub.tw/https://doi.org/10.1119/1.1969211

    #975539
    Maria M.
    Participant

    So with you, Johnny!With family members in Italy, Spain, UK, New York and CT it’s disheartening to go out for a quiet walk wearing a mask, long sleeves and plastic gloves only to have young people running down the sidewalk, unmasked and breathing heavily as they go. PLEASE understand that when I exercise by walking I wear a mask to protect others, not so that you can now come within 6 inches of me. We are so lucky in Washington to still be able to go out to exercise; please use this privilege thoughtfully! Be well.

    #975476
    johnnyrourke
    Participant

    More importantly from the human race like you. People are dying, and they are not just numbers you are watching on your TV’s. These are family members dying so rapidly that they cannot handle burying them as fast as they die. There are people sacrificing their lives to bring you groceries and take care of the sick and dying. This is not just in New York, this is not just in Europe, this is not just in China. I keep seeing everyone around West Seattle/Arbor Heights act like its nothing, walking down the street like its nothing. At least wear a mask, protect yourself and others. Don’t have a mask, wear a scarf. Whatever it takes if you are going to be outside and in the grocery shops. Take this seriously. I have people in my neighborhood here hosting play dates and having campfires with friends. Its heartbreaking to live near people like this with so much suffering happening. Take action before its others watching us on the news and losing our friends and families here all because you were bored and had to get out. Do it for the ones you love if not for others you do not know. If you think you are immune or we are immune here, you are dead wrong.

    #975422
    pelicans
    Participant

    Omg-rofl!
    Pawing pawpaws! Rubbing rutabagas, nudging nectarines, oogling oranges, man-handling mushrooms, stroking celery, heavy handed with the habaneros, choking cherries, scaring scallions, squeezing squash, getting cute with the cucumbers, millions of ways to misbehave in the produce aisles!
    Btw, even though I wear gloves, I, too, use produce bags like gloves. Hold the bottom, turn it inside out, and then test and/or pick the item up. Oh, and no smelling!

    cburby
    Participant

    Hi Everyone!

    I work for KCTS 9 and we’ve been posing some fun “challenges” to the community to help lift spirits. I thought I’d share the latest if you’d like to participate. :)

    At KCTS 9, we believe that our COMMUNITY is our greatest strength in times of adversity. The novel coronavirus has significantly changed the ways we interact with our family, friends and neighbors. In an effort to spread some joy during the difficult moment we’re all living in, we’re launching the OUR HEARTS LIVE HERE initiative. In the coming weeks, we’ll seek out and promote ways to safely bring our community together, something that’s core to our mission.

    In March we asked you, our community, to decorate your homes in order to spread some joy during this difficult time and you delivered! We received so many amazing submissions that it was hard to choose just a few to feature…so we chose a bunch! You can view the submissions by clicking here. You can also click here to check out some of our favorites, which are also currently airing on KCTS 9.

    For our next challenge, we want to see you, your kids, your pets or even your plants in your best “Mr. Rogers sweater”. Break out your cardigans and show us and your neighbors that we’re all in this together!

    Post your sweaters by using #OurHeartsLiveHere and tagging @KCTS9. Make sure to nominate your friends on social media to participate! We’ll select some of our favorite submissions to be featured in segments that will air on KCTS 9 and shared out with our social media channels.

    Finally, please share this with your family, friends and neighbors! The more people who participate the more we show we’re all in this together.

    Here’s how to participate:

    1) To be officially considered, fill out this form and include your name, e-mail and photo of your sweater(s)! Use the hashtag #OurHeartsLiveHere to share your work with the community.

    2) Include the KCTS 9 flyer in your photo. Don’t have a printer at home? No problem. Just hand-write a sign that says “We’re participating in #OurHeartsLiveHere with KCTS 9!”

    2) Follow all social distancing guidelines and stay at least 6 feet away from anyone who doesn’t live in your residence.

    Our favorite submissions will be featured in spots aired on KCTS 9.

    #975390

    In reply to: 70,000 dead

    mark47n
    Participant

    Or…what? You’ll stamp your foot and complain? You don’t get to dictate what others do or say, something that you’ve forgotten before.

    Given your posting history of paranoid raving histrionics you should cut others some slack. In this particular case because the ongoing and politically ancient drug crisis is not first and foremost on anyone’s mind…except yours, of course.

    #975326

    In reply to: 70,000 dead

    Censored.wsb
    Participant

    I did not start this topic to compare the logistics of the two epidemics.
    Obviously
    The drug epidemic has been growing for years and little is done because too many people or our lawmakers don’t care enough about the downtrodden.
    Stick to the subject.

    #975245

    In reply to: Free HD (not UHD) TV

    sn6uV
    Participant
    #975244
    sn6uV
    Participant

    I have a free 40″ HD TV. This is HD not UHD, so 1280 pixels across the top and not 3800. This is a Philips Model #40PFL5708/F7 and includes the original remote. Works fine, we just don’t need the extra TV and prefer UHD.

    Please PM me at 65b6e61514cd354b87d226074ffed534@sale.craigslist.org if you would like it at and include “West Seattle Blog” in your response subject so I can weed locals out from the masses of responses this will get. I’ll provide an address and leave it on the curb next to the driveway and you can wipe it down when you pick it up e.g. to ensure we are being COVID-19 safe.

    #975119
    Censored.wsb
    Participant

    Inslee is still 1 or 2 weeks lagging behind with the response game.
    Well that’s a improvement from the month long delay in Kirkland,
    Don’t wait for the Federal Government to act, or in your case follow.

    OneRogueCloud

    #974849

    In reply to: INSULIN To give away

    furryfaces
    Participant

    Thank you for thinking of others during your own grief.

    What is the expiration date on the insulin and what type is it? Just asking as Furry Faces may be able to hold onto it until COVID-19 shutdowns end.

    If you prefer, here are three suggestions on where to donate:

    1. Doney Coe clinic is a good option. Dr. King, relief Veterinarian at Lien, volunteers with the Doney Coe Clinic and manages the Doney medication list. He will know if insulin is needed. With that being said, Lien is very busy right now as they have implemented COVID-19 best practices. This means every appointment takes longer, etc. So it may take awhile to get a response.

    https://www.facebook.com/DoneyCoe/
    https://doneycoe.org/
    info@doneycoe.org

    2. Seattle Veterinary Outreach – https://www.seattlevet.org/. We believe they take medication donations.

    https://www.facebook.com/PeoplePetsLove/
    http://www.SeattleVet.org
    info@SeattleVet.org
    • Main Contact is Deborah Terwilliger: deborah.terwilliger2@frontier.com

    3. Rainier Animal Fund Wellness Clinic –
    Rainier Animal Fund Wellness Clinic
    https://www.facebook.com/rainieranimalfund/
    https://rainieranimalfund.org/get-involved/
    info@rainieranimalfund.org
    • Main Contact is Virginia Piper: virginia@rainieranimalfund.org.
    • General: info@rainieranimalfund.org
    • Donations: donate@rainieranimalfund.org

    Thanks again for your kindness and generosity.

    Take Care, Furry Faces Foundation

    #974854
    22blades
    Participant

    It’s pretty universal. The folks want to go home after a stressful day with the general public. Let’s be nice, show up 15-20 prior to closing before they have to start moving the clock to “Bar Time”. Last Call!!!! Slam’em down!

    #974707
    GT1
    Participant

    Well they are always nice, I always love this store and the regular employees know me. Of course, I cut them full slack. But I often come in near closing and finish before closing. They are even that evening way nicer than trolls here. I don’t have sanitizer wipes to bring, do you? It was strange, something else going on. People were guarding the door, but I came down the elevator, reading the big sign stating store hours. The one clerk who refused my entry allowed me to pass once I said just want to grab one item, didnt even need a cart. Self checkout closed, one line left. The clerk who knew me reopened. I am thinking there are union tensions going on.

    #974607
    birdrescuer
    Participant

    They are working hard and are the front line workers. So, a little rude. Cut them a little slack. Be kind yourself.

    #974599

    In reply to: Thank you Trump

    Censored.wsb
    Participant

    I meant “WIPE THE SLATE CLEAN”

    Test for covid-19 at all points of entry to USA.
    Airports and Boarders.

    #974529
    redblack
    Participant

    hey, 2MW and mike! my 50th was two days later, and we were in the same boat. we chose mioposto and bakery nouveau, and both of them were similarly awesome.

    obviously not as awesome as chris, though!

    i’m really missing being able to get a good hand-crafted cocktail, especially on my birthday. i’ll get over it, though.

    cheers, you guys. stay safe.

Viewing 25 results - 626 through 650 (of 25,921 total)