Jorge Milanes Despaigne
Just to amuse myself a bit, I stopped to see how this maintenance employee reprimanded those who came behind me for walking across the section of floor she was mopping.
I heard her say some rather offensive remarks, accompanied by various nasty looks. “Don’t walk over the wet floor, please, I don’t like people walking over the floors I clean, use the other door!”
These maintenance employees, as people who mop the floors at Cuban workplaces are commonly referred to, get their daily work done whenever they deem convenient, but the rest of the employees, having lost a considerable amount of time waiting for public transportation, are made to wait at the door for them to finish their duties. You can imagine that no few people are somewhat put off by this.
On one occasion, I asked why janitors always chose to start their maintenance duties during working hours. The reply I got was that the water supply could be cut off later in the day and that everything would stay dirty if they didn’t get their work done early.
When I was a kid, my mother would take me to stores, bookshops, government offices, banks and other public places and I remember seeing that all maintenance work was done very early in the morning or after working hours.
These duties involve the use of time, and spaces, that can easily be planned in accordance with the number of customers or employees present at the workplace, or adjusted around specific situations.
This is yet another example of how Cubans are making “optimal use of working hours”, an issue that has been the focus of much debate, and will likely continue to be for a long time.
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