killing_rose: Raven on an eagle (Default)
killing_rose ([personal profile] killing_rose) wrote in [community profile] accessibility_fail2010-09-15 01:35 pm

(no subject)

 So. School's back in session, and we're going green. This isn't a bad thing. 

What my aching fingers are really pissed off by is the fact that--as part of this effort to go green (which is to say, "Save money, but save face")--our dining services have implemented a program where you pick up a reusable to-go container if you're taking your food and running. I picked up mine today and grabbed salad.

As I went to close the latch, my fingers couldn't do it. They don't have the strength. I had to basically trap the damn thing with my body and slam it. As was, it bounced off of my fingers, made my finger joints ache trying to close it, and nearly went flying. 

Can we say ow? Okay, so it just got opened, it hadn't been bent before, it'll fix itself. I am an optimist. I also had a major brain failure (that would be the pain, thanks!) . Because it came with the latch already closed. It hadn't been hard to open, but trust me, as I finished my lunch a few minutes ago, it was still terribly hard to close.

I foresee this being a massive problem. 

And no, we're not allowed to use our own damned tupperware. A couple years ago when I was too sick to do much more than live off their soups, I used to have to petition--every time--to get them to let me bring my own bowl to take to go. 
amadi: A bouquet of dark purple roses (Default)

[personal profile] amadi 2010-09-15 08:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Are these containers returned dirty to be run through the conventional dishwasher or something? I'm trying to logically parse why these containers are okay and personal containers are not.
jalendavi_lady: Meant To Do That... (Sidious Meant To Do That)

[personal profile] jalendavi_lady 2010-09-16 01:18 am (UTC)(link)
And these are the one set of food containers going through the dishwasher most likely to have been handled by the ill *and* contagious who had helpful friends go and collect food to bring to them? Which was exactly what happened for a number of people in my school's 'not quite the flu' epidemic one year -- thank goodness we weren't using anything communally reusable that semester, it would have spread three times as fast as it did.

I wouldn't be using the communal ones if I were there, and I don't have food allergies.