Pros
Weekends off, decent insurance. That's about it
Cons
There's no AC on the production floor (and that's expected) but then the swamp cooler for the lunch room is always broken in Utah's 100+ degree summer. It's so hot in there, the refrigerator can't keep stuff cold. The drivers come in and empty the ice machine into their coolers to keep their stuff cold on their route leaving nothing for the workers in extreme conditions. There's no real training, they claim there is, but there isn't. The people that train must fear for their positions because they don't actually share anything useful and keep it all to themselves so they can always be the hero. This is supposed to be a "clean area", no food is allowed on the floor because we're working with other peoples clothes, we have to wear hats or hair nets (makes sense), but when the clothes fall on the floor because the lines are broken, it's fine to just pick them up and keep processing them? How is that ok? THE LINES ARE ALWAYS BROKEN! Maintenance says they have the parts to fix them, but they never get fixed. Why? Breaks are hit and miss because they shove so much work your way and tell you it has to be completed before you can leave but there's also no OT allowed. So quite often, breaks aren't taken. Pretty sure this isn't a good (or legal) practice. You have people urinating on themselves while on the job because they feel as if they can't take a break. It's a sweatshop. It seems to be impossible for them to hire people that will stay past the first week of training, it's a mystery. There is literally no HR in this building for anyone to take their concerns to.