ALDI grocery stores are holding job interviews

A line of people waited for job interviews Wednesday at ALDI grocery, 4805 State Ave., Kansas City, Kan.
A line of people waited for job interviews Wednesday at ALDI grocery, 4805 State Ave., Kansas City, Kan.

A crowd of people gathered Wednesday morning at the ALDI grocery, 4805 State Ave. It wasn’t a special sale on food that caused the people to assemble. The occasion was ALDI’s first of three two-hour interviewing sessions for job applicants in the Kansas City area. Other interview sessions will be held on Saturday, Aug. 30, from 7 a.m. to 9.a.m. at ALDI locations in Shawnee and Independence.

“We pay significantly higher wages with full benefits, much more than our competitors,” explained Amy Watson, the Olathe-based director of ALDI store operations, “and that draws a lot of applicants.”

The announced openings are for store associates, who are paid $11.50 per hour, and shift managers, who earn $16 an hour. Watson estimated the interview sessions would attract about 200 applicants. About 20 people are likely to be hired from that group.

Applicants must be 18 years or older to apply and have a high school diploma or GED. Retail experience is preferred and previous experience is required for managers. ALDI requires drug screening and performs background checks. Those hired must be available to work anytime between 5 a.m. and 11 p.m. Monday through Sunday and have the ability to lift 45 pounds.

ALDI has 24 stores in the Kansas City area and 1,300 nationally in 32 states, mostly from Kansas to the East Coast. The company, which bills itself as the nation’s low-price grocery leader, plans to open about 100 stores each year.

“We continue to have excellent growth because of the people we hire from each community and our ability to offer fresh produce and meat, as well as organic and gluten-free selections,” Watson concluded.

A line of people waited for job interviews Wednesday at ALDI grocery, 4805 State Ave., Kansas City, Kan.
A line of people waited for job interviews Wednesday at ALDI grocery, 4805 State Ave., Kansas City, Kan.

T-Bones beat Sox in slugfest

Kansas City outlasted Amarillo on Wednesday night in a 7-6 victory at CommunityAmerica Ballpark in Kansas City, Kan.

The T-Bones took an early lead in the second inning of what would turn out to be a back and forth ballgame. Following a Ray Sadler single, Bryan Sabatella wasted no time extending his 13-game hitting streak, shooting a double to deep center field and scoring Sadler. With his hit, Sabatella matched Robby Kuzdale for the longest hitting streak on the club this season.

The T-Bones tacked on three more runs in the third. Vladimir Frias led off the inning with a triple and later scored when Danny Richar grounded out. Matt Padgett and Ray Sadler then hit back-to-back solo home runs, extending the Kansas City lead to 4-0.

Amarillo stormed back in the fifth, scoring five runs on Kansas City starter Joe Van Meter (1-1). Former T-Bones player Kyle Nichols put an exclamation point on the frame, crushing a three-run home run to left field and putting the Sox in front, 5-4. It was the 200th career home run for Nichols, who spent part of 2013 with the T-Bones.

Kansas City took the lead right back in its half of the fifth. T.J. Mittelstaedt led off with a walk and then scored when Richar doubled to left field. Sabatella grounded into a fielder’s choice later in the inning, scoring Richar and putting Kansas City back in the lead. The T-Bones tacked on another run before the inning came to a close with Kansas City in the lead, 7-5.

Van Meter’s only hiccup was Amarillo’s five-run fifth. He tossed 6 innings and picked up his first win with Kansas City. Ryan Rogers (1-1), who came on in relief in the fifth and only threw seven pitches, took the loss. Kris Regas allowed the tying run to reach third base in the ninth, but managed to secure his 18th save.

With the win, the T-Bones move to 40-48 on the season, while the Sox fall to 31-55. Kansas City begins a four-game series at Gary SouthShore (47-42) Thursday night at 7:05 p.m. The game can be heard on 1660-AM or watched live online at tbonesbaseball.com.

Box score: http://www.pointstreak.com/baseball/boxscoretext.html?gameid=178183
– Story from T-Bones

BPU hears staffing report

by William Crum

At tonight’s work session, the Board of Public Utilities heard a report on staffing and employment opportunities available.

At the regular meeting, Chuck Schlittler, head of the Downtown Shareholders, gave an update on what is going on in the downtown area of Kansas City, Kan., regarding new development.

Jerry Ohmes, director of electric systems control, made a presentation. He helps the BPU comply with federal regulations, helping meet the federal mandates.

David Mehlhaff, chief communications officer, gave a presentation regarding the Board of Public Utilities Empower Education Program, a program designed to encourage young people to learn.