Ruben Alverado, I was born here, but I was raised in Ecuador, so I consider myself more from Ecuador than the United States. I’ve lived here since I was 18. I came back to New York, and I lived in the Bronx, Manhattan, Queens, and Long Island. And right now, I’m in Long Island. I have a wife, married twice. Six kids with the two different wives—two and four. And I was born in 1966.
My friend. Not a friend, my brother, basically. I’ve got 31 years in this building.
It was really quick. I think it was March 7 of 1990-something.
I work 8–4, Monday through Friday, Saturday and Sunday off.
It's all the same. All the same. The only difference is the morning shift and the afternoon shift. The afternoon shift is like you gotta release, you know, give more packages. You receive a lot in the morning, and then whatever you receive in the morning, whoever's working 4 to 12, you know, is busy. Doing a lot of schedules—I've been doing, you know, different days off, like Monday and Tuesday, then Thursday and Saturday, then like Sunday and Monday.
In the morning, actually. The morning is busy because the packages come in and people leave for work. It’s slightly busier.
I’m doing it right here—answering tenants, getting to the phone, dealing with complaints, and all the stuff.
Sometimes, not all the time. Because when you’re busy, you know, the day goes fast. If it's too slow, the day will go slowly. But I prefer the morning, to be honest with you.
Yeah, different waves. We get DHL, we get USPS, we get UPS, we get Federal Express, we get LaserShip. Then, we get a subcontractor coming through security.
I would say a lot. I don’t have the right number, especially in the morning when there is a lot.
Christmas is the busiest day of the year. Right now, the way everything is going, Amazon and all that, it's busy every day. Every day is Christmas because of the packages, especially this week; I think it's Amazon free prime time. Yeah, it's going to be free starting tomorrow. So, yeah, it’s busy at Christmas, but every day is busy.
Overwhelming, yes. Christmas is overwhelming. You can see the crazy maid screaming, “Chupa, chupa.” We get all different kinds of people—we get crazy, medium, sweet, sour, bad people, and good people. Some are good tippers, some bad tippers. We also get paid weekly. Some people get direct deposits, and some people get an old-time check. They want to see the check.
Everything. Everything. A little detail that you leave on the side, and, you know.
When the food delivery comes, that's the first thing you’ve got to do. First security deliveries. We never deliver food. They come through the service entrance, and security calls the tenant. Then, security brings it out. No one is allowed to bring food deliveries up. Only the guys inside are secure enough to bring it up. Only the contractors can go up there—you know, update that checklist, show the ID, and then, you know, give them like a pass with their name and picture. The packages, when the tenants are here, we give it to them. Or we ask them if they want me to send them out? Sometimes, they want you to give it to them or something. And if someone wants to come in and they’re not in the Building Link, we have to try to get in touch with the resident. So, that's what we're doing. We're doing like security with no weapon, nothing. Nobody can have a weapon. If anybody can walk in and come with a gun, hopefully never, and start shooting, just start running. Other than that, you know, we don't let anybody go in there. Even if they get upset and say, “Look, I came for my father’s apartment, but my father's in China,” I say, “I'm sorry, but I cannot contact China. I cannot give you the key.” You know, we had that two or three times, maybe. And all this time, we’ve had like two or three times that we don't let people in. Sometimes, they will wait right there until the next day, and somebody calls and says, “Hey, it's ok to release the key,” and we say ok.
It has a lot of stress. A lot, a lot of stress. With tenants complaining that they need help fixing a water leak, flood, or anything. They wanted help with it yesterday. That’s a stressful thing, and sometimes the tenants can give you stress because they get an email saying they received a package, but we haven’t gotten it in the lobby. The USPS brought two shopping bags. But they are looking, you know, they're scanning, like 11 o'clock, and they bring in two, me. So, then they go, oh, but then he's scanning my bag. I say we don't have that. He's coming; he's on the way. A lot of stress sometimes. Sometimes, I want to quit this job.
I let it go. If I have a problem in my house, I don’t bring it over here, and if I have a problem in my job, I don’t bring that to my house.
Hmm. Well, it depends. Sometimes you get a lot, so I would say 50-50. They come back at different times, in the afternoon or night.
Not a lot. Unless when you go to break, the lunch break, that's when you see them, in that time. But other than that, no. You’re standing outside; you gotta stay alert all the time because tenants come in a car, and they need help. You gotta help with the luggage.
Normal day? About 20-25.
Too much. I would say about 5-10 minutes. Most of the time, it’s just “Good morning. Goodbye.” In the morning, you’ll see a lot of people say, “Good morning,” before going out quickly. I talk more with co-workers than them.
It depends. You can find when they're in the mood to talk in the morning, they talk to you. Sometimes they come back, and you hear them if they want to talk, they talk, but not a lot.
It was less activity. But, still, we received packages like crazy. Mentally, it affected you a lot because you lost a lot of friends, family, and stuff. You know, we were here when the COVID strike. I got the COVID, I forgot to put the mask on, and I got the fucking COVID. Thank God I’m here.
Mm, not really.
Oh yeah, a lot of tenants, they were like, they don't wanna see, they're not even wanna see you here. They want to just send you home. But we were ok, you know. I got COVID, but I took two weeks off because the tenants were so scared. I believe everybody got scared of it.
No. It changed a lot in a lot of ways. Now it looks like a normal, but nah. It's only like a makeup. It looks like this. But there's still a lot of people afraid. I still wear a mask when I go take the train home. Now, I wear a mask because a lot of people are coughing and sneezing. You don’t know. It’s better to be safe than sorry.