
Alex Apodaca, chief operating officer at JB Partners, an Arizona-based franchisee that manages seven Dunkin' stores in the area, told the outlet: "We just can't get people to work."
The west-side Colorado Avenue branch has been operating for 55 years. The store would usually have 15 employees on its rota. But that fell to three just before the store closed, Apodaca said.
"We're in a major labor crisis and that is the 100% reason why we're closed," he added. "No other reason."
Dunkin', which underwent a rebranding in 2018 that changed the store's name from Dunkin' Donuts, is not alone in its struggle, however. Other businesses in the US are still grappling with a labor shortage, months after their states cut enhanced jobless benefits.
Ray Sykes, who owns the Italian restaurant Arabellas in Winter Haven, told The Ledger he had to hire workers still at high school who have very little experience, or in some cases, none at all.
In late August, at least three Chick-fil-A restaurants in Alabama closed their dining rooms because they didn't have enough employees to keep them open. Two more started shutting early "due to extremely short staffing," Insider's Grace Dean reported.
In the case of Dunkin', JB Partners had already closed and reopened at least two of its Springs locations over the past 18 months, due to a hiring crisis.
"That part of town, it's a little bit more difficult with hiring," Apodaca told The Colorado Springs Gazette. "I guarantee you, if we were two or three miles west, or two or three east, we wouldn't have the same problem. But for some reason, that pocket is just really difficult to find people that want to work."
The franchisee hopes to reopen in the coming weeks, according to Apodaca.



Comment: This labor shortage is happening across the US as people, used to staying at home not working, are reticent to return to the daily grind. On social media it's being called "The Great Resignation," and has the appearance of a grassroots movement to not work. But it seems to play too neatly into the hands of the Great Reset crowd to be a spontaneous initiative.
See also: