My canine alarm system went off at about 0400. She was having the same time change issues that the rest of us were, although hers' were mitigated by the fact that she wasn't above taking naps whenever the opportunity presented itself. Her system, on the other hand, was still more or less on ship time, and she was making it very clear that she was due and somewhat overdue to go visit a patch of grass.
I got dressed and sallied forth to confront the day.
Downstairs, it was pleasant to find out that our Security people on the night shift had coffee made. It was even a fresh pot. All we had were styrofoam cups, but the refrigerator had an icemaker in it, and it was functioning, so I threw a cube into the coffee to get it down to drinking temperature.
While the dog attended to her dog stuff, I started making a list. We needed to get some serious shopping done. First off, food. My first instinct when installing someone in an apartment with a kitchenette would be that they would be on their own as far as feeding themselves went, but I was a Karn now, and basic meals and housing were included if you were a member of the Corporation, so I'd have to set up some kind of cafeteria.
Another good idea would be to get some foodstuffs shipped down for them. Having spent about a week trying to live on their food, I knew that it would keep you nourished and all that, but it wasn't what I had been used to, and there were some things that I was really starting to miss even after a week. Experiments with new food is great once in a while, but doing it all the time starts wearing thin fairly fast. So, not only lay in stocks of food, but get Karn food down from the ship.
We needed everything. Bedding. Pillows. Dishes, utensils, and cookware. Towels and washcloths. TP seemed to be kind of thin on the ground, too. I needed to look into a laundry service, too. And a janitorial service. We really needed designated cooks, or to hire someone for that job also. And so on, and on.
By the time I'd finished my coffee and the dog got ready to go back inside, I had a substantial list. About the time we got back inside, I had another one of my moments of clarity. I realized that I was thinking like a grunt again, instead of like a Manager.
While pouring another cup of coffee, I asked Mike if any of the Karn who were assigned here were supposed to fill any of those positions. Naturally, over half of them were. They were just waiting for some to tell them what to do, and provide the stuff with which to do it. Just like that, I had half the battle already won.
As far as the second half, I requested that Mike do some research for me, and find out how all the other Embassies in NYC got their larders replenished. I know full well that most of them didn't do their own shopping. They got deliveries, so someone was surely in the business of doing that sort of thing. Mike filled me in about a minute later. There were indeed businesses who handled that sort of thing, and he had their telephone numbers. This was getting easier all the time.
The next step was to find out who was in charge of the staff people that we had in hand. Mike informed me, and I sent him a message, to be delivered at his normal start time for work. I wanted to get with him and discuss getting all this lined out. I had a list all made up for him to start on.
We also needed to hire a human for him to delegate about three quarters of this sort of thing to in the future, but that one was on me, or our UN Ambassador, or whoever. I was still trying to figure out why we hadn't just brought him along when we came back here from the UN Building, but we hadn't. I asked Mike, and was informed that he'd gone back to the ship so as to be unavailable for a few days, just to avoid all the nusances who would be descending on him until we could get him a staff set up to run his office at the UN Building.
That made sense to me, although I wondered why I hadn't taken the same route. I also found that we'd already hired a Building manager and a Food Service supervisor. The food service woman was supposed to arrive at work at 0800 this morning, and the Building manager (Maintenance, Janitorial, Laundry, and Grounds.) would be starting next Monday.
I got dressed and sallied forth to confront the day.
Downstairs, it was pleasant to find out that our Security people on the night shift had coffee made. It was even a fresh pot. All we had were styrofoam cups, but the refrigerator had an icemaker in it, and it was functioning, so I threw a cube into the coffee to get it down to drinking temperature.
While the dog attended to her dog stuff, I started making a list. We needed to get some serious shopping done. First off, food. My first instinct when installing someone in an apartment with a kitchenette would be that they would be on their own as far as feeding themselves went, but I was a Karn now, and basic meals and housing were included if you were a member of the Corporation, so I'd have to set up some kind of cafeteria.
Another good idea would be to get some foodstuffs shipped down for them. Having spent about a week trying to live on their food, I knew that it would keep you nourished and all that, but it wasn't what I had been used to, and there were some things that I was really starting to miss even after a week. Experiments with new food is great once in a while, but doing it all the time starts wearing thin fairly fast. So, not only lay in stocks of food, but get Karn food down from the ship.
We needed everything. Bedding. Pillows. Dishes, utensils, and cookware. Towels and washcloths. TP seemed to be kind of thin on the ground, too. I needed to look into a laundry service, too. And a janitorial service. We really needed designated cooks, or to hire someone for that job also. And so on, and on.
By the time I'd finished my coffee and the dog got ready to go back inside, I had a substantial list. About the time we got back inside, I had another one of my moments of clarity. I realized that I was thinking like a grunt again, instead of like a Manager.
While pouring another cup of coffee, I asked Mike if any of the Karn who were assigned here were supposed to fill any of those positions. Naturally, over half of them were. They were just waiting for some to tell them what to do, and provide the stuff with which to do it. Just like that, I had half the battle already won.
As far as the second half, I requested that Mike do some research for me, and find out how all the other Embassies in NYC got their larders replenished. I know full well that most of them didn't do their own shopping. They got deliveries, so someone was surely in the business of doing that sort of thing. Mike filled me in about a minute later. There were indeed businesses who handled that sort of thing, and he had their telephone numbers. This was getting easier all the time.
The next step was to find out who was in charge of the staff people that we had in hand. Mike informed me, and I sent him a message, to be delivered at his normal start time for work. I wanted to get with him and discuss getting all this lined out. I had a list all made up for him to start on.
We also needed to hire a human for him to delegate about three quarters of this sort of thing to in the future, but that one was on me, or our UN Ambassador, or whoever. I was still trying to figure out why we hadn't just brought him along when we came back here from the UN Building, but we hadn't. I asked Mike, and was informed that he'd gone back to the ship so as to be unavailable for a few days, just to avoid all the nusances who would be descending on him until we could get him a staff set up to run his office at the UN Building.
That made sense to me, although I wondered why I hadn't taken the same route. I also found that we'd already hired a Building manager and a Food Service supervisor. The food service woman was supposed to arrive at work at 0800 this morning, and the Building manager (Maintenance, Janitorial, Laundry, and Grounds.) would be starting next Monday.
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