Anyone without a Fargodome uniform in a concession stand under the seats is a volunteer raising money for a charity. I did that when I was a teacher at Shanley and we made much more money when we had a booth that sold beer. The only problem was we had students trying to order beers.
It's OK to not be OK.
I'd guess well more than 200 employees on the books.
These are the only F/T staff members: http://fargodome.com/staff-directory
Today my experience of going through the Dome security escalated. Last week I was asked if I had anything they should be concerned about. This week I was asked if I had any knives or guns. I can't wait for the next home game.
The only reason some people get lost in thought is because it's unfamiliar territory.
Paul Fix.
The whole idea of metal detectors is to keep those out, maybe felt too many people were bringing small knives in (can't imagine guns but I suppose some have cc licenses? Not sure if that is allowable probably not?) and forgetting about them. They don't want to make it a hassle for those people.
That said it disturbs me that this is more common then uncommon, I'm old enough to remember we used to go through airport security (at least at Hector, don't remember many other airports in my youth as we never flew) less hassled than we do the Fargodome now. Probably will be one of the last to remember it as such. My kids will never know that type of world, same as I didn't about my parents and grandparents world I guess.
Sent by my phone on a bullet train from Hillsboro.
I'm not the old and I remember being able to walk all the way up to the gate to see family off at the airport. I specifically remember standing at the window watching my brothers plane roll up to the gate, catch the bridge/walkway and keep going smashing the walkway through the window I was just standing against. That was at Hector airport. Sent from my Pixel 2 using Tapatalk