To casual bar and restaurant patrons, the cooks, servers and bartenders they interact with on any given night are largely invisible.
They might notice water glasses refilled, plates removed, a tab placed unobtrusively on the table as the evening wraps up. They don't see the hectic work environment lived by many in the food service industry: Late nights and unpredictable schedules. Demanding bosses and lack of control. Easy access to alcohol but rarely affordable access to health care.
These realities place food service workers at a higher than average risk for addiction, depression, sleep problems and other health problems — issues that gained prominence after the death of celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain.
Recent studies by the American Journal of Epidemiology and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reported that people in the food service and hospitality sectors are at greater risk of mental illness than other industries and have the highest rate of substance abuse disorder.
Sarah Webster Norton and Adam Borgen, two veterans of the Twin Cities service industry, are out to change that.
Serving Those Serving, a nonprofit they started three years ago, connects bar and restaurant employees with free, in-person counseling and other resources to handle problems they might be facing at work and beyond. Earlier this year, the organization partnered with Sand Creek Workplace Wellness, a Stillwater-based company with a network of hundreds of health care providers in the region.
In less than a year, Serving Those Serving has branched out to more than 33 restaurants and 1,100 employees across the state, including Rochester. Their one-of-a-kind partnership has received endorsements from the Minnesota chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, the Minnesota Restaurant Association and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, an advocate of the city's food and drink scene.
For Norton — whose profile rose while organizing for paid sick time and tip recognition, along with a higher minimum wage in Minneapolis — the drive was personal. At 43, she has already buried seven friends in the service industry, she said.