Well yesterday, but I found out the damage total today
At the Kohls Distribution Center, I watched a forklift driver puncture the water sprinkler system, which then kicked in for a large section of the warehouse. Immediately, the fire alarm went off, halting work as employees and supervisors scrambled to know whether it was the fire alarm or the tornado alarm. The alarm itself sounded about the same as a forklift truck backing up, and just about as loud. If it was a tornado, we'd go to the center of the building, and if it were a fire, we'd flee outside. Apparently the alarms sound very similar, which would lead to catastrophic results if something happened. To top it all off, the temps don't have any training whatsoever on any emergency drills, and most of the employees didn't even know what was going on.
The cost of nicking the sprinkler system with a machine? Over one million dollars in inventory alone, and thousands of dollars in lost wages and productivity, plus replacing the orders' inventory, not to mention the headaches of dealing with all those customers and scrambling to get stuff shipped. A total inventory count will happen on Tuesday and Wednesday, and only inventory staff would be able to work. (Overtime will be available to them)
If the sprinklers would have been only 30 feet closer to the south, it would have hit The RF Gun Cage, meaning all the unused inventory guns, batteries, set-up equipment, and other various vital parts of the entire warehouse's server would have been down for the count, which would have been in the Tens of Millions of Dollars. Thankfully, the server itself is away from the gun cage.
Kohls online purchases may be a little delayed.