Lawnboi
WKR
Not here they are not.Part time drivers are paid hourly, the full time drivers are paid based on the route.
The part time work is some of the hardest physical labor Iv ever done, and that was back in college.
Not here they are not.Part time drivers are paid hourly, the full time drivers are paid based on the route.
When did they start that my father in law just retired after 30 years and that is not how it works at all. After reading this he got a good chuckle.No, it does not, especially with UPS. Lemme splain to you how UPS works.
You get to choose your route based off seniority, so the most senior driver there gets the first pick of the routes. So the senior employee can pick the best paying route, but guess what... They don't actually have to do that route, they put drivers without seniority on that route and they bounce around on easier routes while getting paid for the other route. Do you think that's fair? It's not, but that's how UPS works. When I lived in VA the driver who had my route was that was and it was always a sub.
Explain to me how the union is helping the sub driver thats doing a harder route for less money than it actually pays...
If it weren't for their shitty union they wouldn't be in this mess, they are because the sub drivers aren't being paid what they should be for the work they're doing and they're pissed off over it all because a lot of senior drivers are gaming the system because the union allows them to.
As an adult with responsibilities, I'd like to change careers and do something other than construction. Been looking at different jobs and talking to folks... It sucks knowing I'd make like a quarter of construction wages changing careers. Lots of things I'd like to do/try, but man the thought of making younger me wages is awful! I guess I'm glad I fell into construction and loved it for a time.Or you just work at bettering yourself and become a skilled worker so you’re actually more valuable to an employer and they will in turn pay you more.
Of course, that takes time and effort on someone’s part without immediate gratification. It’s becoming exceedingly difficult to find individuals in todays workforce that are capable of putting in the effort to actually EARN those higher wages. They seem to truly believe they’re entitled to high wages just for showing up and punching a time clock.
Likely a result of the excessive screen time and consumption of social media from a very young age of those entering the work force now. They’ve no doubt been subjected to all the progressive propaganda and ridiculous messages being pushed on those platforms. Livable wages for all for example. Actual mature thinking individuals know that concept is absolutely asinine but the 12-17 yo demographic that stare at phones all day without parental supervision do not so they believe livable wages for all is doable when they begin to enter the workforce. I blame their crappy parents for their initial naivety and lack of work ethic as they enter the working world.
Now, if an individual is already an adult with some responsibilities and they still believe this type of stuff i don’t know what to tell someone like that other than theyre going to have a rough go of it until they learn the world doesn’t owe them anything they need to earn what they need/want.
All that happens despite the unions. I'm in the IT field, specifically contracting world, and people skip around jobs every 1-2 years to get nice raises with each move until they're up to market rates or get comfortable otherwise. That's just the way it is. The people who work somewhere for 10 years always freak out to find out the new guy next to them that just got hired makes twice as much. That's the free market, you get paid what you're worth if you're bold enough to make moves.I don’t understand you non-union guys reasoning. So you’re ok with people leaving the company to find better working conditions, but you’re not ok with the workers staying with the company, speaking in a collective voice, and negotiating with the company?
I left a non union electric cooperative to go to a neighboring union utility. The co-op said they couldn’t afford to pay me the rate the union offered me so I left. I took a demotion and got a $6hr raise. Within a year the coop gave everybody in the line dept a $5hr raise to keep guys from leaving and continues to keep up with the utilities rates.
I along with about 30 other guys left the union utility 12yrs later to go work outside construction out of a different local union hall for a $25hr raise and all overtime double time. That was 4yrs ago. Since then that utility has raised its hourly rate by about $20. They got a $9hr raise just this year. A couple years before I left our membership agreed to a 0% raise in the contract with the utility. The whole time the utility said they just can’t afford to give a raise of any sort.
I’m sure it’s just a coincidence but both times the poor ol company that’s barely making ends meet somehow found the money (which was way more than the union was asking for in negations) to pay guys that remained to keep them from leaving.
Do you non-union guys really just not believe that these big companies will do all they can to get as much out of you for as little pay as absolutely possible until you call their bluff??
What better example could I possibly give you?
Something else that just blows my mind is all the guys that cuss the union but still benefit from it second hand. The co-op had to raise its pay scale to compete with the rate that the union negotiated with the neighboring utility. None of those non union co-op guys refused that pay raise. Just like a buncha bare tailed, cheese eatin rat bastards. I’m sure they’re all just waiting in the dark rubbing their scrawny tail hoping to get some trickle down from the latest union utility raise. I think a lot of non union guys might change their mind if they all the sudden got the benefits taken away from them that a union fought to get. Brainwashed non-dues payin little parasites.
It puts me in tough spot politically because I think the Democratic Party is mostly evil reptilians. But after being on both sides I do whole heartedly believe everyone should have the right to organize. If you don’t need it, great. If you do need it, stand together and call their bluff.
So what’s wrong with staying where you’re at and negotiating as a whole for it?All that happens despite the unions. I'm in the IT field, specifically contracting world, and people skip around jobs every 1-2 years to get nice raises with each move until they're up to market rates or get comfortable otherwise. That's just the way it is. The people who work somewhere for 10 years always freak out to find out the new guy next to them that just got hired makes twice as much. That's the free market, you get paid what you're worth if you're bold enough to make moves.
I just think it's a shit way to go about it constantly threatening to hurt the company and it's customers if you don't get your way when it's so easy to just do it the right way, problem is you have to have some value to do that and often times these striking employees have none which is why they have to resort to those tactics. You agreed to a pay amount for the job, if that's no longer acceptable to someone they're free to go do better rather than pitching a fit and rallying a bunch of other employees to strongarm tactics.So what’s wrong with staying where you’re at and negotiating as a whole for it?
So what’s wrong with staying where you’re at and negotiating as a whole for it?
Do you guys really just not believe that these big companies will do all they can to get as much out of you for as little pay as absolutely possible until you call their bluff??
So you’re under the assumption that the company just can’t afford to pay these crybabies that aren’t worth it any more money that what they already are?I just think it's a shit way to go about it constantly threatening to hurt the company and it's customers if you don't get your way when it's so easy to just do it the right way, problem is you have to have some value to do that and often times these striking employees have none which is why they have to resort to those tactics. You agreed to a pay amount for the job, if that's no longer acceptable to someone they're free to go do better rather than pitching a fit and rallying a bunch of other employees to strongarm tactics.
This is JMO and I'm fully aware it's not for everyone.
There’s nothing wrong with leaving and going somewhere else. I did it.You still dont get it.
Whats wrong with going to another company that pays more and has better benefits.
Sure they will.
But you proved yourself wrong. The neighboring coop that wasnt even in union negotiations had to raise their pay to market to keep from loosing guys. Key word they had to raise to market.
Fact is there is a market on what employees are worth.
Bunch of people here still dont know how inflation and economics work from a goverment level and a market level.
Calling people names and insulting them is beneath you. Your better then that.
Sorry, I was rude and I apologize. Having a few beers watching world cup kickball.So you’re under the assumption that the company just can’t afford to pay these crybabies that aren’t worth it any more money that what they already are?
The company was not hurt in both my personal examples, they just had to cut out a bigger piece of pie for their employees.
Why would you not want to have a voice and a seat at the table with the company when it comes to your pay, benefits and working conditions?? And a legal contract that both sides have to uphold once agreed upon??
Who is “constantly” threatening the company? If I remember right most of our contracts were three year contracts. So every three years each side set down to negotiate. And the vast majority of the time we lost more than we gained. Have you ever been a union member or are you just getting this view from the news?
There’s nothing wrong with leaving and going somewhere else. I did it.
And there’s nothing wrong with an organized negotiation. In my opinion it’s better for the company to pay the negotiated rate than to have employees leave, have temporary reduction in workforce, hire and train new people and then still have to raise your rate to keep up with the place your previous employees left you for.
How did I prove myself wrong? The co-op raised their rates to match the utility’s rates that the union bargained for. If there’s no union to negotiate a higher rate, then there’s no higher rate to have to match. The union created the higher wage.
But beyond all that, the bigger point being the co-op had the money in its pocket all along and wouldn’t pay it until they had to.
It seems like we’re both having a hard time understanding how the other is missing such obvious points. What’s going on here ha??
Ok, sorry, it wasn’t aimed at any individual. But I do feel that way about people that talk bad about a group that fought for benifits they are currently receiving.
If I understand how unions get started in company. Is it a negotiation or is it the workers strong arming the company into the union workforce? I am asking this as a question because I don't know exactly how it works. But I didn't think that UPS asked to have a union workforce. So that doesn't seem like a "negotiation" to me. Like the Amazon union vote. They tried like heck to unionize them. But Amazon has been able to hold them off.I don’t understand you non-union guys reasoning. So you’re ok with people leaving the company to find better working conditions, but you’re not ok with the workers staying with the company, speaking in a collective voice, and negotiating with the company?
I left a non union electric cooperative to go to a neighboring union utility. The co-op said they couldn’t afford to pay me the rate the union offered me so I left. I took a demotion and got a $6hr raise. Within a year the coop gave everybody in the line dept a $5hr raise to keep guys from leaving and continues to keep up with the utilities rates.
I along with about 30 other guys left the union utility 12yrs later to go work outside construction out of a different local union hall for a $25hr raise and all overtime double time. That was 4yrs ago. Since then that utility has raised its hourly rate by about $20. They got a $9hr raise just this year. A couple years before I left our membership agreed to a 0% raise in the contract with the utility. The whole time the utility said they just can’t afford to give a raise of any sort.
I’m sure it’s just a coincidence but both times the poor ol company that’s barely making ends meet somehow found the money (which was way more than the union was asking for in negations) to pay guys that remained to keep them from leaving.
Do you non-union guys really just not believe that these big companies will do all they can to get as much out of you for as little pay as absolutely possible until you call their bluff??
What better example could I possibly give you?
Something else that just blows my mind is all the guys that cuss the union but still benefit from it second hand. The co-op had to raise its pay scale to compete with the rate that the union negotiated with the neighboring utility. None of those non union co-op guys refused that pay raise. Just like a buncha bare tailed, cheese eatin rat bastards. I’m sure they’re all just waiting in the dark rubbing their scrawny tail hoping to get some trickle down from the latest union utility raise. I think a lot of non union guys might change their mind if they all the sudden got the benefits taken away from them that a union fought to get. Brainwashed non-dues payin little parasites.
It puts me in tough spot politically because I think the Democratic Party is mostly evil reptilians. But after being on both sides I do whole heartedly believe everyone should have the right to organize. If you don’t need it, great. If you do need it, stand together and call their bluff.