Category Archives: UPS
Guess Who ?
UPS has the hottest chick in the game driving its trucks. Beyoncé is not taking up a new job, but she did make a special delivery for her fans on Instagram. B posed for an impromptu photo shoot behind the wheel of a UPS truck in New York City, sporting a striped jumpsuit and curly hair. She is gearing up for her “Mrs. Carter Show World Tour,” which kicks off in Belgrade, Serbia, on April 15.
Feels Like Home
UPS vs My Driveway
I like a company that keeps track of your orders. When I had bookmarks made for my new Barringer’s Pass series, Earthly Charms told me when it shipped – Monday – and when it would be delivered – today. UPS seemed to be running late, as it hadn’t arrived by late afternoon. Then I got an email from the company – did I receive my bookmarks? UPS said they couldn’t get all the way up my driveway and left it by a tree half way to the house. They wondered if perhaps deep snow made the driveway impassable.
I hopped in the truck to check it out – sure enough, there were two parcels wrapped in plastic and propped up by a tree. The other package was the edits from NY on my next book. If it really had been snowing, I might never have found them.
In fifteen years of living here, this is the first time a delivery didn’t make it to the house. This is the treacherous driveway he couldn’t handle. The package is at the base of the tree on the right.
A previous UPS driver had told me that company policy says they’re supposed to park on the road and walk up to the house. Obviously, if he did that in my neighborhood where most houses are far off the road, he’d never get done. But that was the rule – walk it up to the house.
I went to UPS.com and used every character permitted to me to explain my dissatisfaction with their service. They’re supposed to answer within twenty-four hours.
Dirt Road Diaries
Is getting pulled out considered an accident?
Customer at the street……perfect stop
Jury says UPS owes $3.8 million in fatal Norwich crash
By JOHN BARRY A jury has said an Oakdale truck driver and United Parcel Service must pay more than $3.8 million to the estate and widow of a Jewett City man killed in a Nov. 23, 2010, crash on Interstate 395 in Norwich. The jury reached its verdict Wednesday after a three-day trial in front of Judge Susan Peck in New London Superior Court. Jury selection began Jan. 23. George Upton, 55, was killed in an early morning crash near Exit 82 when his Ford Ranger pickup was hit from behind by a UPS tractor-trailer driven by Joseph Socha, 58. Both drivers were heading south. The six jurors found Socha and UPS negligent and reckless in the crash. They awarded the estate $508,132 in economic damages and $1.5 million in noneconomic damages, and awarded Julie Upton, George Upton’s widow, $1.875 million. The crash happened about 2:45 a.m. Socha was taking a load of packages from UPS’ facility in Chelmsford, Mass., to a facility in Norwich. Upton, also a truck driver, was heading to work at Tri-Mac in Bozrah. When hit from behind, Upton’s pickup smashed through a guardrail and traveled down a 40-foot embankment. Upton, who was ejected from his pickup, was pronounced dead at the scene.
Sometimes you have to double park
Odessan Says She Was Fired From UPS Simply Because She’s a Woman
ODESSA- An Odessan says she was fired from her job at UPS simply because she happens to be a woman. Now, she’s suing. The trial starts Tuesday morning at the Midland Federal Courthouse. Amber Ibarra spent more than five years as the only female driver at the Odessa UPS Package Center. “It’s been a very long roller coaster,” she said. “There was definitely an environment that was hostile to women,” Ibarra’s attorney, Holly Williams, said. Williams says Ibarra endured hellish relationships with the men she worked around at UPS. She describes the facility as having debilitating overtones of sexist mentality, which eventually cost Ibarra everything. “When I lost my job, they took my livelihood away from me. [They took] my career,” Ibarra said. According to the lawsuit, one male coworker repeatedly subjected her to offensive comments. On one occasion, he even paged her while she was with her mother and when she called him back, she claims he asked her to perform oral sex on him. Williams says, “You can imagine how humiliating that would be.” That same man, she says, would routinely call her a “[expletive] imbecile” and a “[expletive] idiot.” “Obviously that’s just horrifying,” Williams said. Ibarra and a few other female coworkers complained to management, and that male coworker was eventually terminated, but Ibarra says it subsequently led several male employees to retaliate against her. Comments about female employees’ menstrual periods, we’re told, were common. Those comments were graphic and we’re told they happened multiple times on a daily basis. “We’re told that women were given extra loads and more packages to deliver and heavier packages, just to give them a ‘hard time’,” Williams said. Ibarra says she believes the sex discrimination she endured for so long eventually led to her termination. It was in the area of 42nd Street and Golder Avenue where Ibarra got into an accident while driving the company truck. “She hopped a curb and ran into a telephone pole. She was not injured. It was a single-vehicle accident,” Williams said. The accident eventually resulted in Ibarra’s termination. She fought back, even taking her dispute to the Union but the decision to terminate was upheld. The lawsuit references a handful of other male UPS employees who reportedly found themselves in far worse vehicle accidents while driving company trucks but still managed to continue working at the Odessa UPS Package Center. One man, referenced in the lawsuit, “was involved in an accident involving five vehicles and one fatality” and another man referenced, “fell asleep, ran over and wrecked into a parked car on a highway.” The attorney for UPS tells NewsWest 9, the company doesn’t believe it is appropriate to comment on the case until all the evidence is presented in the courtroom.
The lawsuit lists a group of male employees who “do not want women in the workplace because they perceive that men are stronger, quicker, and faster than women, and women are weaker, slower, and have menstrual periods.”
“When you’re leaving the UPS office, at this point, and you’re out on the road, you’re thinking about this stuff all day. It’s unsafe because you’re upset thinking about how they’re kind of setting you up to fail,” Ibarra said.
Ibarra is suing for sex discrimination and seeking damages for the money lost during the ordeal and all the emotional stress she says she was put through.