Category Archives: UPS

The New Attack

     The company has taken a new plan to avoid having to pay Unemployment. We're Watching You, and We Will Get You!They are able to combine the new Telematics system with the desire to terminate senior drivers, and the desire to send them down the road with no unemployment benefits.
     They use Telematics to show when a vehicle stops, and when it starts. They then have claimed that your break starts and stops based on the movement of those wheels. You do not get credit for putting your mirrors in. You do not get credit for entering times in your board. You do not get credit for washing your hands, or going to the bathroom.
     They claim that if you do claim that time for any of the above listed activities that you are, “stealing time from the company”.
     Telematics does not show any information about any action that takes place outside of the delivery process. Other than the seat belt, and bulkhead, and backing, it only shows stops, starts, and speed of the vehicle, and the vehicle location, all as a function of time.
     The system does not show questions from customers. The system does not show the driver dealing with damaged packages, or open packages. The system does not show a driver dealing with rabid animals, or people.
     Of course the company design is that any action outside of the delivery process is on the driver’s time.
     So of course the question would be, “Why would the company leap directly to the theft of time when such problems arise?” The answer is of course the quest for super production standards, the attempt to rid themselves of less than desirable drivers, and the desire to terminate for dishonesty.
     The Unemployment system in most states allows a company to protest an employees right to claim unemployment for theft from the company.There are a number of other reasons, violence, disappearing from the job, etc.
     The worst part of the whole attack is that the Union has become accepting of the Telematics information. Even though the contract specifically prohibits the information from being used against a driver, the mapping and times are routinely allowed to be presented in a case. The Union has accepted that all of the information is exact, and in fact is a clear reference of the drivers actions, setting the drivers up for failure in any case the company may have brought before them. 
     It would seem to me that the Union has forgotten what it is like to be a driver on a daily basis, and in fact many of the BA’s have never had to survive with the company under the Telematics regime, and probably would be the first ones fired if they did.
     Of course when you go up the ladder within the Union officer ranks, that mentality becomes even more prevalent, which is unfortunate for the driver, because these are the people that are supposed to be representing the driver’s interests with the Company.
     The goal here is of course to make the Rank and File aware of the situations that you may face, and to give the Rank and File the ability to anticipate the politics of the Company/Union relationship. 
     Write or call your Business Representative, and let him know that you want to be protected in these situations. A call to your Local Union principle officer would also be a good idea.
     To find your Local Union go to Teamsters.org.
     It also wouldn’t hurt to send a note to James Hoffa.
     Your world within the company is definitely under attack, and any fairness in the decisions that may affect you, are being taken out of the equation.
     If you don’t believe that, then you have your eyes closed.

I Hate When That Happens

                                UPS Truck Strikes Mentor House


Authorities are investigating a Monday evening crash in Mentor that sent a UPS truck into a house.  (I hate when that happens)

Mentor Fire Department Battalion Chief Terry Szabo said crews were called out at about 7:30 p.m. to the area of 7198 Lake Shore Blvd. for a motor vehicle accident.

Szabo said a UPS truck, headed westbound, sideswiped a white car going the opposite direction before continuing through a neighbor’s yard and into the living room of the house at 7180 Lake Shore.



You can read the whole story here plus pictures and video.


Fight Hunger……Eat the Rich

Jesus was a Liberal   A Northern Sun catalog came in the mail today. Happy days are here again!! They sell great buttons and bumper stickers, or as they say, “Products for Progressives since 1979.” The pages are loaded with all the best liberal quotes and catch phrases. I always try to buy a button or two and show my support. Buy American. 
   Fight Hunger…Eat the Rich is the first one I would buy. I have to admit, that’s how I feel about the coming class war. Or how about When I Grow Up, I Want t be Too Big to Fail. Oh sorry, that’s only banks and health insurance companies.  We Already have Death Panels, they’re called Insurance Companies.
   
I like the ones that offend the people that offend me. Voting is Like Driving, “R” is for reverse, “D” is for Forward.
   I would love to run a company like this. It would make a great retirement job, doing something fun and making a statement.  I’d love to have this one on a bumper sticker, Where’s Robin Hood when you need him? Some of them explain the world in much simpler terms than all the talk shows ever could. Liberals treat dogs like people, conservatives treat people like dogs.
   Don’t worry that you might be offended if you check out the link,   Wikileaks says You can handle the truth.

UPS Management Style…..Self-Loathing??

   The UPS management  style must have been brought up from Below. I’ve never seen a company treat it’s employees as badly as UPS does and get away with it. At most companies, a whistleblower would have exposed UPS management as cruel and unusual. But UPS has elevated its own brand of micro-management to unbelievable heights. What other company, especially one with a Union contract, gets away with this level of harassment?
   UPS has always prodded and herded its workers like cattle on a drive to market. But it’s worsened in the last 10 years. And it continues to get more intense every year. Drivers who didn’t like how management treated them became supervisors and treated their group the same way. How does that happen?
   I think that UPS management attracts a certain type of person. And that person  is someone who hates themselves.
   For example, the new supe who now lords it over his drivers, demands perfection and threatens to fire anyone who makes a mistake, is a self-loather who hates himself for not being perfect and he’s taking it out on you.
   The manager who follows his drivers around and tries to catch them doing something wrong is the same guy who beats himself up for not achieving more. He’s going to make you achieve more because he feels like a failure.
   And on up the ladder it goes.
   We once had a division manager who could not show an ounce of compassion for anyone caught up in the disciplinary process. He acted like they deserved it. But behind the scenes, he was the one who deserved it. He had a penchant for going down on Colfax and picking up hookers. I’m sure he hated himself. Late in his career he came in looking bruised and battered.  He said he rolled his bike but word got out that he had gotten rolled alright, but not on his bike.
    Another time we had a preload manager who yelled and screamed at us like we were children. One day he came in with a black eye. Turned out he was molesting his childrens’ friends and one of the fathers found out. That was his last day. The way he yelled at us to be perfect only shows how much he must have hated himself.   
   So the next time you get chewed out or threatened, remember that it’s probably not you that has the problem. Hating your own inadequacies and projecting that onto those around you seems to be what defines UPS management. That’s my opinion based on 30 years in the meat grinder.

Don’t be Stupid

Speaking of scabs….it wasn’t long after the strike in ’97 that I was called in to steward for one of our scabs.  It seems he had gotten a little too friendly at one of his stops.
Many UPS drivers feel that they have a special relationship with some of their customers. Especially women customers. This guy had gone into one such stop and was chatting it up with the girl behind the desk. The wind was blowing like hell outside and soon the talk turned to the weather. The driver felt he could say almost anything to this lady and when he said “Did you order up this wind so you won’t have to blow your boyfriend tonight?”, she seemed to take in stride.
He was feeling pretty good about himself until the complaint came in and they called him into the office. That’s when I got involved. You know when you go in the office and the division manager is there that this is going to be a serious meeting. UPS always starts out with “Did anything happen yesterday that you want to tell us about?” I stopped the meeting right there and took the driver outside. I asked him the same question and he had no idea what the problem was. So we went back inside.
I told the manager that we weren’t going on his fishing trip and unless he had something substantial, we were done. That’s when he read the complaint. It seems the secretary had told her boyfriend about how clever the UPS guy was and the boyfriend called in the complaint. When UPS interviewed the lady, she claimed she was offended by the driver’s intimate comments and relelated several more incidents of raunchy statements the driver had made over the past several months.
The driver’s only defense seemed to be that he thought they were friends. That wasn’t enough to save his job. We took the termination to panels but when UPS read all the cute statements the driver had made to this lady, I gotta say it was down right embarrassing. That’s got to be one of the hardest parts of stewarding, trying to save a guy’s job when he’s done something really, really stupid.
You can’t always save people from themselves.

Your Legacy?


      Let Me See, What Can I Think Of Next?  Your Legacy?…. You’ve had a good career. You’ve worked your heiny off for a union company. You raised your two kids on a union wage and benefits. You’ve retired from that company, and get to sit back and watch your children, and their families live in the world out there.
        Will the opportunity for a decent living, and a retirement, be there for your kids? Not with the way most Teamster members take it for granted. Your children are faced with a life of little or no healthcare. They are faced with a life of corporate giants, who will sell out their employee’s health and well being for their bottom line. These same corporate giants do not care if your granddaughter survives at birth. They don’t care that your sons or daughters cannot afford housing. They don’t care if your kids have a decent standard of living.
        It’s you, and your vote that has given your kids that lifestyle. It’s time for you as a union member to hang your head in shame. You did not pass on your legacy to your children. You have denied them the same opportunity that you had. They will work till they die. They will suffer under oppressive management because you either couldn’t be bothered to vote, or you felt you had some other agenda that was more important. Making that mistake is a legacy of suffering for the future.
              You are responsible for that legacy!
     The “you”, that is, the uninformed, inattentive, “only cares about themselves”, you.
     If “you” don’t need to wake up, wake up the guy or gal next to you.                    The future depends on it!


    

 


You Seem Surprised

    You Are the Union! In the 30’s people died to bring the Power of the Unions into existence. Massive physical, and financial abuse by the Companies of the time, motivated people to rise up and demand they be represented by Unions.
     These workers were not interested in getting something for nothing. They simply wanted to be treated fairly in the workplace. They simply wanted to be compensated at a fair rate for the work that they did.
     The corporate abuses of the day were so bad that many workers banded together to create what have become today’s Unions. Unfortunately many of our own Union members have listened to the media lies about our Union’s motivations in the workplace. People have been led to believe that the Unions are simply there to protect the lazy worker. The Unions are there for workers to get “something for nothing”.
     With the gradual weakening of the Unions the Corporations are again rearing their ugly heads. Politically the Corporate “powers that be” continue to attack the existence of the NLRB, (National Labor Relations Board), and also attack worker protections such as Unemployment, Workers Compensation, and OSHA. The continued weakening of these organizations is systematically putting workers at greater risk in their jobs, and causing the wage levels in this country to decrease.
     To their defense, the Corporations, have convinced many of the average Union workers, that they are going to somehow improve the life of that worker when the regulatory agencies are gone. The Corporations didn’t do that before, and they are making it clear that they are not going to do that now.
     Look at your life within Big Brown. Are they treating you better today? Are they more concerned about your safety on the job? Do they act appreciative of your efforts to move, and improve the company?
     Keep in mind that you are all looking at it from within a solid Union company. Can you imagine what it looks like inside the non-union companies?
     The day is here for the working people of this country to step up. A solid workforce cannot be defeated, or ignored. How much abuse will you endure before you will say something. No one is going to do it for you.
     Our Unions have been so successful, that they have created a “lazy, complacent” membership. The facts of today are, our Unions will not survive if we don’t stand up along with them.
     Our next contract negotiation begins in 2013. Prior to that will be International Officer elections, and many Locals will elect their officers also. Many people do not even vote in those elections. They have the complacent attitude that their vote doesn’t mean anything. The fact is they simply are too lazy to educate themselves, and formulate an opinion. It takes a certain amount of effort to formulate an opinion, and many simply find it hard to do.
     Some of the things you can expect to see in the negotiations are listed below. These are the speculations I have come up with based on many different sites, and discussions.

1. Two Tiered wage scales for newly hired drivers. (What that means is that any new driver hired after a certain date will be payed at a lower wage level, and will have a lower maximum wage. What it can do is give the company the incentive to attack, and drive out the older drivers working under the old wage rate.)

2. Forcing drivers to pay all, or a portion of their benefit package. (What this does is effectively reduce the current benefit package, and put a financial hardship on the worker to keep his or her healthcare and pension paid. Many workers will simply opt out for financial reasons, and the costs to the workers still paying will increase. )

3. Wage reductions, and/or raise freezes. (The consequences are obvious. No keeping up with inflation. Increasing company profits at the expense of the worker. Reducing the future ability to stay with the costs of goods and services.)

4. Reduction in Contractual Language to reduce the power of the employee to work within a safe, non-harassing environment. (Basically the company will attempt to take away the workers ability to grieve an unsafe, or an intimidating situation. Basically the company wants a “Like it, or Lump it” contract.)

5. Attacks on seniority. (When all else fails, that is what you have. It is what keeps you on the route you like. It’s what keeps you working ahead of the junior guy. It’s what prevents you from being laid off, when the business drops off. Without seniority the choices are made at the whim of the company.)

6. Pension benefit reductions. (In this day and age, the company controls the pension. Without contractual agreement, the company will be able to do as they please up to and including dissolving the pension. The pension has remained the “light at the end of the tunnel” for so many. As the time passes, it becomes the only hope for life outside of the Company.)

            The obvious conclusion is that you, and your co-workers had better get involved. The Union functions because of you, not in spite of you. Today’ politics make it clear that you are under attack. If you don’t fight back, you will lose what you have.

UPS Workers Demand New Approach to Safety



Joe Korziuk has spent 23 years working for UPS washing trucks, delivering packages and driving tractor-trailers. Though he loves the job, it has a dark side. At age 45, he has had surgery on both knees and his shoulder, developed bulging disks in his back and suffered a concussion when boxes fell on him. His wrists, injured when a car plowed into his truck 15 years ago, still ache in cold weather.‬‪​


“It’s a direct result of the job,” said Korziuk. “They’re always harping on you and pushing you to go faster and faster.”‬‪​


Korziuk is among about 1,200 members of Teamsters Local 705 representing several Chicago-area hubs who last week began a campaign demanding that UPS reduce workloads and change what the union calls a “blame the worker” approach to health and safety.


Nationwide last Thursday Teamster workers wore stickers reading “Unfair Production Standards,” a play on the name UPS. Employees say they are pressured to increase productivity while at the same time they are called on to reduce injuries, a combination that workers claim leads many of them to avoid reporting injuries. ‬‪​


UPS officials say safety is a top priority, noting that their latest reported injury statistics are lower than national averages for the courier and messenger industry – 1.6 injuries per 200,000 work hours for employees at the Addison hub and 3.6 for UPS workers nationwide this January through March. That compares to an industry average of 4.7 injuries per 200,000 hours. Teamsters Local 705 attorney Anthony Prince said UPS does not report many injuries to the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), which compiles these statistics.


‬‪​‬‪​UPS workers are required to memorize and frequently recite a list of more than 20 safety standards, and they can be fired if they fail the recitation multiple times, according to workers’ accounts and a disciplinary report reviewed by the Chicago News Cooperative. Supervisors regularly observe workers and document any safety lapses. After employees report injuries, they are required to meet with UPS health and safety specialists and get extra training. ‬‪​


Workers with multiple injuries are identified as “injury repeaters” according to workers and internal UPS documents. They are more frequently monitored by supervisors and required to complete extra training. ‬‪​‬‪​(Read more about workers’ compensation at UPS)


An internal management document from the Jefferson Street UPS hub in the South Loop advised supervisors to identify workers with more than one injury, enroll them in an “Adopt a Repeater” mentoring program, and examine their “risk behavior.” The document said nothing about analyzing other factors beyond the worker’s control that could contribute to injuries.


Some employees said it’s as though UPS safety programs are based on the premise that workers would not get hurt if they followed proper procedures. They said workers frequently do not report injuries to avoid angering supervisors or being subject to extra training and scrutiny — hence official numbers do not reflect the true incidence of injuries, workers said. ‬‪​


“When a truck breaks down you can get a new one, but I only have one body,” said a female 49-year-old package driver who is fighting for workers’ compensation benefits related to a shoulder injury that required surgery. The worker, who asked that her name not be used for fear of retaliation, said she also broke her hand in 2009 when it was caught in a closing truck door, and she has had surgery on her elbow and twice on her back.


“You get older but they still want you to be light and fast,” she said.‬‪​


UPS officials said additional monitoring and other procedures are important to make sure workers understand safety protocol.‬‪​


“If you have a strain, sprain or rupture to your knee, back or shoulder, no matter how minor it is, we’re going to do a few things with that person,” said Steve Vaughn, manager for the Addison facility’s corporate Comprehensive Health and Safety Process. “We have online assessments to re-educate them on safe work methods. If I strain my shoulder there will be occupational health education on how your shoulder works, on how to eliminate the risk from being injured again.”‬‪​


The Teamsters scheduled the work-safety campaign to coincide with the 40th anniversary of the founding of the OSHA, the federal agency that sets and enforces standards for workplace health and safety. Labor unions also have dubbed it Workers Memorial Day in reference to those sickened, hurt and killed on the job.‬‪​


UPS package delivery drivers usually pick up or deliver about 500 packages a day and make up to 20 stops an hour, workers said. They are supposed to handle packages, often several at a time, of up to 70 pounds without assistance. ‬‪​


Employees who drive tractor-trailers from one UPS facility to another are expected to take 36.57 minutes to perform a list of more than 100 tasks, including inspecting and testing brakes and lights and checking the connections between tractors and the trailers they haul. ‬‪​


“It’s not only doable, but it’s doable with ease,” said Vaughn.‬‪​


But many tractor-trailer drivers disagree. They said they find it nearly impossible to complete the checklist in the allotted time, and they add their bosses often look the other way as the safety checklists are ignored. ‬‪​


“Sometimes the supervisor just slaps your door closed and says go, you don’t even get to eyeball your load” to make sure the weight is distributed safely, said tractor-trailer driver Bernie Jayne, 57. “So you’re driving down the road with a mud flap dangling or a lug nut loose. They turn a blind eye until something happens.”‬‪​


Korziuk said that in March he was ordered to drive a tractor-trailer 20 miles from the suburban Willow Springs sorting facility to the Addison hub, even though the rig had a red tag on it that meant it was not to be driven. One of the untended problems was loose rollers on the rear sliding door.‬‪​


“With the rollers missing the back door was swinging and more rollers could have come flying off on the road,” he said. “It was dangerous.”‬‪​


Korziuk said a clerk took the red tag off as he left Willow Springs, “and then I had to re-tag it when I got to Addison. That’s against the policy, but I just worked as directed. If I didn’t, he would have given me a lot of grief.”‬‪​


Erin Elliott, health and safety manager of the UPS Illinois district, said it is the drivers’ responsibility to refuse to operate a truck with a red tag and to report a supervisor who pressured them to do so.‬‪​


Workers said they are afraid of being disciplined or fired if they disobey supervisors’ orders. Last spring, OSHA ordered UPS to pay more than $100,000 to a Missouri driver who had been fired for refusing orders to drive a vehicle without working lights.‬‪​


Tractor-trailer driver Kevin Sims said he received a written warning that he could be fired for disobeying the orders of a supervisor who was riding in the passenger seat, observing his work in the early morning hours of Feb. 17. As Sims pulled the 28-foot tractor-trailer onto Interstate 290 en route to a transfer facility in Indiana, he said he could tell the surface was becoming icy. The supervisor told him to go the posted speed limit of 55 miles per hour, Sims said, but he refused because he thought it would be unsafe. After arguing with the supervisor he relented and sped up to 54 miles per hour. A month later, the supervisor cited him for “failing to work as instructed” twice and then “finally complying when instructed a third time.”‬‪​


Workers inside UPS hubs said they also deal with hazards, including falling packages and dangerous machinery. In November 2009, OSHA cited the UPS Palatine facility for a number of safety violations including missing guardrails, unsafe ladders and the lack of emergency shut-off mechanisms for conveyor belts. A UPS spokesman said the company is negotiating with OSHA over those citations and has contested some of them.‬‪​


Many drivers say they enjoy relatively good wages and benefits, and do not want to risk being fired for disobeying orders, complaining about company procedures or getting injured.‬‪​


But Dan McMackin, a UPS spokesman who used to work as a package driver, said he finds it “ludicrous” that workers would fear retaliation for reporting injuries.


“Our whole system is set up to report injuries, we do it better than anyone,” he said. “That’s what the goal is, to get people to report injuries. And one of the main reasons is so it avoids injuries down the line.”‬‪​


UPS’s approach is an example of “behavior-based safety programs” that have become increasingly popular among employers since the 1980s. The chemical company DuPont was among the pioneers of the strategy, and has advised other companies on implementing it.‬‪​


“It’s the idea that danger does not exist structurally in the work itself, that danger is a choice generated by individual behavior,” said Robert Bruno, a University of Illinois at Chicago professor who spent time in the Willow Springs UPS hub while researching a 2003 book on the Teamsters. ‬‪​“It’s an attempt to persuade workers that regardless of how your body is physically distorted, how many times you bend over or unpack a truck, that none of that really has any kind of a detrimental effect on the body – it’s all in their mind and attitude. It’s like saying a coal mine is safe if you are just attentive to the risk.”‬‪​


McMackin defended the UPS policy, arguing that the company’s programs are intended to improve employees’ attitudes toward safety and used frequent observation to see if they are following safety rules.


“You make four positive comments for every negative critique,” he said. “You increase good behavior by giving positive feedback – like you do with your kids – instead of beating them over the head you say, ‘Hey you did a great job.’ ”‬‪​


Several workers at Chicago-area facilities said they found the safety programs humiliating and punitive, and that group rewards for low injury rates mean workers are under peer pressure not to report injuries. ‬‪​


“It’s fear and shame, it’s like third grade,” said Prince. “It’s like, ‘We would have had a pizza party but Tommy didn’t put his crayons away.’ ”‬‪​


Some workers at the Addison facility said that while assigned to lighter duty after an injury, they are ordered to write down the safety procedures numerous times. At one point, they said, managers at the Addison facility decorated a wall with miniature foam UPS trucks bearing each driver’s name, and made a show during employee meetings of removing the trucks of drivers who reported injuries. The practice was discontinued after the union complained, according to union trustee Kenny Emanuelson.‬‪​


UPS workers injured on the job are directed to visit clinics run by health care providers with whom the company works, according to UPS officials, though they have the right to visit any doctor they choose. ‬‪​


In the Chicago area workers are referred to clinics run by the Texas company Concentra Inc., which is a defendant in a class-action lawsuit filed last summer by about 7,000 Wal-Mart employees in Colorado. The lawsuit alleges that Wal-Mart managers had input into participated in Concentra doctors’ diagnoses and recommendations for workers injured on the job, in violation of labor law.


Gary Coveny, a retired UPS driver, said that In his 28 years with the company he had surgery on his shoulder, wrist and twice on his ankle.


“I was in trouble because I was always getting injured, I was a bad example for other people,” he said. “I was getting so torn up but I just kept hanging in there, I had so much invested. There are a lot of injuries because they push you so hard. If they gave you the right amount of time, people wouldn’t have to get hurt.”

Retirement




A Mercedes Benz Modell 600 at the Oldtimermarkt Bockhorn.

This van was formerly used by UPS in germany, chassis and engine are Mercedes Benz.
The coachwork was done by Kässbohrer.
Originally these vans have no Mercedes Benz emblems on them, they were added by the current private owner on this one.
Mechanicman

Rumor Has It

   Let Me See, What Can I Think Of Next?  Sources say the company intends to retrofit all package cars with a new starting system. The driver will carry a FOB that enables the starting system to function.  A push button on the dash allows the truck to start, but only when the FOB is in proximity. The FOB also enables the locking and unlocking of the bulkhead door, and the back door without having to use a key. When the driver moves a certain distance away, the truck should be secure. The cost of retrofit is rumored to be in the millions, and every vehicle is supposed to get one.
     The plus is the elimination of the “key on the finger” delivery method. No putting the key in the ignition. No putting the key in the bulkhead door. Sources say the company expects to recover the cost of retrofitting it’s entire fleet the first year in time savings by changing driver methods. They also will benefit from increased security by drivers being unable to leave their keys in the truck.
     The only real negative I can see is during severe cold weather, when the truck will not stay warm unless left running, the drivers will be freezing their asses off, because the truck will shut down when the FOB moves away from the vehicle. Of course I can see where drivers will leave the FOB in the truck while they make the delivery. A new terminating offense?
     I love new Technology. Obviously so does the company.