US Postal Service Going Broke.
-
believer
That's no lie. I've experienced similar nonsense in trade shows I've done at McCormick in Chicago myself. THUGS plain and simple. PLUS they actually expected me to tip them for setting up an 8 foot display table once. I told the moron to get the hell out of my booth.queencitybuckeye;888743 wrote:Trade shows in Chicago are always fun as we can't plug in our laptops, projectors, etc. We have to wait for the union electrician to do it. -
queencitybuckeye
This is the environment the president grew up in, and we're supposed to support a jobs program he comes up with?believer;889374 wrote:That's no lie. I've experienced similar nonsense in trade shows I've done at McCormick in Chicago myself. THUGS plain and simple. PLUS they actually expected me to tip them for setting up an 8 foot display table once. I told the moron to get the hell out of my booth. -
I Wear Pants
+1ts1227;886738 wrote:Jesus, even a thread where everyone agrees for the most part still has to derail into an off topic, partisan retard extravaganza. -
believer
Only as long as it's done with union labor.queencitybuckeye;889414 wrote:This is the environment the president grew up in, and we're supposed to support a jobs program he comes up with? -
Writerbuckeye
Yeah, because telling union horror stories has nothing to do with the ills at the post office. :rolleyes:I Wear Pants;889462 wrote:+1 -
I Wear Pants
Who forces a company to agree to a union contract?Writerbuckeye;889859 wrote:Yeah, because telling union horror stories has nothing to do with the ills at the post office. :rolleyes: -
believer
The gubmint maybe? :rolleyes:I Wear Pants;892843 wrote:Who forces a company to agree to a union contract?
The point? To imply that postal unions had nothing to do with the demise of the USPS is absurd. Of course it did. Are unions entirely to blame? No. But they are, in fact, a huge player in the mix. -
Manhattan Buckeye
lbeliever;892859 wrote:The gubmint maybe? :rolleyes:
The point? To imply that postal unions had nothing to do with the demise of the USPS is absurd. Of course it did. Are unions entirely to blame? No. But they are, in fact, a huge player in the mix.
Public sector unions should be illegal. Period. There is no arms-length negotiation when one political party is in the panties of the unions. At least in the private sector we have shareholders that have a stake in labor matters. In the public sector we have payola with everyone's money (those that pay taxes, that is) handing it out with no recourse. -
WriterbuckeyeWho the hell okays a union contract that says you can't lay off any employees?
The federal government, as they did with the latest Post Office contract just approved by the Obama administration earlier this year.
I don't care if it's been part of their contract since they started the union, in this economy it's almost criminal that taxpayers are being forced to pay for labor that's so obviously unnecessary.
There's going to be one hell of a legal fight take place when the Congress is forced to basically null that contract so it can revamp the system. It's that or let it go bankrupt and throw every postal service employee out of a job and not have services at all. -
I Wear Pants
What I'm saying is that if a company thought that a union contract was bad for them couldn't they just, you know, not sign it?believer;892859 wrote:The gubmint maybe? :rolleyes:
The point? To imply that postal unions had nothing to do with the demise of the USPS is absurd. Of course it did. Are unions entirely to blame? No. But they are, in fact, a huge player in the mix.
And "Who the hell okays a union contract that says you can't lay off any employees?" is my point as well. That's not a problem with the union (though there are plenty with that particular one) but rather a problem with the people approving contracts and shit. -
Glory Days
because union thugs make them sign it. havent you learned anything from the union threads?I Wear Pants;893245 wrote:What I'm saying is that if a company thought that a union contract was bad for them couldn't they just, you know, not sign it?
And "Who the hell okays a union contract that says you can't lay off any employees?" is my point as well. That's not a problem with the union (though there are plenty with that particular one) but rather a problem with the people approving contracts and shit. -
believer
....or binding gubmint arbitration. Basically the same thing.Glory Days;893597 wrote:because union thugs make them sign it. -
I Wear Pants
No one forces anyone to sign a contract.believer;894052 wrote:....or binding gubmint arbitration. Basically the same thing. -
Manhattan Buckeye^^
Indeed, just elected officials that get paid on the one hand and pay out on the other.
Public unions should be illegal. -
believer
Succinct yet profoundly true.Manhattan Buckeye;894127 wrote:Public unions should be illegal. -
believer[URL="http://
"][/URL]http://thehill.com/blogs/on-the-money/1007-other/181819-postal-service-faces-grim-new-realityvball10set;901357 wrote:I%20guess%20anything%27s%20possible...highly%20unlikely,%20but%20not%20impossible
So unionism has nothing to do with the demise of the USPS?
Let me translate the union-speak: "The Postal Service should be urging Congress for bailout money. - not slashing union membership and demolishing our union," union president Cliff Guffey really said.The American Postal Workers Union blasted the move.
“The Postal Service should be urging Congress to address the cause of its problems – not slashing service and demolishing its network," union president Cliff Guffey said. -
Manhattan Buckeye"“The Postal Service should be urging Congress to address the cause of its problems
What should Congress do, tax or ban e-mail? On-line billing? The fact is there is not as much demand for the postal service as there was 15 years ago due to developing technologies, yet their inane contract doesn't allow them to adjust. I know its this guy's "job" to defend his union but he sounds like a moron. When there is less demand for your product, you have to shrink to survive or adjust in other ways. -
WriterbuckeyeCongress needs to override this contract via whatever legal means are available, and force the Postal Service to downsize according to its budget. If the union wants to keep more employees on the payroll, they'd be wise to begin negotiating pay cuts for its top earners, and a pay freeze elsewhere. I know this won't happen, because a postal worker I know just got a 47 cents per hour "cost of living" increase.
-
gutThe "no layoff" rule could have been a concession for other things, like a lower raise (should have been a cut) or a reduction in benefits. I doubt either of those things happened.
-
I Wear Pants
I'd still attribute that to this shitty union rather than unions as a whole. Unions don't have to be as shitty as the ones we usually think of (this one, Teamsters, UAW, etc).believer;901370 wrote:http://thehill.com/blogs/on-the-money/1007-other/181819-postal-service-faces-grim-new-reality
So unionism has nothing to do with the demise of the USPS?
Let me translate the union-speak: "The Postal Service should be urging Congress for bailout money. - not slashing union membership and demolishing our union," union president Cliff Guffey really said.
But yes, there should obviously not be a "you can't cut employees" rule. -
Writerbuckeye
I'd love to know what isn't a shitty union. The ones you named plus SEIU and AFSCME are all pretty bad. Thuggery abounds, especially in the SEIU; AFSCME is only a bit behind.I Wear Pants;901688 wrote:I'd still attribute that to this ****ty union rather than unions as a whole. Unions don't have to be as ****ty as the ones we usually think of (this one, Teamsters, UAW, etc).
But yes, there should obviously not be a "you can't cut employees" rule.
Face it: there isn't really a need for unions these days, and most of them do nothing but screw up things for exceptional workers and make life easier for deadbeats. -
Hamler BulldogsI say do away with all unions.
-
believer
You just defined socialism.Writerbuckeye;902440 wrote:Face it: there isn't really a need for unions these days, and most of them do nothing but screw up things for exceptional workers and make life easier for deadbeats. -
BGFalcons82Unions at their finest hour!! - http://www.businessinsider.com/sioux-city-postal-wokers-to-get-paid-172-million-for-not-working-2011-9
What a relief that these Sioux City postal workers will get paid for 4 more years hoping...praying...agonizing...over finding a new job. :rolleyes:
Where else in the world can one get a paid 4-year vacation? Oh wait...laid off UAW members in Detroit get similar benefits. What a great country!! -
LJ
$10,750 per worker per year. Or $206 per week. Less than they would get on unemployment.BGFalcons82;911672 wrote:Unions at their finest hour!! - http://www.businessinsider.com/sioux-city-postal-wokers-to-get-paid-172-million-for-not-working-2011-9
What a relief that these Sioux City postal workers will get paid for 4 more years hoping...praying...agonizing...over finding a new job. :rolleyes:
Where else in the world can one get a paid 4-year vacation? Oh wait...laid off UAW members in Detroit get similar benefits. What a great country!!