- Oct 5, 2004
- 11,437
- 1
- 76
I work in a trade union.
On a daily basis, I literally have to double or triple the production of our non-union competitors.
We achieve this through a five year apprenticeship program that involves roughly 1500 hours of classroom traing, 10,00 hours of on the job training, and constant classroom continuing education after graduation.
Another way we do this is to stay on the cutting edge of technology.
If a new tool, process, product or design comes down the road, we employ it to our advantage.
We create, invent and adapt on a daily basis.
The reason we do this is simple...
If an employer can hire a monkey to do the job, they will.
If they can buy a machine to do a job better, we embrace it because we have to, or we sit on the couch while our non-union competitors take the work.
For this, we are paid well and have excellent benefits.
In the past number of years most if not all of our raises have gone to health and welfare to cover the ever rising costs.
I've seen a grand total of zero cost of living increases in the last 10 years, unless you consider $.55 in ten years a cost of living increase.
I've also watched our health and welfare plan roll back, drop benefits, increase copays, and drop specific coverages.
During that time I've also seen my workload and what's expected of me rise twofold.
I've also seen manpower go from adequate to consistantly short.
We always arrive on a job far later than we should and desperately behind. It's an employer's tool to increase immediate production. It works, even if it increases accidents and causes injuries. Fortunately, we heal.
It's a balanced game that's gone on for decades.
It's fortunate for me that graft and corruption is generally limited to our high-ranking union officials and contractors.
Our union recently lost millions in self-funded pension holdings because of misappropriation of the money and "cost overruns" on a hotel project that our officials invested in without member consent (some parts were consentual, most were not).
This has left my retirement in shambles with no recourse available and no way to replace what's lost.
My reward for that fvcking? Go work harder and smarter tomorrow.
How does this tie in with the UAW battle that's been raging here forever?
The strength of trade unions is it's members. The strength of the UAW is it's members.
The major single difference in the two???
My union creates, innovates, employs and develops strategies that make the whole thing go 'round.
Automakers have management who handle that.
Who's better suited to figuring out how to turn the wrench? The guy who turns it, or the guy who read about how it's turned and has looked at pictures.
Who's to blame for a union's plight that has no say in the day to day operations of the plant in which they work?
Who has set the standard for the day to day stupidity that goes on? Who dictates it?
I know most folks here have at some time or other experienced the frustration of working for idiots. Can you imagine the frustration of the UAW workers who have watched their livelihood going down the toilet because things are being done the way they are done?
Who is in charge of innovation at GM? Delphi?
On a daily basis, I literally have to double or triple the production of our non-union competitors.
We achieve this through a five year apprenticeship program that involves roughly 1500 hours of classroom traing, 10,00 hours of on the job training, and constant classroom continuing education after graduation.
Another way we do this is to stay on the cutting edge of technology.
If a new tool, process, product or design comes down the road, we employ it to our advantage.
We create, invent and adapt on a daily basis.
The reason we do this is simple...
If an employer can hire a monkey to do the job, they will.
If they can buy a machine to do a job better, we embrace it because we have to, or we sit on the couch while our non-union competitors take the work.
For this, we are paid well and have excellent benefits.
In the past number of years most if not all of our raises have gone to health and welfare to cover the ever rising costs.
I've seen a grand total of zero cost of living increases in the last 10 years, unless you consider $.55 in ten years a cost of living increase.
I've also watched our health and welfare plan roll back, drop benefits, increase copays, and drop specific coverages.
During that time I've also seen my workload and what's expected of me rise twofold.
I've also seen manpower go from adequate to consistantly short.
We always arrive on a job far later than we should and desperately behind. It's an employer's tool to increase immediate production. It works, even if it increases accidents and causes injuries. Fortunately, we heal.
It's a balanced game that's gone on for decades.
It's fortunate for me that graft and corruption is generally limited to our high-ranking union officials and contractors.
Our union recently lost millions in self-funded pension holdings because of misappropriation of the money and "cost overruns" on a hotel project that our officials invested in without member consent (some parts were consentual, most were not).
This has left my retirement in shambles with no recourse available and no way to replace what's lost.
My reward for that fvcking? Go work harder and smarter tomorrow.
How does this tie in with the UAW battle that's been raging here forever?
The strength of trade unions is it's members. The strength of the UAW is it's members.
The major single difference in the two???
My union creates, innovates, employs and develops strategies that make the whole thing go 'round.
Automakers have management who handle that.
Who's better suited to figuring out how to turn the wrench? The guy who turns it, or the guy who read about how it's turned and has looked at pictures.
Who's to blame for a union's plight that has no say in the day to day operations of the plant in which they work?
Who has set the standard for the day to day stupidity that goes on? Who dictates it?
I know most folks here have at some time or other experienced the frustration of working for idiots. Can you imagine the frustration of the UAW workers who have watched their livelihood going down the toilet because things are being done the way they are done?
Who is in charge of innovation at GM? Delphi?
