Has the time come for IT to Unionize?

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GoatMonkey

Golden Member
Feb 25, 2005
1,253
0
0
Originally posted by: Apathetic
Originally posted by: piasabird
So how much you get paid and if you add the total hours into this, how many hours you working.

Just take extra time off during the day.

$33.00 is around what? 2 hours pay? 1 hours pay?

This should encourage you to fix you problems so the system works better. If it a faulty program, then make the programmer be woke up to come in and fix it. If it is the network it is probably your fault for not setting it up correctly. If you make the big bucks then it is your problem. So fix it so you dont get called. If your system worked you would not get called at all.

Bingo. If the application is giving errors, call the programmer. The developer is then highly motivated to make sure things work correctly.

Dave

Congratulations, you are no longer needed.
 

Red Dawn

Elite Member
Jun 4, 2001
57,529
3
0
Originally posted by: Journer
unions are BAD! very, very BAD. in fact...they should be illegal. nothing good has ever come from unions. it just makes stupid people feel like they have control when they are just the puppets of the union leader -_-
And you know this how?
 

arch113

Senior member
Mar 3, 2005
227
31
91
I'm in IT and I belong to a union.
I get paid hourly, and clock in/out.
I am not required to carry a pager, or even take calls after hours.

If I do get a call, and solve the problem over the phone, I get minimum of 2 hours. If I have to go on location, I get a minimum of 4 hours (even if its a simple as hitting a reset button).

I will admit, we are a little different than most work areas ;)
 

boomerang

Lifer
Jun 19, 2000
18,883
641
126
You're looking for reinforcement on union representation here?

This place is a bastion for the Young Republicans. Most everyone here is a future corporate fat-cat. (Shhh, don't let them know they'd better hurry, because capitalism's days are numbered in the US)

You should know better. Shame on you!
 

ultimatebob

Lifer
Jul 1, 2001
25,134
2,450
126
Originally posted by: spidey07
no way.

All that would do is standardize wages and keep the truly skilled from making money.

Not to mention that a US IT union would just motivate corporations to outsource their work to India and China even faster than before.

Seriously... Why would companies put up with mandatory wage hikes and labor negotiations when you get get people for 1/5 the price overseas?
 

OutHouse

Lifer
Jun 5, 2000
36,410
616
126
Originally posted by: Journer
unions are BAD! very, very BAD. in fact...they should be illegal. nothing good has ever come from unions. it just makes stupid people feel like they have control when they are just the puppets of the union leader -_-

dumbass, you owe your entire work structure to unions. 40 hour weeks, paid vacation, 401K, health insurance....
 

bctbct

Diamond Member
Dec 22, 2005
4,868
1
0
Originally posted by: Journer
unions are BAD! very, very BAD. in fact...they should be illegal. nothing good has ever come from unions. it just makes stupid people feel like they have control when they are just the puppets of the union leader -_-

You may be right, I will ponder this issue when I retire with a full pension at the age of 53. If I work 15 min I get 2 hrs. of pay. If that makes me a puppet, at least it pays well.

edit

I doubt you could Unionize the IT industry. Unions start with a group of people who band together for the greater good and most people in your industry would have a hard time selling that to the corps.
 

OutHouse

Lifer
Jun 5, 2000
36,410
616
126
Originally posted by: GoatMonkey
There are a few answers here.

1. Become a developer and fix the problems yourself. no thanks im no code monkey.

2. Be more involved in the final testing and acceptance process of the software development cycle so you don't have to maintain crappy software. Im sys admin, i have 300 servers to support along with our 6 in house apps, along with all the corporate software that is used in finance, HR, Marketing, manufacturing, shipping.... along with daily task that needs to be done that does help on after hours calls. Im sorry but i do not have time to do the testers job nor can the test bed totally replicate production because of just sheer volume of transactions.

3. Learn to troubleshoot better and fix the problems before they happen. ummm db locks are pretty hard to troublshoot before the begin.

4. Get a new job. Na i do like it here i just need to bitch every now and again.


 

athithi

Golden Member
Mar 5, 2002
1,717
0
0
Wow..and here I was thinking IT possibly couldn't get any worse. The way some folks in IT work, it already seems like they are unionized. The reason good folks are over-worked and exploited in IT (not just tech support), is precisely because most folks in this field are incompetent and not held accountable for their mistakes and you want to make it official?
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Originally posted by: ultimatebob

A US IT union would just motivate corporations to outsource their work to India and China even faster than before.

It's been shown that jobs are not needed in the U.S. other than service jobs like food and Courts so might as well get it over with and ship any remaining jobs out.
 

JEDI

Lifer
Sep 25, 2001
29,391
2,738
126
Originally posted by: Citrix
i am on my last week of pager duty and it has sucked. I have been paged by our call center every fricken night between 1am and today it was 4:30 am. Sure me and the other admin get 33 bucks a day for pager duty but its not enough in our opinion. When we bring this up that the 33 bucks is crap especially if we have to work a issue for several hours in the middle of the night. Management says that we should feel lucky becuse many companies dont comp you for being on pager duty and expect you to do it as part of the salary.

well fine, me and my co-workers feel that they are exploiting us, our engineers write software that can be buggy on the back end but works great from the customers perspective. so instead of fixing it we in Sys admin have to come up with back-end work arounds to resolve issues before 1, the customer sees it, or two we get paged. Most of the time we can come up with something to make our life a little easier but we shouldn't have to do that!!! :|

So this morning i get paged at 4:30 from a supervisor in our call center asking me to research a fricken question that a customer had. WTFBBQ!!!!!!! I asked moron supervisor if he knows that Colorado is in the mountain time zone so we are two hours behind. I then asked him if this was a system emergency?

Mumble mumble,

I asked him again is the product down?

ummm no i dont think so.

I told him ill look at it when i get into the office at 8AM Mountain time. I know i was kinda rude to him but holy f*cking sh*t dont fricken page me on bullsh*t.

I think its time to unionize!!! unions are the answer to everything and IT is well over due for it.


Edit:

humm check this out, Austraila has a IT union.

Unions FTW! i'm tired of being paid low 6 figures when the client is paying 4x more for my position. i'm not greedy. i just want 1/2! and i bet the union can do this for me! (50% for me, 50% for the company seems reasonable, no?)

 

Zee

Diamond Member
Nov 27, 1999
5,171
3
76
no fuckin way. forget the view from management, or consumer. ever worked with a total freakin tard or bum that you just wish would die in a car accident? how would these people get fired?
 

PokerGuy

Lifer
Jul 2, 2005
13,650
201
101
Basically, unions served a purpose once upon a time, back when you had large industries and a single company was the only employer in town. They owned you, and since mobility (moving somewhere else for a job) was pretty difficult and communication was difficult, the employer could abuse their workers. Modern society simply does not have a need for unions. The only people that need unions are people who are lazy or bad at their job, they need union 'protection' and union help to force employers to overpay for their limited work skills.

Ever worked in a union shop? Most union shops (though not all) are extremely inefficient, nobody has an incentive to work hard since they can't advance fast anyway (seniority and all that bs), they often even get mad at those who do work harder since it makes the others look bad. Idiot workers who screw up day after day can't be fired etc etc etc. Unions are a nightmare.

Don't get me wrong, we have a lot to be thankful to the unions for, they fought to get us a lot of the things we take for granted now, but they are simply dinosaurs, relics of another fading era.

 

Triumph

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
15,031
14
81
There are plenty of IT companies out there. If you don't like your company, go get a job with another one. If no other IT company will pay you what you want, then you're asking too much. If everyone in IT thought they weren't getting paid enough, then the field is oversaturated. Find a new field or accept lower pay.

If there were only 1 company that you could work for then there would be a reason to unionize. But there isn't, every company out there needs IT support.
 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
Originally posted by: Triumph
There are plenty of IT companies out there. If you don't like your company, go get a job with another one. If no other IT company will pay you what you want, then you're asking too much. If everyone in IT thought they weren't getting paid enough, then the field is oversaturated. Find a new field or accept lower pay.

If there were only 1 company that you could work for then there would be a reason to unionize. But there isn't, every company out there needs IT support.

True. But job hopping is always a concern with a potential candidate. You can't just hop and hop without consequences.

This is a career, not a body to fill a spot similar to other unionized jobs. Without a union the cream is able to rise.
 

mugs

Lifer
Apr 29, 2003
48,920
46
91
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Triumph
There are plenty of IT companies out there. If you don't like your company, go get a job with another one. If no other IT company will pay you what you want, then you're asking too much. If everyone in IT thought they weren't getting paid enough, then the field is oversaturated. Find a new field or accept lower pay.

If there were only 1 company that you could work for then there would be a reason to unionize. But there isn't, every company out there needs IT support.

True. But job hopping is always a concern with a potential candidate. You can't just hop and hop without consequences.

This is a career, not a body to fill a spot similar to other unionized jobs. Without a union the cream is able to rise.

Interesting to hear someone in management say that, because some managers I've worked for thing we're all interchangeable (I work in software development, not IT per se, so we're even less interchangeable)
 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Triumph
There are plenty of IT companies out there. If you don't like your company, go get a job with another one. If no other IT company will pay you what you want, then you're asking too much. If everyone in IT thought they weren't getting paid enough, then the field is oversaturated. Find a new field or accept lower pay.

If there were only 1 company that you could work for then there would be a reason to unionize. But there isn't, every company out there needs IT support.

True. But job hopping is always a concern with a potential candidate. You can't just hop and hop without consequences.

This is a career, not a body to fill a spot similar to other unionized jobs. Without a union the cream is able to rise.

Interesting to hear someone in management say that, because some managers I've worked for thing we're all interchangeable (I work in software development, not IT per se, so we're even less interchangeable)

Post another thread about job hopping and I'll give my input. Don't want to derail too much.

People are viewed as a resource, human capital. From a management perspective this is true and in all honesty how it is viewed. Just a resource.

But finding a good resource is the same as finding a good tomato, you have to look at it's background. If it keeps blooming without producing fruit, then it ain't a good mater.
 

mugs

Lifer
Apr 29, 2003
48,920
46
91
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Triumph
There are plenty of IT companies out there. If you don't like your company, go get a job with another one. If no other IT company will pay you what you want, then you're asking too much. If everyone in IT thought they weren't getting paid enough, then the field is oversaturated. Find a new field or accept lower pay.

If there were only 1 company that you could work for then there would be a reason to unionize. But there isn't, every company out there needs IT support.

True. But job hopping is always a concern with a potential candidate. You can't just hop and hop without consequences.

This is a career, not a body to fill a spot similar to other unionized jobs. Without a union the cream is able to rise.

Interesting to hear someone in management say that, because some managers I've worked for thing we're all interchangeable (I work in software development, not IT per se, so we're even less interchangeable)

Post another thread about job hopping and I'll give my input. Don't want to derail too much.

People are viewed as a resource, human capital. From a management perspective this is true and in all honesty how it is viewed. Just a resource.

But finding a good resource is the same as finding a good tomato, you have to look at it's background. If it keeps blooming without producing fruit, then it ain't a good mater.

When you're starting a new job it is expected that there will be some acclimation time, so in that sense we are interchangeable. But I have had managers who think they can assign someone to a project for 2 months while they are not needed on some other project, and actually have that person make worthwhile contributions. That's not realistic.
 

daveshel

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 1999
5,453
2
81
Originally posted by: Citrix
Im sys admin, i have 300 servers to support along with our 6 in house apps, along with all the corporate software that is used in finance, HR, Marketing, manufacturing, shipping.... along with daily task that needs to be done that does help on after hours calls. Im sorry but i do not have time to do the testers job nor can the test bed totally replicate production because of just sheer volume of transactions.

I don't think most of the folks here have a real great understanding of what life is a busy data center is like. We have about 200 servers and support about 4400 users, all with a staff of 11. I have to handle the Exchange servers plus the spam filter appliance and the email archive system. I have the sole responsibility for a single department's 12 servers, which means being on call 27/7/365 for those. Then I have to take an on-call shift for the whole data center for a week every 2 months or so. It's a real scramble to keep up with everything, and so much has to be done in off-hours. It isn't a cushy job by any means.
 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
Originally posted by: mugs
When you're starting a new job it is expected that there will be some acclimation time, so in that sense we are interchangeable. But I have had managers who think they can assign someone to a project for 2 months while they are not needed on some other project, and actually have that person make worthwhile contributions. That's not realistic.

Just trying to give you insight. A resource is a resource.

Take for example my experience, and this has happened MANY times. It was posted on the results/tracking/metrics board....the PM left. And I quote, on the boards as reviewed by the board...

"Resource has left company, re-evaluating if project is feasible due to resource shortage."

Play the game or die by it.
 

Greenman

Lifer
Oct 15, 1999
22,237
6,432
136
Yeah, unions really suck. Far better to be a salaried employee working 70 hours a week and getting paid for 40 than to suffer through the hell that is a union. And no, I'm not in the union, and I never have been. Though I was an employee for a year and a half once.
It was really strange getting paid every week no matter what I did, and I in fact did almost nothing, while receiving regular praise for getting things done. The corporate world is bazaar.
 

Red Dawn

Elite Member
Jun 4, 2001
57,529
3
0
Originally posted by: arch113
I'm in IT and I belong to a union.
I get paid hourly, and clock in/out.
I am not required to carry a pager, or even take calls after hours.

If I do get a call, and solve the problem over the phone, I get minimum of 2 hours. If I have to go on location, I get a minimum of 4 hours (even if its a simple as hitting a reset button).

I will admit, we are a little different than most work areas ;)
Well according to most of the pudgy little nerds here you must be worthless and lazy.
 

PokerGuy

Lifer
Jul 2, 2005
13,650
201
101
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: arch113
I'm in IT and I belong to a union.
I get paid hourly, and clock in/out.
I am not required to carry a pager, or even take calls after hours.

If I do get a call, and solve the problem over the phone, I get minimum of 2 hours. If I have to go on location, I get a minimum of 4 hours (even if its a simple as hitting a reset button).

I will admit, we are a little different than most work areas ;)
Well according to most of the pudgy little nerds here you must be worthless and lazy.
Well, based on arch113's post, you could easily see how whatever company he works for is at a competitive disadvantage with other non-union companies. So someone needs to ask him a quick question after work hours - bam, company has to pay him for 2 hours worth of work. In non-union shop, that would not cost the company anything. It's not that everyone who is in a union is worthless and lazy, it's just that a union environment is the perfect environment for the worthless and lazy, so it tends to attract them and fosters them .... just like any government office. Not all government office employees are worthless and lazy, but the percentage is definitely higher than in the private sector, doubly so if it's a unionized government office! Oh, and while not 'worthless', most union workers are also overpaid for what they do or the skills they have.

Guy working factory line with no skills in competitive environment = $12 per hour. Unionized = $20 per hour. To me, that means the guy is overpaid by $8 an hour if he's part of a union. In a competitive marketplace, you are paid what you are worth, unions mess up that balance.