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February 22, 2012
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Thanks,

 Frank Wilson, Former Exec. VP, APWU, Local 1; Currently Representing Postal Employees in the EEOC, MSPB, DOL, OWCP, NLRB, etc. Forums!

note worthy..

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Federal workers' comp program remains vulnerable to fraud

http://goo.gl/5JW1h The federal workers’ compensation program remains vulnerable to fraud, mostly due to a limited access to data, according to the Government Accountability Office.

How the USPS is Using Its Flexibility Under the APWU Contract

http://goo.gl/YcHd9 The most recent Postal Service Active Employee Statistical Sumary for pay period 26, FY 2012 has some early indication as to how the Postal Service is using its new flexibility under the APWU contract.  The statistics suggests that the Postal Service is adjusting to the new employment options slowly.  Here are the statistics.

Details coming soon on TSP's planned Roth fund

more... http://goo.gl/5uEUj  The board governing the Thrift Savings Plan expects to unveil regulations governing a new Roth option sometime next week.

Developers Vow to Fix Fans at Old Post Office

The owners of Chicago’s hulking Old Post Office took issue Monday with a federal lawsuit which claims that the building has fallen into such a state of disrepair that the health of Amtrak and Metra passengers has been put in jeopardy. more... http://goo.

OFF BEAT: Investigators get an eyeful in workers comp fraud case

Investigators who installed a surveillance camera near the home of a former postal worker eventually convicted of workers compensation fraud got more than they expected.

Maintenance Craft Jobs Memo

  Finally!  Movement on Maintenance Craft Jobs Memo APWU Web News Article 003-2012, Feb. 1, 2012 Finally, there is some movement in the Maintenance Craft on implementation of key provisions the 2010-2015 Collective Bargaining Agreement, Maintenance Craft Director Steve Raymer has announced.... http://goo.

Is your job on the chopping block?

Good news/bad news on the federal government job security front: The bad news is that 142,255 government jobs disappeared in 2010 and another 183,064 people were fired, or pushed into retirement in 2011. The good news, if you are a federal civil servant, is that the overwhelming number of government workers who were booted out or otherwise let go are state, county or municipal workers.
Read More...

Postal Service Wants Chicago Opinions on Closings

  Getty Images The U.S. Postal Service announced in late July plans to close 3,700 post offices nationally, 14 of which could be located in Chicago. read more: http://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/Meetings-Planned-on-Chicago-Post-Office-Closures-132523993.html Source: http://www.nbcchicago.

The Postal Workers Strike of 1970: ‘Our Backs Were Against the Wall’

  (Photo courtesy of SocialistWorker.org) Beginning in the mid-1960s, public-sector workers influenced by the Black Power and antiwar movements brought that militancy to their workplaces. Even though strikes by public employees were illegal, workers walked out anyway in wildcat work action.

GAO report ignores the obvious

  The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has released a brief report suggesting three options for “reforming” the US Postal Service. You can find some interesting analyses of the report at Save the Post Office and the Courier Express and Postal blog. But the most amazing part of the report to me is the first paragraph.
Read More...

USPS seeks contractor to run gym for executives

  The USPS says it’s doing everything it can to cut expenses, but apparently that doesn’t include cutting back on some cherished executive perks, including the gym at USPS Headquarters.

$641 million: The price of disgruntled employees

  Besides paying tens of billions of dollars each year in compensation, operations and overhead costs, the financially strapped U.S. Postal Service has another huge annual expense: hundreds of millions of dollars in settlements to disgruntled employees and former employees.
Read More...

Proposal to end FERS is dishonest

  One of the most draconian proposals now before Congress' deficit-cutting supercommittee calls for ending the Federal Employees Retirement System pension program. It would immediately be killed for new and current employees with fewer than five years of service.
Read More...


What's New at Chicago Local 0001
WAIVER OF MEDICAL AND OTHER PRIVATE INFORMATION TO USPS

From: Lance XXXX[mailtoXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Sent: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
To: Lance XXXX
Subject: Fw: Fwd: WAIVER OF MEDICAL AND OTHER PRIVATE INFORMATION TO USPS

 

 

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
To:XXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Sent: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Subject: Fwd: WAIVER OF MEDICAL AND OTHER PRIVATE INFORMATION TO USPS

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: MYSTERIOUS UNION MOGAL XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
To: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX


Subject: Fwd: WAIVER OF MEDICAL AND OTHER PRIVATE INFORMATION TO USPS

 

PLEASE SEND THIS TO OTHER BROTHERS AND SISTERS AS I DO OT HAVE ALL EMPLOYEE EMAILS.

 

 

IT HAS COME TO MY ATTENTION THE ROLONDA CHRISTY AND POSSIBLE OTHER SUPERVISORS AT THE ASHLAND, KY FACILITY ALLEGEDLY TRIED TO COMPELL EMPLOYEES IN ASHLAND TO SIGN A PS FORM 2485-C WHICH IS A WAIVER OF YOUR MEDICAL AND OTHER INFORMATION WHERE YOU GIVE THE INSPECTION SERVICE THE RIGHT TO GET INTO THINGS THEY OTHERWISE TO NOT HAVE A RIGHT TO.

 

ALL EMPLOYEES ARE ASKED NOT TO SIGN THE FORM FOR NUMEROUS REASONS.

 

1. ON THE FIRST PAGE IT REFERENCES THE PRIVACY ACT AND SPECIFICALLY TELLS ANY EMPLOYEE THAT FILLING OUT THE FORM IS VOLUNTARY.

 

2. THE USPS WILL USE YOUR COMMENTS TO GET INTO YOUR PAST RECORDS AND ATTEMPT TO FIND SOMETHING YOU DID NOT DISCLOSE IN YOUR HIRING APPLICATION PS FOR 2591 IN AN POSSIBLE EFFORT TO FIRE YOU FOR FRAUD.

 

3. IF YOU ANSWER ONE OF THE MEDICAL QUESTIONS YES THAT YOU HAVE A MEDICAL PROBLEM AND LATER THE USPS SENDS YOU TO THEIR DOCTOR AND THEIR DOCTOR WHO IS PAID BY THEM SAYS YOU HAVE NO SUCH MEDICAL PROBLEM THEY COULD AGAIN TRY AN CHARGE YOU WITH FRAUD BECAUSE YOU ANSWER WAS INCONSISTENT WITH THEIR DOCTOR'S ANSWER.

 

4. UNDER THE PROVISIONS OF TITLE 5 U.S. CODE 8337 NO POSTAL EMPLOYEE CAN BE REQUIRED TO GO TO ANOTHER CRAFT IF THE USPS HAS BEEN NOTIFIED AN EMPLOYEE HAS A DISABILITY AS DEFINED IN THE REHABILITATION ACT. THE ATTACHED FORM M-16 ABOVE IN QUESTION 3 IF ANSWERED YES AND 12 IF ANSWERED PERMANENT QUALIFIES YOU FOR A DISABILITY AS PER THE REHABILITATION ACT. NOTE THAT THE USPS 2485-C FORM ON PAGE 2 IN PART B ASKS SIMILAR QUESTIONS AS ITEM NUMBER 3 ON THE ATTACHED M-16.

 

AN EMPLOYEE COULD HOLD THE USPS ACCOUNTABLE UNDER THE LAW AFTER THE FORM M-16 HAS BEEN COMPLETED APPROPRIATELY AND YOU HAVE PROOF THE USPS RECEIVED IT.

 

5. THE FORM IS ASKING QUESTIONS THAT MOST CLERKS WOULD NOT BE QUALIFIED TO ANSWER BECAUSE THEY ARE NOT DOCTORS AND HAVE NEVER WORKED AS A CARRIER SO HOW WOULD THEY KNOW HOW TO ANSWER A QUESTION ABOUT A JOB THEY NEVER WORKED.

 

ANYWAY, DON'T SIGN THE FORM AND SAVE YOURSELF A LOT OF HEADACHE.

 

IF YOU ANSWER ONE OF THEIR QUESTIONS NO AND THEN TRY AND FILE DISABILITY THEY WILL TRY AND GET YOU FOR FRAUD AND USE YOUR ANSWER IN COURT TO DEMINISH SUCH A DISABILITY CLAIM LATER.

Federal workers' comp program remains vulnerable to fraud

http://goo.gl/5JW1h The federal workers’ compensation program remains vulnerable to fraud, mostly due to a limited access to data, according to the Government Accountability Office....

How the USPS is Using Its Flexibility Under the APWU Contract

http://goo.gl/YcHd9 The most recent Postal Service Active Employee Statistical Sumary for pay period 26, FY 2012 has some early indication as to how the Postal Service is using its new flexibility under the APWU contract.  The statistics suggests that the Postal Service is adjusting to the new employment options slowly.  Here are the statistics...

Details coming soon on TSP's planned Roth fund

more... http://goo.gl/5uEUj

 

Details coming soon on TSP's planned Roth fund

The board governing the Thrift Savings Plan expects to unveil regulations governing a new Roth option sometime next week.

Developers Vow to Fix Fans at Old Post Office

The owners of Chicago’s hulking Old Post Office took issue Monday with a federal lawsuit which claims that the building has fallen into such a state of disrepair that the health of Amtrak and Metra passengers has been put in jeopardy.

more...

http://goo.gl/phF4Y

What’s behind UPS’s “extraordinary growth”? The US Postal Service

According to an article in Logistics Management, the “star” of United Parcel Service’s impressive fourth quarter performance was its Sure Post product, which uses the US Postal Service to actually deliver B2C parcels: more

OFF BEAT: Investigators get an eyeful in workers comp fraud case

Investigators who installed a surveillance camera near the home of a former postal worker eventually convicted of workers compensation fraud got more than they expected. more

Maintenance Craft Jobs Memo

 

Finally! 
Movement on Maintenance Craft Jobs Memo

APWU Web News Article 003-2012, Feb. 1, 2012

Finally, there is some movement in the Maintenance Craft on implementation of key provisions the 2010-2015 Collective Bargaining Agreement, Maintenance Craft Director Steve Raymer has announced....

http://goo.gl/YBT1p

Is your job on the chopping block?
Good news/bad news on the federal government job security front: The bad news is that 142,255 government jobs disappeared in 2010 and another 183,064 people were fired, or pushed into retirement in 2011. The good news, if you are a federal civil servant, is that the overwhelming number of government workers who were booted out or otherwise let go are state, county or municipal workers. Read More...
Postal Service Wants Chicago Opinions on Closings

 

Postal Service Wants Chicago Opinions on Closings

Getty Images

The U.S. Postal Service announced in late July plans to close 3,700 post offices nationally, 14 of which could be located in Chicago.


read more: http://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/Meetings-Planned-on-Chicago-Post-Office-Closures-132523993.html

Source: http://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/Meetings-Planned-on-Chicago-Post-Office-Closures-132523993.html#ixzz1c0x4zlni

The Postal Workers Strike of 1970: ‘Our Backs Were Against the Wall’

 

(Photo courtesy of SocialistWorker.org)
(Photo courtesy of SocialistWorker.org)

Beginning in the mid-1960s, public-sector workers influenced by the Black Power and antiwar movements brought that militancy to their workplaces. Even though strikes by public employees were illegal, workers walked out anyway in wildcat work action. One of the outstanding wildcats of the time was a strike by postal workers in 1970.

Tara Lee was a leader of the 1970 wildcat strike in New York. In July, Lee spoke on a panel discussion “Wildcat! The 1970 postal workers’ strike” along with Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor at the Socialism 2011 conference in Chicago. Here, we reprint Tara’s Lee’s speech.

——————————————————-

I’ve been introduced as a postal worker, a radical and a leader of a wildcat strike–and I did that before my 22nd birthday. God, what the hell have I done in the 41 years since? I’m going to give you a little bit of history of what happened with the postal workers that led up to the strike.

The postal workers first started getting hit with wage decreases back in the Depression of the 1930s because one of the things we had back then was the beginning of Keynesian economics and “pump priming” and everything–except when it came to government workers, who took a 25 percent pay cut under Franklin Roosevelt by executive order. At that time, we had no union and things were done by executive order or acts of Congress pertaining to postal workers and every other government workers.

So right away, we are 25 percent behind the rest of the population. And throughout the remaining 30-plus years until we had our strike, we continued to fall behind because the only way back then that a postal worker got a raise was through an act of Congress.

We had no union, and we had no collective bargaining agreements, none of that. A postal worker could be fired if the postmaster didn’t like the way they looked. That was it. There was nothing we could do. There was no contract, no negotiating, no bargaining rights, nothing.

So 1970 comes, and we’re falling way behind in wages. Eisenhower had vetoed two pay raises for us during his presidency, Kennedy had passed one. I got a big raise of 9 cents the first year I worked there, and I went from $2.95 an hour to $3.04 an hour. It took 21 years to reach top pay, which was $8,800 a year. Consider that in metropolitan areas–people living on $8,800 a year trying to raise a family of four or five. You just couldn’t do that.

There was no way that Congress was going to pass a pay raise for us at that time. We had the Vietnam War and the failed War on Poverty, and we had massive budget deficits. It was almost like the situation today–not as bad economically, but where we were trying to have an austerity budget, , cut federal spending, do away with the “waste” from the War on Poverty, get rid of all those programs that were helping people because we were wasting too much money in Vietnam.

I guess over the last 40 years, this country hasn’t learned anything either. Well, not the country, but the people in charge of it. We’ve learned something–that’s why we’re here.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

I BECAME a strike leader, mostly through default, because nobody else had the courage to stand up to do so. New Rochelle, where I was working at the time, was a small suburban city just north of New York City. Our strike started on March 17, 1970, St Patrick’s Day.

New York City Branch 36–God bless them–passed a resolution to go on strike. That’s right. It was started by a postal worker by the name of Vince Sombrotto. In 1978, Vince Sombrotto was elected president of the National Association of Letter Carriers, and he won by a huge margin. He won on the issue that in 1978, we were offered a contract with a cap on it–and when I say “cap,” I mean a cap on wages, a cap on our cost-of-living increases.

Our national president at that time, Joe Vacca, from Cleveland, accepted it, and the rank and file voted it down and told him to go back and renegotiate. He did. It was too late for him. We voted him out of office. Vince Sombrotto became president, and he was president of our union for close to 30 years after that.

In 1970, though, he was just a regular city carrier in New York City. He made the motion to go on strike, and it carried. Branch 36 went out on strike March 17, 1970. A succession of little branches around New York City and on Long Island followed. Also in New Jersey, Newark, Teaneck and a couple of the other big cities went out. Bridgeport went out, New Haven went out, Hartford when out, and it spread up through New England–Boston, Providence, all the major cities in New England went out and some subsidiary localities around them.

Philadelphia and Pittsburgh went out, and it mushroomed throughout there–Allentown, Pennsylvania, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, and we moved westward to Minneapolis and to the West Coast. Los Angeles went out, San Francisco went out, Portland went out, Sacramento went out, Seattle went out.

You notice, I’m omitting the South. Not one branch from the South went on strike.

When we went out, it was like mass confusion. They were going to break the strike, so they called in the National Guard. Well, you can call in the National Guard and the reserves to try to deliver the mail, but if you don’t have the training to know how to do it, you’re not going to deliver the mail. There’s no way.

And here’s the best part about it. We had a secret weapon: a lot of postal workers were veterans. A lot of them were in the National Guard and the reserves. And they had been in since the Second World War or the Korean War. So they were high up. So they would go through the people who came in, and they would tell them how to screw up the mail. So we made sure no mail got delivered.

I have to say some words about the people who went out. I was 21-and-a-half years old when I got hired. I could have been a bartender, driven a cab, done whatever. I was going to school at the time. I figured I’d get out of school, get a degree and quit the Post Office. Well, I never did. I just stayed there because economic conditions up North and our raises that we got from the strike made it worth my while to stay there.

But these guys went out on strike then, and it was illegal. We all could have been prosecuted, and we all could have been arrested–every single one of us. We all could have lost our jobs. What they risked was their pensions, their homes, everything they had. And they did so, because we were pushed against the wall.

We didn’t have a choice. We had people in the big cities who were collecting welfare because they had a family of four or five, and they were living below the poverty level. We just had our backs up against the wall.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

OUR NATIONAL president ordered us back to work. We didn’t go back. That’s what made it a wildcat, because it was not a legal strike. It never was a legal strike, period.

We did try to negotiate. I know nobody here really likes Richard Nixon too much of course, but I have to say, unlike Ronald Reagan, who 11 years later fired the air traffic controllers, Nixon realized that things were wrong. He had tried to get through Congress a Postal Reorganization Act, which would have given us a certain measure of collective bargaining, but it was stalled.

The reason it was stalled was simply because of political patronage. In the old system, if a Democrat was elected president, in every city in the country, in every town in the country, we had a new postmaster. He usually was the head of the local Democratic Party or someone that they recommended.

If the Republicans won, then we had Republican postmasters. They didn’t know a damn thing about the Post Office. The assistant postmaster was the person who ran everything. It was the career guy who worked himself up and knew how the mail system worked.

Our postmaster in New Rochelle was the town clerk before he was made postmaster. You want to talk about somebody from the Sopranos? He walked around with a cigar in his mouth like this, and he’d give his big pep talk: “I’ve been the number one postmaster around here in this region for five years in a row. I fired 150 people to get there, and if I have to fire another 150 people this year to be the number one postmaster again, I’m going to fire 150 people. Now get back to work.”

When the Postal Reorganization Act went into effect [as a result of the strike], we automatically got a pay raise and step increases going back retroactively for a year. So we got a nice big lump sum—one payment. The Postal Reorganization Act did away with the patronage system. Then we had career people coming in and taking over as postmasters, people who worked their way up and knew what they were doing.

Our mail service improved. Our wages drastically improved. I’ll give you a little example. Back in 1968 when I started, my pay was $118 a week based on a 40-hour week, which came out to a little over $6,100 a year. When I retired in 2003, I was making a little over $42,000 a year, which is pretty good. I could live comfortably on that salary. I could raise a family. We could take vacations. We could have a nice house. It’s what American working people should have who do a good job.

Our work is not easy. Our work is pretty hard. I walked 10 to 12 miles a day for more than 30 years. I’ve got arthritis and I’ve got curvature of the spine from that. It happens. People have carpal tunnel from continuously putting mail into a mailbox. It happens.

We go around and we deliver mail in all kinds of weather. I’ve delivered mail when it was 10 degrees below zero in New York, and I’ve delivered it when it’s been over 100 degrees in Florida, after I transferred there. I’ve delivered it in hurricanes and in blizzards. So it is a physical job; it’s not an easy job. But it’s a good job because I had a good rapport with the customers on my route. I was friendly with them.

The most important thing we had to do was get ourselves in a position where we had the same rights as every other union. At that time, we were an association. We weren’t allowed to call ourselves a union. And we’re still the National Association of Letter Carriers, because we honored our past by not taking the name “union” when we could.

The Postal Reorganization Act compressed the wage scale from 21 years to eight years, which I think is still too long for someone to reach top pay. And in contract negotiations since then, it’s gone back up to 13 years. Like all other things these days, it’s going the wrong way for labor.

We don’t have the right to strike. The Postal Reorganization Act set up a mediation and arbitration system if you had a contract impasse, and this was at the local level also, with local negotiations concerning rotating days off or fixed days off for carrier schedules, because we do have six-day delivery still. It set up vacation schedules and how many people can take off in what they call “prime time” during the summer months.

So we have these negotiations at the local level as well as the national level on safety and health, on wages, length of time to get top pay, how many sick days we get, vacation time, all those things.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

IT GAVE us a collective bargaining agreement. And that was the most important thing that we got out of the postal workers’ strike. Yes, the wages were great at the time, but we got a collective bargaining agreement and a contract, and people could no longer be fired at the whim of management.

Management felt that they were dictatorial and they could do anything they wanted to, and they used to break the contract left and right by giving us a legal order. And as shop steward, I used to walk around with a copy of the contract in my pocket, pull it out and turn to whatever page I needed and say, “You can’t do that. It’s right here–see it’s against the contract.” They didn’t like me too much.

In that respect, we won. We won big. We got what we wanted. We got a collective bargaining agreement. We got wage increases. We got a condensed level to top pay. We did well. And the reason we did well was because we had the support of the people.

The people know their mailman. They like their mailman most of the time. They see their mailman every single day. You know, they’re mailing a letter: “Can you take this for me, mailman?” I was on the same route for 10 years. Everybody knew me. In most cases, that’s the way it is.

We had the respect of the people, and we had the people on our side. And that’s what we need to do today to win again. We need to show the faces of the American labor movement out there to the public so that people will know that the American labor movement is working for them, that we’re not against them. When we do services for the people, we need to let them know that we’re union.

That’s extremely important. With the right wing’s attack against labor, I think in a lot of cases, people don’t know that anymore. So they have to get re-educated to a certain degree that the worker, the laborer, the union man is working for me. He’s building the products that I’m going to use. And that’s very important.

It’s also very important that we have a working class that makes a good wage, that’s treated with respect. Because look at what’s happened. Our purchasing power has decreased, and we can’t buy the goods and services that are being made. So nobody is producing more goods and services; we’re still left with the ones they made three years ago.

And when that happens, because people’s jobs are outsourced, we can’t buy the products that we need to buy to keep manufacturing going. So manufacturers lose money and they go out of business, and our people lose jobs. It’s a vicious cycle, and it needs to stop.

I was very proud to have a part in our strike. The fear of being arrested back then scared a lot of people. I remember our local president at the time. He stood up at our meeting and he was like this: “This is a court injunction. They’re going to lock me up if we go on strike.” And we looked at him and said, “Well, the only thing you’re good for is organizing the picnic every year anyway, so.”

So I made a motion that we go out on strike and honor the strike that Branch 36 had started and set up picketing and the whole nine yards. The motion was seconded, we had a little bit of a debate, it passed, and the next day we had a picket line in front of the post office.

It was great. I totally loved that. Wildcat strikes can work. That proves it. We just have to get back to our roots and have the American labor movement get fired up again and do what they need to do–take action and defend themselves, because that’s what we did.

Our backs were to the wall. We had to do it. And when you put people with their backs up against the wall, they will take desperate actions–because you’ve made them desperate people. I can’t say enough about the people who went on strike, the older people back then, because they were very courageous.

http://www.indypendent.org/2011/10/22/postal-worker-strike-1970/

Transcription by Karen Domínguez Burke

 

This article first appeared on SocialistWorker.org

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For ten years, The Indypendent has printed truth in the face of power. With political and economic systems faltering, there is an opportunity for real change from the bottom up. But this means having a vibrant independent media. Consider supporting The Indypendent as a monthly sustainer, donating as little as $5 a month. Please visit indypendent.org/donate.

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13 Responses to “The Postal Workers Strike of 1970: ‘Our Backs Were Against the Wall’”

Shelly D Says: 

I’ve been saying that for months, but I don’t think this generation has the cohesion or the backbone to stand up and stick together. They are spineless!!!

General Scott Says: 

Thank you so much for standing when you did. I owe the labor movement so much for the quality of life me and my family have enjoyed for the last twenty eight years. Lord help this leaderless generation. Step up !

Uh Oh Says: 

The strike worked back then because scheme knowledge was required to sort the mail for delivery. Today machines sort the mail for delivery to individual addresses. If workers went on strike today they would be fired along the lines of the air traffic controllers. They would not be replaced for the most part and those who were would be entry level folks. The union was desperately needed back in those early days. But once the union found clout with arbitration the whole situation became reversed. Stewards today spend their time in the office filing reams of grievances as their daily work. The dizzying array of arenas of complaints are astounding such as ADA, FMLA, OWCP, USERRA, EEOC, MSPB..etc. No one wants to do the work they were hired to perform, instead they want a sit down job in an office, but cannot understand why it is not provided. The end of USPS is draws nigh yet the struggle continues for the status quo.

Jor Assalone Says: 

i walked the picket line in 1970 and many other informational picketing in years later….
go to u-tube for my movie of the strike in Hauppauge….Smithtown, Long Island…

the carriers today could care less about what we did….I don’t think even some of haven’t even taken the test…
they hire anybody and then JRAP CRAP GETS RID OF THEM…
Management has too much power today…..they violate the contract constantly….in Sombrottos early days he would have filed an injunction with each violation…not like today…OH FILE A GRIEVANCE…usps loves that cause they don’t have to account for all the money paid out in penalties…

b.a. Says: 

god bless you tara lee i have been in the service for 27 years and will soon retire although i was not in during the BIG STRIKE OF 1970 i wish i could have been the woosies they have now that call then selves union people need to go to school to learn how to be real uinion . all they think about is how much they can put in there pockets.and how many grievances they can file and then lose most of them.

DOUBLETAL;K Says: 

GREAT PIECE WITH MANY UNTRUE FACTS. THIS GUY WAS NO HERO–JUST A FOLLOWER. A GREAT LEADER NAMED GUS JOHNSON LED THE STRIKE WITH THE OK FROM UNION HEADQUARTERS. YES, THERE WAS A UNION AND IT HAD BEEN IN BUSINESS SINCE 1889. WHO DOES HE THINK NEGOTIATED THE GREAT SETTLEMENT? AND WHO NEGOTIATED WITH PRESIDENT NIXION TO EXONERATE EVERY LETTER CARRIER. AND WHO DOES HE THINK NEGOTIATED THE FIRST CONTRACT THAT HAS NOT BEEN ALTERED SINCE? TRUE HE JOINED THE STRIKE TO HIS CREDIT BUT MUCH MORE WAS INVOLVED BEHIND THE SCENES INCLUDING SEVERAL MEETINGS AT THE WHITE HOUSE TO MAKE CERTAIN THE REORGANIZATION BILL PROTECTED LETTER CARRIERS., INCLUDING A NO LAYOFF CLAUSE WHICH IS PROTECTING THEM TODAY. AS FAR AS CARRIERS FROM THE SOUTH WERE CONCERNED, THEY WERE ALL PREPAREDD TO WALK OUT AT THE ORDERS OF HEADUARTERS. SUCH AN ORDER WOULD HAVE DESTROYED THER UNION AND IMPRISONED THE LEADERS. THE WALKOUT WAS THE GREATEST ACHIEVEMENT IN NALC HISTORY AND IT PRODUCED THE GREATEST RESULTS. BUT DON’T LET IT HAPPEN AGAIN.

Rimshot Says: 

Good job. Good story. And thanks for what you did.

Marcus Carter Says: 

It is important to understand how we as Postal Workers receive our pay and benefits. Prior to 1970 the Postal Service was low pay and a difficult place to work. Most of us would not work for this Postal Service without a Union Contract. I salute those that fought and continue to fight for our pay and benefits. Thank you for your service.

commonlaw Says: 

I remeber it well….almost everyone had a part time job to survive, I was a 24 yr. old Shop Steward and AFL-CIO delegate. We were in contact against our Union’s will with folks from NY a Giordano I believe……We formed a local network in Cleveland of willing Branch Stewards and on Thursday morning polled the employees, and informed management we were going on strike. Our local was dead set against it but we were on the Streets until the following Tuesday when Nixon and Rademacher ??? reached agreement. I remember we were not immeadiately given immunity from prosecution. I still have the “To Strike” roster passed around the station that morning with the original singnature….about 95% agreed to strike. The memorable thing management allowed us to us the phones and rest rooms…….but the network had in advance set up “call centers” at local bars……there was on social media or cell phones back then.

Joe Assalone Says: 

our customers brought us coffee and doughnuts….bosses left the doors open to use the rest rooms and had coffee pot going all day…SOME OF THEM THANKED US FOR GETTING THEM MORE PAY TOO…

warrren Says: 

Amazing!! how the past gave us the present but those that blazed that road for us to benefit in the present time were GIANTS compared to the ones we have now (midgets).

I had to read this article 3 times to understand that generation but my memory still remembers back in 1970 looking at a pay stub from my fathers work.

$118.00 was what he got paid for a week and with that he maintained a family of 4 boys and our mother.

These men where the ones that came back from Normandy during WWII, they went as boys and came hard as steel, real men.

How sad that the times have changed, what has not changed is all the benefits we enjoy from their sacrifices today

Frank Says: 

When our union local joined the strike, I was a young man with a wife and infant child. To go on strike took courage and will because we were all risking everything by doing so. I remember the resolve…but I also recall the fear, which stayed with us until the immunity agreement was announced. I only wish the collective will existed today among working people of all stripes to actively support each other…not necessarily by striking…but by overwhelming displays of unity. If the apathy continues, I fear that all will be lost for working people and the middle class that built this country will be reduced to the same plight as the pre 1970 postal workers…collective begging.

sbaird Says: 

All is not lost! I have been union since the day I was hired 6 years ago. I helped organize our local joint rally to save our service and am trying to get the membership more involved. The problem is not those of us hired on recently. We understand the uncertainty of the “real” world. We have children we want to educate and raise. The problem is with those who have served for twenty years or so. Their children are grown. They have forgotten what its like to be looking for a good job and not being able to find one. They just want to maintain the status quo until they retire. There is no convincing them that even their retirement could be in jeopardy. I have tried but haven’t found the right words to motivate I guess. Any suggestions?

GAO report ignores the obvious
  The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has released a brief report suggesting three options for “reforming” the US Postal Service. You can find some interesting analyses of the report at Save the Post Office and the Courier Express and Postal blog. But the most amazing part of the report to me is the first paragraph. Read More...
USPS seeks contractor to run gym for executives

 

The USPS says it’s doing everything it can to cut expenses, but apparently that doesn’t include cutting back on some cherished executive perks, including the gym at USPS Headquarters. In a statement of work for prospective contractors posted at the Federal Business Opportunities web site, the USPS prefers the term “health promotion program”, but the services required sound like what you’d find at a pricey gym: aerobic exercise, weight training, Yoga, T’ai Chi, and, of course, “lifestyle counseling”.

The statement doesn’t mention how much the gym costs, but specifies that it must be open and fully staffed from 6AM to 8PM every weekday, and that managers of the facility have at least “a bachelor’s degree in a health/fitness-related field” and “certification from recognized industry organization”.

Here’s the statement of work:

Statement of Work 2 10.20.11

http://www.postalnewsblog.com/2011/10/24/usps-seeks-contractor-to-run-gym-for-executives/

$641 million: The price of disgruntled employees
  Besides paying tens of billions of dollars each year in compensation, operations and overhead costs, the financially strapped U.S. Postal Service has another huge annual expense: hundreds of millions of dollars in settlements to disgruntled employees and former employees. Read More...
Proposal to end FERS is dishonest
  One of the most draconian proposals now before Congress' deficit-cutting supercommittee calls for ending the Federal Employees Retirement System pension program. It would immediately be killed for new and current employees with fewer than five years of service. Read More...
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The Association for Union Democracy (AUD) is the only national, pro-labor, non-profit organization dedicated solely to advancing the principles and practices of democratic trade unionism in the North American labor movement. It is the premise of AUD that internal democracy makes unions stronger and better able to fight for the rights and interests of working people. We provide organizing, educational, and legal assistance to those fighting for greater membership control of their unions
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