Go to work for a fedex ground contractor..... and get back to me on that.....There are no protections or benefits of being a Teamster.
Go to work for a fedex ground contractor..... and get back to me on that.....There are no protections or benefits of being a Teamster.
It's mesters such as yourself that perpetuate that fallacy. I am a 40+ year retired Teamster whose comfortable AND financially secure life is due entirely to the Teamsters. Both my pension and my Social Security are significantly larger than the average nonunion worker. The Teamsters are why.There are no protections or benefits of being a Teamster.
Wrong but okIt's mesters such as yourself that perpetuate that fallacy. I am a 40+ year retired Teamster whose comfortable AND financially secure life is due entirely to the Teamsters. Both my pension and my Social Security are significantly larger than the average nonunion worker. The Teamsters are why.
You are entitled to your opinion... I get it..... but how about trying my suggestion with a fedex ground contractor???Wrong but ok
Organized labor has been responsible for getting on the job safety laws passed that has saved countless lives & injuries. The pay & benefits paid by non union freight lines are the result of organizing efforts of the Teamsters. Do you really think the workers at the non's would be compensated as well if not for the Teamsters?There are no protections or benefits of being a Teamster.
And a hat rack in Big Dave's tractor.Back in the 70's Viking ( Fed x today )paid $2 bucks above NMF wages. They also had radios and AC in their trucks.
Just to keep their people happy and the Teamsters at bay.
Right with you there- and the main thing that everyone should understand is that “ Right to Work “ laws have nothing to do with protecting your right to work- they are only there to reduce the amount of protection you have if you belong to a union. If you are in a union job, but you aren’t required to pay dues, your union officials won’t have the resources to represent you the way that you need them to. That’s why “ Right to Work “ is usually called “ Right to Work for Less “.Organized labor has been responsible for getting on the job safety laws passed that has saved countless lives & injuries. The pay & benefits paid by non union freight lines are the result of organizing efforts of the Teamsters. Do you really think the workers at the non's would be compensated as well if not for the Teamsters?
I had a friend who was a steward in a manufacturing plant in LR which is in a "Right to work for less" state. She said several workers there would not join nor pay dues. She did get two women back to work who were not members of the union, I think it was associated with the Machinist Union. She asked them to join but they said they knew their rights & there was nothing that reqired them to join & she still had to represent them. She said you are correct but there is nothing in that law that requires me to get your job back next time.Right with you there- and the main thing that everyone should understand is that “ Right to Work “ laws have nothing to do with protecting your right to work- they are only there to reduce the amount of protection you have if you belong to a union. If you are in a union job, but you aren’t required to pay dues, your union officials won’t have the resources to represent you the way that you need them to. That’s why “ Right to Work “ is usually called “ Right to Work for Less “.
I wish some of these doubters could have seen the working conditions when I started in 55.Organized labor has been responsible for getting on the job safety laws passed that has saved countless lives & injuries. The pay & benefits paid by non union freight lines are the result of organizing efforts of the Teamsters. Do you really think the workers at the non's would be compensated as well if not for the Teamsters?
and it's still that way todayI wish some of these doubters could have seen the working conditions when I started in 55.
The Teamsters were already improving them then.
I've seen a dock worker put in a 12 hr day, go home, and be called back to work a late-arrived trailer.
If he only worked 1 hr that's all he was paid.
Dispatchers gave their friends or in-laws the better-paying trips, seniority was just a word.
Don’t work for a union carrier then.Except Right to Work laws, right?
Except the right to keep what you earn and not have your earnings involuntarily confiscated.
I cannot speak to the current situation or culture. But, to my knowledge, it has largely remained that same way. As you suggest. There was a dispatcher that was also a licensed insurance agent. I know this will come as a shock, but the customers of his outside business seemed to get better runs.and it's still that way today
You should have been gone a week ago. Moderator on the ABF board gives you another chance & you still continue to troll all the union boards with your nonsense….Wrong but ok