Posted on 04/28/2012 8:14:21 PM PDT by digger48
Employees upset with higher-ups at company, union
Kokomo An Alternative Work Schedule begins May 7 at Chrysler Groups three transmission plants in Kokomo, and many employees see only disadvantages to shifts the company said would benefit the workers.
United Auto Workers members affected by the change learned details about the new schedule Thursday during union meetings.
AWS is also known as 3-2-120 because three employee groups work two shifts every day for a total of 120 production hours every week.
Instead of working a traditional eight hours per day for five days per week, Chryslers transmission plants employees will work 10 hours per day for four days per week.
(snip)
Chrysler Corporation and UAW International are the ones making us do this. Its going to disrupt a lot of families.
(snip)
It was 106 degrees on my job last year ... Eight hours a day in that was horrid. Now Ive got 10-and-a-half, Landis said. Theyre sitting in an air-conditioned office, telling us how bad they feel for us.
People dont understand the wear and tear on your body in a place like that, she later said. Yes, we are paid good wages, but you know what? Its nice to be treated like a human being.
(snip)
Landis said she was concerned about the AWS effects on families, especially parents who have a little more than a week to find someone trustworthy and willing to watch their children for more than 10 hours a day.
A ton of single parents are from New Castle, St. Louis, she said. A lot of these people dont have family here. ... These parents are not going to be able to put their kids on the bus, nor are they going to get them off the bus.
(Excerpt) Read more at kokomotribune.com ...
But one little change in their $30/hr world, and you'd think they were being asked to give up a kidney.
I raised my 2 kids on a lot less money than UAW workers make and working longer hours 6 days a week. My kids still managed to get to and from school somehow.
I used to love to work four ten-hour days. Every weekend was three days long. AND there was the opportunity to work the fifth day and make some overtime.
My mother worked three twelve-hour days and got paid for 40 hours in Californica back in the 80s and she liked it too.
Sniveling little spoiled SOBs.
Did you ever work on a 106 degree factory floor with constant 90 db noise levels? It really saps the life out of you. If they paid factory workers the pittance you claim to have raised two kids on, no one would work in them unless you used slave labor.
Taking a pay cut to get out of a factory was the happiest day of my life. There is no job more dehumanizing than working an assembly line. I didn’t even work the line (I was the shift electrician), but I always felt bad for those guys who spent the whole shift out there in front of a machine.
“Did you ever work on a 106 degree factory floor with constant 90 db noise levels? It really saps the life out of you.”
*
I worked assembly before as temp job right after college as extra money for my university tuition. I 100% agree with you. You go brain-dead like a liberal at an Obama rally after 2 hours. The only time I told myself I have to get an education or else was at that point and when I worked at McDonald’s in high school and the chick I had a crush at school saw me mopping the floors.
I’ve made a lot of money off of the union workers over the years. If you pay otherwise unintelligent people a bunch of money, they spend it.
That’s the Democrat version of trickle -down economics. Take it from the rich, run it through Washington, and give whats left to the unions to spend.
a few years ago, they simply cut out the overtime that most had come to rely on. Within just 2 weeks of the smaller paychecks, there were 500 bankruptcy filings in town.
Some of them are good, down-to-earth folks. but some of them are absolutely the most self-entitled, spoiled whiners you ever want to encounter. You can tell the Democrats from Republicans that way.
They draw their union provided lawyer like a six-shooter whenever they feel slighted. And being liberals, thats 24/7/365.
Changing the hours on a week's notice is probably against the law.
Why, actully yes. I have.
I never said I made a pittance, just a whole lot less tham the union people, and with no bennies.
And yes...I worked in a bearing factory for a year, right next to the heat treat. member of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. Made cam follower bearings for Sikorsky and others.
I had a choice and I also chose to get out of there. I've spent the last 40 years working outside in all kinds of temperatures. Wouldn't have had it any other way.
Nobody forces anyone to work at an auto plant., and I know a whole lot of people who work in whole lots worse conditions for a whole lot less than UAW members make.
that's good to hear. I thought it was ditch diggers like me.
I worked in a paper mill in So Cal (LA area) in the late 70s and early 80s after my discharge from the USMC. Hot, dirty, smelly, boring, backbreaking work. But I did it the best I could while I was there.
I never thought to make a career out of it, it was a stepping stone. If you don't like your job look for something else. That's the beauty of our system when it's allowed to work. There are opportunities to improve.
Unions stagnate and cripple industries and make members dependent on them. A perfect symbiosis with the DemocRATS.
Just my two cents.
These characters need to quit complaining. They have a job. I spent 13 years supporting assembly line operations. I have a pretty good idea what they are doing.
They need to shut up and be thankfull they have a job.
Landis needs to come work S.Texas in August.
Primma Donnas
Is anything worse than Primma Donna Communists!
try spending 12 hour days with a screaming GM diesel engine running at 180 degrees just 5 feet behind your head and 150 degree clutches and brakes just inches from you. I spent close to 30 years doing that very thing.
In 100 degree weather and 10 degree weather. breeze or no breeze. grease, dust and constant danger.
I just couldn’t bring myself to be just another one of the union collective.
And I can see a lot of my lifes work on Google Earth. Not everyone can say that.
No...I worked in a ONE HUNDRED THIRTY DEGREE WAREHOUSE IN THE SUMMER AND MINUS ZERO IN THE WINTER LOADING AND UNLOADING SEMI TRUCKS ONE BOX AT A TIME WITH MY BARE HANDS.
Chelly Landes
that’s a she?
eeeesshhh!
Companies did this in Los Angeles to get ride reduction credit with the air quality rules.
It's a (D) idea so they should be OK with it, right? /S
To quote the great Monty Python. . .
‘Well we had it rough, we had get up at 6 am, a half an hour before we wen’t to bed, . . . .
Well I worked construction in 175 degree heat and had to walk to work barefooted, uphill in both directions.
I had an idiot, A.A. 30 something first line manager tell our gang that once. I told him, "No, YOU'RE lucky we have jobs..... because without us, they don't need you!"
Long story short, I've been retired for a while now and he's been dead for about the same amount of time...the nose candy caught up with him.
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