What UPS Doesn't Want You to Know

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 июн 2023
  • When you think of good middle class jobs, you probably think of UPS. But the shipping giant has a secret.
    While full time delivery drivers are the face of UPS, it’s the part-time workers like Cesar Mendoza who are the heart of the $100 billion shipping behemoth. In fact part-timers make up around 60% of the 340,000 UPS workers represented by the Teamsters.
    These workers have been ignored for nearly 30 years, but as UPS and the union wrestle over a new contract - with a massive strike looming July 31st - part-time workers are coming out of the shadows to tell their story of what its really like to work for the world’s largest package delivery company.
    #UPS #labor #strike
    -----
    More Perfect Union is a new nonprofit media org with a mission to empower working people. Learn more here: perfectunion.us/
    Follow us on Twitter: / moreperfectus
    Instagram: / perfectunion
    Facebook: / moreperfunion

Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @132images
    @132images 10 месяцев назад +1280

    7 years working for UPS, including management, and I would never recommend it to anyone. Once they became a publicly traded company the culture of leadership changed over night and the daily stock price became the only driver for decisions. They went from building long term relationships to exploitive BS.

    • @nairda4813
      @nairda4813 10 месяцев назад +24

      Wow, amazing how UPS they exploited they worker’s…

    • @kiltedcripple
      @kiltedcripple 10 месяцев назад +17

      I don't entirely blame them... or at least, I understand part of the pressure on UPS, I do blame them for exploiting their employees but I can easily observe that Amazon starting their own delivery service had to be a huge push to " compete" by copying their model.

    • @DanGartman
      @DanGartman 10 месяцев назад +64

      ​@@kiltedcrippleall these corporations have the same problem. Quarterly earnings calls.. they have to appease their shareholders.

    • @FatherLarper-rz9kw
      @FatherLarper-rz9kw 10 месяцев назад +45

      The problems of going public. Couldn’t agree more.

    • @mitziewheeler8517
      @mitziewheeler8517 10 месяцев назад +35

      Sometimes I think if companies treated their employees better and instead of going public letting only the employees invest in the future of the company things would go better all the way around.

  • @fallon2311
    @fallon2311 10 месяцев назад +466

    I am a Teamster and UPS package handler. I've been with the company for almost 6 years. UPS doesn't want you to know that I make the same amount as a new hire due to their MRA abuse. We need significant catch-up raises for us part timers who have been left behind for far too long.

    • @tira2145
      @tira2145 10 месяцев назад +14

      Doesn't the union negotiators cover that?

    • @bidmcms3
      @bidmcms3 10 месяцев назад

      That sounds like new hires are paid way too much

    • @nicklikesradio
      @nicklikesradio 10 месяцев назад +18

      @@bidmcms3 $16 is too much?

    • @filthyfrankblack4067
      @filthyfrankblack4067 10 месяцев назад +2

      Same at the A-Zon like the pandemic people just need to quit in mass again.

    • @HayTatsuko
      @HayTatsuko 10 месяцев назад +6

      It is infuriating to me that devoted workers like you do not get the compensation you deserve. More power to you and to your peers!

  • @Tom-sj6sh
    @Tom-sj6sh 9 месяцев назад +33

    My pops got out of high school and went straight to UPS. Been there 35 years. I have the upmost respect for you workers.

    • @brotheradamfromups
      @brotheradamfromups 5 месяцев назад +1

      Pretty much the same boat here. Got on months after I turned 18 and plan to retire here in 40ish years.

  • @Summitclym
    @Summitclym 10 месяцев назад +65

    My son did the UPS part time gig for 7 years before going full-time. After 7 years of that he was laid off last year. He’s now managing shipping for a private company, ‘working from home, making less $ but so much happier!

    • @Alex-bn9xx
      @Alex-bn9xx 10 месяцев назад

      That place is a shit hole he got lucky to espace

    • @vowish5319
      @vowish5319 7 месяцев назад +7

      U dont get laid off at UPS. Thats impossible. Thats why we have a union. I think your son got fired and did not tell you the truth.

    • @Summitclym
      @Summitclym 7 месяцев назад +10

      @@vowish5319 You do huh? 😂 He was in management and many other managers were laid off as well. Management is not represented by the union.

    • @thegamingchicken945
      @thegamingchicken945 5 месяцев назад

      @@vowish5319bro I worked at Harley and we would get laid off all the time

    • @i_i8924
      @i_i8924 4 месяца назад +3

      @@Summitclym Thats why you should never become a Supervisor for UPS unless you want to become FT (very hard and like u said, can get fired still) or to put on resume. If he was a package handler/driver he could not get fired unless he literally stole/lied/fought (some still able to keep their jobs lol). Going management also gives up the pension (5 yrs to qualify for base level) AND u have to pay your own health/dental.

  • @omega4l94
    @omega4l94 10 месяцев назад +911

    As an Amazon Driver I stand with y’all 100%. We’re really getting lowballed

    • @Jewish.Hotdog
      @Jewish.Hotdog 10 месяцев назад +25

      frr i thought UPS was the next step up even them getting exploited crazy world we live in

    • @xFactoryUSA
      @xFactoryUSA 10 месяцев назад +12

      Shipping is down nation wide in general, maybe not in your area, but there isn't a magical money tree that can feed everyone if the money doesn't exist

    • @OgdenM
      @OgdenM 10 месяцев назад +53

      @@xFactoryUSA , huh? Down since when? Online shopping is bigger then ever now. But, sure it's mostly Amazon doing shipping directly I guess. And from what I've heard, working for Amazon contracted delivery companies is worse then UPS.

    • @OgdenM
      @OgdenM 10 месяцев назад +27

      I've heard driving for Amazon is worse then driving for UPS. Mostly because you work for a contracted company and not directly for Amazon and they get away with all sorts of stuff.
      Then again, working for Amazon directly even sucks. (Whether you're in delivery / warehouse OR even in the office on the tech side of things.. it's all a nightmare apparently. )

    • @trainsandlocomotives
      @trainsandlocomotives 10 месяцев назад +1

      Do Amazon Drivers get pay raises?

  • @JustRaiHere_2023
    @JustRaiHere_2023 10 месяцев назад +303

    Corporate greed is the new norm in the US and workers are suffering for it.

    • @LexYeen
      @LexYeen 10 месяцев назад +37

      New?
      Go read up on the history of the labor movement.

    • @dosmastrify
      @dosmastrify 10 месяцев назад +9

      New?

    • @IjwPetersen
      @IjwPetersen 10 месяцев назад +21

      yeah it's an old norm for this country that's just peaking yet again

    • @doct0rnic
      @doct0rnic 10 месяцев назад

      They were planning for this strike awhile ago, same with John Deere, same with the railroads, same with Starbucks, it's almost like a common strategy, drag out negotiations till inflation rises then give in to the contract, the wage asked for for years is now lower than the current inflation during signing so essentially they're paying the same thing.

    • @magicdance4273
      @magicdance4273 10 месяцев назад +14

      It's a founding norm, my friend.

  • @vowish5319
    @vowish5319 7 месяцев назад +11

    I work at UPS as a part time preload since 2019 and yeah it does make u depressed, tired, angry, and muscley.

  • @jameswilliams7490
    @jameswilliams7490 9 месяцев назад +11

    This video is 💯percent right on .. I was 14 years part -time and finally became a feeder driver and was told I wouldn't top out for another 4 years

  • @shmehfleh3115
    @shmehfleh3115 10 месяцев назад +154

    I worked third shift for two years, and it's something I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy. I was full-time and making OK-ish money, too. Certainly enough to survive on, unlike the UPS part-timers. If they strike, I hope they win.

    • @Filthy_Larry
      @Filthy_Larry 9 месяцев назад

      That’s in any field though. What about third shift fire fighters or cab drivers or nurses?

  • @samm9184
    @samm9184 10 месяцев назад +83

    All power to the Teamsters in this fight, my wife and I will be the first ones on the picket line with ya'll with home cooked meals.

    • @MrBoker69
      @MrBoker69 10 месяцев назад +6

      Thank you for the support.

    • @unLuckyFetus
      @unLuckyFetus 10 месяцев назад +1

      ✊️

    • @Oscar-rv7bq
      @Oscar-rv7bq 10 месяцев назад +1

      Wow! That's awesome of you both!

    • @OutofTime..
      @OutofTime.. 10 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for your support.

  • @MiguelGonzalez-lr2vt
    @MiguelGonzalez-lr2vt 9 месяцев назад +30

    Im a ups driver and have been with the company for 29yrs. I was part time for the first 5 years.
    I remember how brutal it was and how underpaid and under appreciated it was. I would work for 3am to around 8:30. By the time I got home showered and ate, it would be around 10. Slept until 1:30, picked my daughter up from school, dropped her off at my moms house, went to my 2nd job from 3pm until 11:30. Back home and in bed by 12:30am. (Slept in my work clothes to maximize sleep time) and back up at 2:30am to start the process all over again.
    I was grateful to finally get a full time job after those first 5 years, and progression was only 2 yrs back then. Only to work 50 to 60 hrs a week which did take a toll my on marriage. I am divorced and missed watching my kids grow up. I remember running my butt off all day, and skipping lunch just to make it to the last few innings of my daughters softball games. Which wasn’t always possible cuz you always ran the risk of having to go help someone if you got done at a decent time.
    All this just to say, we’ve made sacrifices throughout our whole career that no one sees and WE DESERVE A GREAT CONTRACT!!!

    • @threeg6966
      @threeg6966 9 месяцев назад +1

      That story sounds very familiar.

    • @hsimpson7267
      @hsimpson7267 9 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you. Your hard work makes our modern lives possible.

  • @Jeffthedude15
    @Jeffthedude15 9 месяцев назад +14

    I deliver for FedEx Ground and I stand by these guys. I hope they get what they should and maybe all the attention can shed light on what we go through. At FedEx Ground we don't get any benefits and not nearly as much pay as the Guys and ladies get at UPS or FedEx Express. It is intense labor especially in the heat and it takes a toll on your personal life. Get what y'all deserve!

  • @whatsitwhosit
    @whatsitwhosit 10 месяцев назад +245

    Spent 14 years there..and I've always said that UPS has successfully pulled the wool over the entire world's eyes, fooling the public into thinking that it's such a great company. Back in the '90's one of the arguments during contract time was that the starting wage hadn't increased in over 8 or 10 years. That fact did not register with the company. Combine that with they're legendary combative and aggressive management practices in such a strenuous work environment and you have a recipe for conflict. Drivers frequently suffer multiple surgeries from injuries sustained during their work, not to mention the plethora of cuts, sprains, strains etc. that happen on a daily basis. A living wage with which you can buy a house (or just rent an apartment)...all for just driving a truck or working in a warehouse.....don't believe it!

    • @dosmastrify
      @dosmastrify 10 месяцев назад +6

      But driving a truck your actually CAN.
      They make 95k a year

    • @malewire1263
      @malewire1263 10 месяцев назад +13

      I worked there before a long time ago. The driver retirement package was to get hurt on the job, sue, get a settlement and retire to start your own business.

    • @Grizabeebles
      @Grizabeebles 10 месяцев назад +15

      Makes you wonder how all the gig economy workers who've started delivering packages and fast food are going to feel in another 5-10 years once they've blown out their back moving boxes or broken their ankle falling off an icy porch as an "independent contractor".

    • @MRosati5000
      @MRosati5000 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@Grizabeebles They will be thrown on the scrap heap.

    • @trappedkitty5335
      @trappedkitty5335 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@dosmastrify At what cost, when you can only work for 15 - 20 years-barring traumatic injury-before you have occupational injuries that force you to quit or work in constant pain.
      Also, does that apply to pay schedule 2 or is that the pay from pay schedule 1? How much overtime gets you to middle class in the smaller cities? You likely don't need it when you live in Mississippi, but if you live in Washington, the cost of living is far greater. If you live in or near a major city anywhere, you are scraping the bottom of middle class. Part-time employees won't see that at all, which is the focus of this video.

  • @TheOtherOtherMike
    @TheOtherOtherMike 10 месяцев назад +23

    former UPS employee here. The opening sequence is so fucking ON POINT!!! NEVER get to be with your family, work you like a dog and hang a carrot in front of you to tease a promotion and give you a route...

    • @trainsandlocomotives
      @trainsandlocomotives 10 месяцев назад +1

      How long do you work per day?

    • @TheOtherOtherMike
      @TheOtherOtherMike 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@trainsandlocomotives 10-11 hours, 6 days a week. I was a 22.4 driver

    • @trainsandlocomotives
      @trainsandlocomotives 10 месяцев назад

      @@TheOtherOtherMike 6 days a week!

    • @BikeGuyFPV
      @BikeGuyFPV 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@TheOtherOtherMikeand UPS still hasn't done a single thing to install AC into any of the package trucks, yet expect you to find a package within fifteen seconds when you get to your next stop no matter what nor what weather conditions you're in.
      Bunch of BS

    • @christinajones7696
      @christinajones7696 10 месяцев назад +2

      I hope the Strike costs them Billions! Go Teamsters!!!

  • @Zicden21
    @Zicden21 10 месяцев назад +73

    I have been at ups as a package handler for almost a year and 9 months now and it is time that we finally strike back. We are tired of being treated like shit and they expect us to roll over. Better pay, more full time jobs and better hours. Ups has made billions of dollars and we want our share. It is not fair for us especially since we are the ones doing all of the work.

    • @JohnJones-qj8dm
      @JohnJones-qj8dm 9 месяцев назад +4

      Are you filing grievances for sups working? Get that $$ my friend. Also it forces them to staff properly and lightens our workload.
      Make sure you file.

    • @JCab13
      @JCab13 9 месяцев назад +1

      Always file. Dont back down from signing those papers

    • @87clits
      @87clits 8 месяцев назад +1

      No one makes you so the job it's solely your choice. There's lot of jobs out there. Go find another one if you hate it so much.

    • @anthonyjackson6087
      @anthonyjackson6087 7 месяцев назад

      A whole almost 2 years lol. I was part time 7 and a half. You will get what you want when you earn your driver position.

    • @LACHIVA1969
      @LACHIVA1969 6 месяцев назад

      UPS doesn't want you there. UPS wants people to come and go and never see benefits so they can only pay benefits to those with over 4 to 5 years. They just recycle the workers.

  • @jeffhartson9203
    @jeffhartson9203 10 месяцев назад +8

    I am retired, but I wholeheartedly support All the UPS employees. Our country has gone down the tubes due to poor leadership in Washington. And this only adds fuel to the fire that has gone out of control. To much micromanagement from the government and company CEO's.

  • @matthedge22
    @matthedge22 10 месяцев назад +191

    They could hire half those part timers and turn em full time. Just want to keep the wages low.

    • @MMuraseofSandvich
      @MMuraseofSandvich 10 месяцев назад +29

      And avoid providing benefits like health insurance.

    • @NightMystique13
      @NightMystique13 10 месяцев назад +6

      Full time usually includes benefit; they aren’t cheap.

    • @rarecandy3445
      @rarecandy3445 10 месяцев назад +11

      thats how all of these businesses work. i managed a restaurant on the U of I campus for about 7 years and not once was ever put on as a full time employee. i didnt recognize what was really going on because of how young i was. the owner would cut every managers hours down to 35 max unless we were severely understaffed and payed nobody over 13 an hour. he hired on a ton of other in store workers to keep their hours even less than the management and eventually fired all of us managers, promoted others and hasnt paid anyone over 10 an hour since.

    • @diy_mushroomguy
      @diy_mushroomguy 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@rarecandy3445they deserve to go into the hole.

    • @alexnissley9848
      @alexnissley9848 10 месяцев назад +11

      Part time gets Health Insurance after 9 months at UPS. Source I work for UPS.

  • @budzill
    @budzill 10 месяцев назад +32

    The 2018 contract was a slap in the face to part-timers

    • @dosmastrify
      @dosmastrify 10 месяцев назад +6

      Why didn't they vote? Only 44% voted

    • @MrBoker69
      @MrBoker69 10 месяцев назад +4

      I think it was more of a part timers don't care thing and voters not voting, with a mail in ballot, was horrible. Thank god that they got rid of the 2/3 majority rule.

    • @drwalker9093
      @drwalker9093 10 месяцев назад +4

      That's something that started earlier, even before the public stock offering. The part-timers are less likely to vote/participate in union activity, which makes the union more likely to give up something at the low end of the pay scale in order to gain more for those with seniority and full-time jobs.

    • @Grizabeebles
      @Grizabeebles 10 месяцев назад +6

      The pattern is right there when you look at it.
      Things get better for a while right after the strike and the company retains a bunch of new staff.
      10 years later when those new guys are fat and comfortable the company pleads poverty and demands cuts.
      The fat and comfortable guys let the most recent batch of new guys get slapped in the face so the comfortable guys don't have to sacrifice anything.
      The company keeps turning the screws for 5 or 10 years until the comfortable guys are all gone and another strike happens.
      Picture a boot stamping on a human face. Forever.

    • @okdenny
      @okdenny 10 месяцев назад

      Part timers don't vote. They just complain how much drivers make. Every single contract, drivers always advocate more pay for part timers. You would know that if you went to a proposal meeting...or any union meeting for that matter. At the end of the day, part timers lack solidarity. The numbers don't lie.

  • @vidzkid76
    @vidzkid76 10 месяцев назад +43

    Solidarity from the outside! ✊️ There are millions of us out here right behind you guys! Labor is making a comeback and it takes all of us. Stay strong. Union strong!

    • @JohnJones-qj8dm
      @JohnJones-qj8dm 9 месяцев назад +1

      Are you in another union? You should sign up, we could use you.

    • @vidzkid76
      @vidzkid76 9 месяцев назад +1

      @JohnJones-qj8dm Unfortunately, no. Just a regular working class shlub, but I know how important the fight is.

    • @matthewharper7333
      @matthewharper7333 8 месяцев назад

      The Union caved

    • @vidzkid76
      @vidzkid76 8 месяцев назад

      @@matthewharper7333 Union members have not approved the contract yet

    • @andynull8869
      @andynull8869 5 дней назад

      @@matthewharper7333 it is not a union but controled opposition... power is taken not given.... revolution NOW

  • @ralphcarter3261
    @ralphcarter3261 9 месяцев назад +20

    Im also a upser. was part time for 4 years been a driver for about 6. what they put us though during the pandemic was brutal with nothing to show for it other than physical and metal stress. Still even now 3 years later im still struggling with what happened. UPS has made record profits off our backs just so the CEO can make millions in bonus's.

    • @258shoff
      @258shoff 9 месяцев назад +2

      nothing was worse than my company as a fuel hauler cutting our hours so bad to where I was making 300-400 dollars a week while other fuel companies were being given 1k a week to get by. My company did some illegal stuff and a lot of people at my job had to get loans to get by as the rest of people who got laid off in the country were taking home over 1k a week in free money, that's what it is to be an "essential" worker i guess.

  • @TubaZac
    @TubaZac 10 месяцев назад +122

    My GF works the Twilight shift at UPS, the same hours as the man in the video. This whole video is incredibly validating. The finacial concerns and workplace culture issues are very real and span the whole country. I remeber her telling me when their wage was reduced back to $16, i was livid for her. Standing strong with the Teamsters 💪

    • @rockon8174
      @rockon8174 10 месяцев назад +3

      At that point she should've left for another job.

    • @TubaZac
      @TubaZac 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@rockon8174 That was my mindset too, I'd be outta of there so fast if I got a $5 pay cut. This is happening everywhere. Ultimately their pay was re-adjusted back up 3 dollars (at least until the new contract).
      Part of the reason she stayed was the low interaction with other people. Confrontation and dealing with customers is not her stong suit. I'm the opposite, I'd deal with people and get overwhelmed by the volume of packages.
      There are some upsides to staying with UPS, I hope the union makes some big headway on fair employment contracts, it's well deserved.

    • @jonathannagela2130
      @jonathannagela2130 8 месяцев назад

      twilight is at night dummy

    • @andynull8869
      @andynull8869 5 дней назад

      teamsters are controled opposition

  • @Randy-tc3mv
    @Randy-tc3mv 10 месяцев назад +55

    I've been a part timer nearly two years now in the warehouse. The work is definitely tough on your body, it takes it's toll loading trailers understaffed almost constantly. UPS chronically understaffs so they can violate our contract and have supervisors do union work. They keep you tired and poor so you don't have energy or resources to stand up for yourself. And as soon as you get hurt once, you become a liability. You need strong motivation to hold down a job like this and teamsters move mountains EVERY day. Many of us are very proud of the work we do, and deserve more respect from the company. Brothers and Sisters, I can't wait to see us all benefit from whats coming down the pipe. We're almost there.

    • @sosaa3436
      @sosaa3436 10 месяцев назад

      You’re part time, learn a new skill and get a better job

    • @gothnate
      @gothnate 10 месяцев назад

      I think every job I've ever worked at in retail understaffed all the time. Corporate would always give the store managers a set number of hours they could schedule each week. My last job, a gas station, only allotted 220 hours per week, which always left us at least one employee less than we needed. I left a couple of weeks ago because of the exploitative practices. Three people left before I did, and one more after me. They were left with one employee for the store, and I'm willing to bet $1 million they won't learn from it.
      Most of us quit because of the raises they promised. They enticed us to apply for jobs at $17 per hour and said we'd get raises after 45 and 90 days, told us the same in the interviews, told us the same again in orientation. When the time came to give us raises, they decreased the starting pay for people that started after us to $16 per hour, and told us, "Just consider your extra dollar your raise."
      That is illegal in my state. Even a verbal promise _must_ be followed through with. Of course, what do you expect from Kent Oil, a business based out of Texas that refuses to allow unionization? These corporations need some bad things to happen to them. That's the only way to get any headway on them NOT violating human rights and dignity.

    • @WaqasKhan-hx4hw
      @WaqasKhan-hx4hw 10 месяцев назад

      Why don’t you just become a driver if you don’t like the warehouse work??

    • @OutofTime..
      @OutofTime.. 10 месяцев назад

      ​@WaqasKhan-hx4hw because it takes God know how long to become one. At least 3 years minimum but more like 5 and even then its not guaranteed.

    • @WaqasKhan-hx4hw
      @WaqasKhan-hx4hw 10 месяцев назад

      @@OutofTime.. I’ve heard otherwise some say 2 sun say 6 months some say 3yrs some said 15yrs

  • @w8what575
    @w8what575 10 месяцев назад +2

    I used to sel on eBay…I shipped 90% of the items I sold via usps…they’re expensive as all hell and then they started smashing the ever living crap out of the packages to the point of costing me so much money in refunds from damaged items through delivery…it got to the point I didn’t want to ship anything through them…complaining about their pay etc…o sold a very large heavy package my last sale…price for usps was $75 to ship it…but I knew it wouldn’t make it in one price…so I checked ups and the price was $20 to ship …so I tried their shipping service…the item arrived in one piece! And 2 days early! All I gotta say…..all the employees with ups….u guys are amazing at ur jobs and as a reseller…I can’t thank u enough for doing ur jobs as well as u all do! Thank you! We appreciate all of u!

  • @MRBooze-yl6it
    @MRBooze-yl6it 9 месяцев назад +4

    I work in feeders in Michigan. I hope you and I get everything we deserve because we work damn hard for what we get now and we deserve better

  • @matt45540
    @matt45540 10 месяцев назад +86

    I've managed a lot of UPS employees at their second jobs. Totally disrespectful they expect their employees to have to find another job that will work around a different company schedule. But even 8 years ago we dealt with it because they would show up whenever they got done. DOL should have done something about the part-time work a long time ago

    • @dosmastrify
      @dosmastrify 10 месяцев назад

      The shifts only run 4 hours and then the tractor trailer drive for 4 hours that's how much of the network is configured. It's not to just screw the little guy.
      Full-time inside inside job that UPS involves being at work at least 9 hours sometimes 10 or 11, there has to be a split between shifts for the facilities to get cleaned out

    • @Grizabeebles
      @Grizabeebles 10 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@dosmastrify-- there doesn't "have" to be a split. Employees could load for 4 hours then drive for up to 4 hours or drive and then load or *'gasp'* clock out early.
      A company can restructure work flows around their employees. It's just a hell of a lot harder than playing a worker-placement game.

  • @davidwachter6202
    @davidwachter6202 10 месяцев назад +81

    Keep fighting the good fight , never settle for anything less. Please support our union brothers and sisters.Solidarity forever!!!

  • @troylynn970
    @troylynn970 9 месяцев назад +2

    23 years working part-time and I am so ready for the fight...

  • @racerx4152
    @racerx4152 10 месяцев назад +7

    I was a part time loader/ unloader/ sorter from 1986 -1989. one time I was watching a training film for drivers, where they counted the steps you take from the truck to the house you were delivering too. crazy stuff. they worked ungodly hours back then too.

  • @jomjohns
    @jomjohns 10 месяцев назад +124

    I did about 3 months being a package handler back in 2018. The turnover was so high that I was one of the longest tenured when I quit at 3 months. We were so short staffed that I was loading 5 trucks by myself at one point. One morning they had a round of about 10 new people they were showing the ropes in preparation for the looming "peak" season I kept hearing from the veterans, and not a single one came back after the first day.
    There was one driver who bragged about how much money he made, but I always called BS because he would join us at 4am to load packages and then delivered until 7 or 8 at night.
    TBH I didn't hate it, it was a second job for me, but once I got fulltime at my primary job I handed in my notice immediately lol.

    • @myronaustin
      @myronaustin 10 месяцев назад +26

      And the part that hurts the most? Him loading trucks in the morning and then driving all the way till 8 p.m. at night. That's the way they FOOL you into busting your ass even longer to get a bigger paycheck. It really isn't equal to the value of labor that one person puts in.

    • @jomjohns
      @jomjohns 10 месяцев назад +20

      @myronaustin Is a 6 figure paycheck even worth it if you work 70+ hours per week?

    • @myronaustin
      @myronaustin 10 месяцев назад +10

      @@jomjohns they boost the costs of/for goods and services.
      All the while our wages stay stagnant.
      They "bait and switch" with tiny increments in pay increases but make it just enough to get by on. THEN sell you the idea of coming in more to stack the money up.
      You double your efforts to make the increase work in your favor, giving more productivity and clearing out the excess or backlog.
      They cut the workforce to "save money" since the productivity is up and it "seems" as if they don't need as many employees.
      But it's ACTUALLY to keep the profits made from said output increases.
      When the load starts to really grind at the workforce, causing incidents or mistakes to happen, they use it as an excuse to start trimming away the pay package that was previously "upped".
      Which leads to folks quitting and the company in question blaming the everyone BUT themselves as to why folks don't wanna come back.

    • @Grizabeebles
      @Grizabeebles 10 месяцев назад +9

      It sounds to me like the fastest way to break this treadmill isn't a strike per se but for every employee to work their shift to rule and refuse all overtime and unscheduled shifts.
      If the company wants people to work full-time hours it should be continuously compelled to give them full-time status and a guarantee of full-time hours.

    • @MJ98774
      @MJ98774 10 месяцев назад

      @@jomjohns 100.000 divided by 52 weeks in a year is 1900 per week. 25 dollars an hour x 40 hours = 1000. Add another 30 hours at time and a half (37 per hour) and you're already past the 1900 mark.
      In other words? He's making 22-24 an hour. That's not a good wage anymore when your average rent is 2k and average house price is 300k. I always laugh at these idiots who can't do the simple math. That's chump change to put one's health at risk, and UPS loves having baboons like this who can't crunch the numbers. I always laugh at these clowns.

  • @synedrus7059
    @synedrus7059 10 месяцев назад +373

    I worked for UPS during the pandemic, from 2021 to 2022 as a part-timer. When I started, our hourly wage was $14.50. Eventually, it was bumped up to $17.00, then $19.00, and finally $21.00 at peak season that winter. Without any warning, after that peak season, our wages went all the way back down to $15.00. A month later, our supervisors passed out paperwork that made us sign, acknowledging our wage decrease.
    A month.
    An entire month between when our wages were cut, and when we had to sign that we acknowledged that. It was absurd.
    Not to mention the short hours and massive volume, start times getting pushed back to insane degrees, and expected to move the same (or larger) amount of volume in much less time. I was a primary worker. It was frowned upon to turn off your belt to catch up with the absolutely absurd volume of packages. But if you didn't, packages would be sent to the wrong secondary locations.
    Overall, the entire experience was an exhausting, frustrating, and defeating mess that eventually began to take a toll on my mental health, so I had to quit.
    I hope this upcoming strike does good for the hundreds of thousands of workers still facing these issues.

    • @alexescobar001
      @alexescobar001 10 месяцев назад +9

      Why the regrets? I remember seeing those ups ads and they were clear offering up to $ 22.00/h for part time job ONLY for that season, so I told to my self that is not for me and found something else. 🤔

    • @Lwill0
      @Lwill0 10 месяцев назад +13

      What would of happened if you didn’t sign the pay decrease acknowledgement?

    • @jonmolina948
      @jonmolina948 10 месяцев назад +8

      You just work there for the benefits. They only make the new people stay the whole 4 hours. That’s how it was in Northbrook Illinois. Nobody ever gets full time.

    • @usedcarsokinawa
      @usedcarsokinawa 10 месяцев назад +8

      Fight fo hours rather than get a better job. Get into a trade. If not, you have a choice.

    • @thurstonhowelllll948
      @thurstonhowelllll948 10 месяцев назад +4

      I recall their advertisement for hire was shady AF , never even approached - How do walk into a situation like that not knowing

  • @hackjobgarage9289
    @hackjobgarage9289 9 месяцев назад +6

    I have been with UPS for 25 years. It took me 8 years to get a full time job and 20 years to get a good job that I can be happy with. When I started at UPS, minimum wage was $5.50 and the starting wage at UPS was $8.50. It was a competitive wage, now that minimum wage in Oregon is $14.50 that's what the new employees make. I feel sorry for the new guys, they can not afford to live on their own.

  • @danhedrick1795
    @danhedrick1795 10 месяцев назад +1

    Cali is expensive as is but can’t expect to survive off one part time job. I wish them luck. We definitely deserve more

  • @James-ol6rw
    @James-ol6rw 10 месяцев назад +74

    And people these days wonder why so many young people refuse to go back to work( after the pandemic) !

    • @MrFinesse316
      @MrFinesse316 10 месяцев назад +5

      Good idea Every worker nationwide .. in every field.. should just stay home n work from home.

    • @poisonduckee
      @poisonduckee 10 месяцев назад +3

      To be fair, unemployment is under 4%... People are back to work.

    • @georgekazanchyan4976
      @georgekazanchyan4976 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@poisonduckee Yep! I say UPS should just let them strike and see how long they last without any pay. If those employees are not happy, they don't have to work there.

    • @poisonduckee
      @poisonduckee 10 месяцев назад +17

      @@georgekazanchyan4976 I think UPS should just pay them a decent wage and avoid the strike. All companies should for that matter. They are destroying the economy while the government is subsidizing it. I for one don't think we should give wealthy people and companies the power to take all of the money. That is stupid.

    • @not-askaven2990
      @not-askaven2990 10 месяцев назад +12

      ​@@poisonduckeetechnically, if you refuse to go back to work, you actually aren't unemployed, you're considered "outside the workforce"
      regardless there's no labor shortage and never was, there's a good pay shortage

  • @PaulGuy
    @PaulGuy 10 месяцев назад +177

    This whole country needs to go on strike. One day would cost the executive class billions. We need to remind them who really does the work.

    • @tira2145
      @tira2145 10 месяцев назад

      No, we need to stop using these mega corporation's whenever possible. Support local businesses. Everyone that bitches about rich people purchase most of there stuff on Amazon.

    • @eddybrownII
      @eddybrownII 10 месяцев назад +8

      That would only increase their use of temporary workers

    • @MayorMcheese12
      @MayorMcheese12 10 месяцев назад

      Yeah then theyd just hire illegals who work for nothing basically. Then getting a job would really be hard cause why pay you when they can pay the cheap mexican

    • @ShadowJP3012
      @ShadowJP3012 10 месяцев назад +17

      The only issue is we don’t unite smh

    • @tira2145
      @tira2145 10 месяцев назад +10

      @@ShadowJP3012 nobody is going to participate in a nation wide strike. There credit card balances are way too high. What needs to happen and could actually happen is for people to stop buying so much crap that they don't need. The stuff you do buy, get it from a local business, not Amazon or Walmart or any other large corporation. yeah it might cost more, but it's worth it.

  • @marlon94124
    @marlon94124 9 месяцев назад +14

    I have been with UPS for 23 years this coming August, and I worked in the Preload for 5 years and a Package Car Driver for 18 years. I worked two jobs when I was a part-time worker, but only one being in the Package Division. Without UPS, I would not have any better pension and benefits from other employers outside of UPS.

    • @user-ks1ew8rj5i
      @user-ks1ew8rj5i 9 месяцев назад

      And you screwed the younger guys to keep it. YOU are the problem!

  • @bmoney2392
    @bmoney2392 9 месяцев назад +2

    been working for UPS 15 years preloading in Florida and it's HORRIBLE! warehouses are so hot and dont care about our safety and struggling to even get 3 1/2 hours everyday

  • @georgejimenez9747
    @georgejimenez9747 10 месяцев назад +19

    I've been working for Amazon for 6 days now, and I can't believe that some of these people who have been working for a couple of years dealt with this BS in the delivery industry every day with low pay!

  • @soninalphin2771
    @soninalphin2771 10 месяцев назад +100

    I used to be an UPS employee, the tough environment was sometimes painful to get through. I left UPS because it was just too stressful & that's how the higher ups want it, they have run with a policy of "hire & fire" as rapidly as possible so that people don't get the benefits full timers may get. That was about 20 years ago & sadly it seems very little has changed.

    • @amanawolf9166
      @amanawolf9166 10 месяцев назад

      And that is the nail on the head, imho. It's a hire and fire mentality. It is 100% exploitation what happens to people. What's worse is the fact the corprate jerkoffs know they can get away with it. If they are caught, it's easier, in some but not all cases, to pay a fine vs fixing the problem(s).

    • @dosmastrify
      @dosmastrify 10 месяцев назад +5

      Not entirely true. First, it's hire and they quit. Second having a well-trained reliable worker is worth the extra couple bucks an hour that those workers make

    • @soninalphin2771
      @soninalphin2771 10 месяцев назад +16

      @@dosmastrify they quit because the higher ups push the employees as much as possible without angering the union reps, I've only met a few managers that actually cared for their employees & yeah, they won't fire an employee, unless they have reason & evidence that the union can't argue with.

    • @OMartinez91
      @OMartinez91 9 месяцев назад +1

      I had a supervisor that did that during Covid. She would have so many new drivers in routes set up for failure since they were routes a new driver couldn't do in less than 10 hours. She was about to disqualify me had I not been poached by another center the day before she was going to dismiss me

    • @chris10878
      @chris10878 7 месяцев назад

      You get the benefits after 9 months …. Not bad

  • @JohnJones-qj8dm
    @JohnJones-qj8dm 9 месяцев назад +5

    Part time is not a bad gig. The raises are guaranteed, we get free, amazing, health insurance, and there are tons of opportunities for extra $ (grievance checks and extra shifts). It's a great part time job. I'm making more part time at UPS than I was at my previous full time job.

  • @adamwolf4041
    @adamwolf4041 9 месяцев назад +1

    As a former part time loader and package drlivery driver for eleven years from 1988 to 1999 I experienced the 1997 strike. I will refrain from making negative comments about my previous employer. I did not have a good experience and I would not recommend that ANYONE work there!

  • @JR-he6fn
    @JR-he6fn 10 месяцев назад +33

    I’m not a UPS driver but 100% behind them. Because if they get higher pay, other jobs like it will pay more one way or another

    • @rockon8174
      @rockon8174 10 месяцев назад +3

      No. Not how it works. Do you see Amazon paying more? Nope.

    • @happycommentator6773
      @happycommentator6773 10 месяцев назад +3

      It definitely doesn't work that way. Ask a FedEx Express or FedEx Ground driver.

    • @JR-he6fn
      @JR-he6fn 10 месяцев назад +2

      I’m just saying. If wages go up for some people, it can’t be bad for other jobs raising their wages

    • @barakjohnson9931
      @barakjohnson9931 10 месяцев назад

      It won’t change anything except ups will have positions that won’t come open because people will stop quitting and make it a career… only opening that will stay open is loading and unloading or if someone retires and or the city is growing

    • @Filthy_Larry
      @Filthy_Larry 9 месяцев назад

      @@barakjohnson9931my friend is career there. He gets paid good money and has minimal responsibility.

  • @djnekroman
    @djnekroman 10 месяцев назад +191

    As a "Purchasing and Procurement Manager" at my current job, I am absolutely *dreading* this inevitable UPS strike... But on the other hand: As a hardcore lefty and believer in workers' rights, I *can't wait* for this inevitable UPS strike. I don't mind being miserable in my shitty job for a little while as long as it means that other people are truly getting the compensation that they deserve.

    • @ciscornBIG
      @ciscornBIG 10 месяцев назад +4

      Wow.

    • @msboon6078
      @msboon6078 10 месяцев назад

      Hard core lefty. Do you really think Biden has your back?
      I'm going from homeless under Obama to getting a job a vehicle buying a home under Trump.... Now back to... I'll be homeless here in about 2 weeks under Biden...
      I'm 57 now.... In tears now.... Please don't vote Biden again. I won't make it...

    • @dosmastrify
      @dosmastrify 10 месяцев назад +1

      Strike isn't inevitable. Watch the contract negotiations, teamsters largely happy with current results

    • @ryno4ever433
      @ryno4ever433 10 месяцев назад +7

      Based

    • @MrBoker69
      @MrBoker69 10 месяцев назад +7

      Thank you for your support.

  • @DamnnnSon1
    @DamnnnSon1 9 месяцев назад +26

    This whole video is completely accurate 👌 I'm a 22.4 and really looking forward to being coverted to full time driver. Even tho I know I'll be doing the same BS graveyard shift work, not getting enough hours, and only being on a route on Saturdays. I'm still salty that none of us got Hazard Pay during covid while most Americans were sitting home making double their usual pay a week on unemployment 😤

    • @brainskulls
      @brainskulls 9 месяцев назад +5

      I'm a twilight package handler off of the Hub in San Gabriel Valley, CA, and I would just at least, like the bare minimum, would want retroactive pay for all the "Hazard Pay work" we did during the pandemic. I still look at my paychecks during that time and see that we were only getting paid 15$ an hour and the only boost in income was from the Forced OT. I was really surprised when my brother who filed for unemployment during the pandemic, was making more than me a month even with the forced OT. I was working 12+ hours a day and on Saturdays and still never saw the amount that my brother was making on unemployment... I hope this new contract does good for all partimers and 22.4s

    • @boblaser7385
      @boblaser7385 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@danwilliams7362UPS treats feeder drivers like gold and everyone else like trash. Every single guy that goes into Feeders says it's lime working for an entirely different company. ✌🏼

    • @churrofornia7217
      @churrofornia7217 3 месяца назад

      @@brainskullsI’ve worked out of the SGV hub and it’s the worst of them all, no respect, no integrity. UPS and Teamsters are a mafia. Bunch of drug addicts working there.

  • @kclarke2971
    @kclarke2971 10 месяцев назад +29

    It's truly sad, I feel for the part timers. My friend was a full time driver for decades.(now retired). The work was hard, he said he was always a slave. In "the day" it was worthwhile as far as pay and benefits. but that was decades ago. Only greed and manipulation now. So sorry.

    • @rolandledesma-de7qd
      @rolandledesma-de7qd 10 месяцев назад

      Was a driver for 20 years. Pay is really good for full time drivers, but I grew to hate it. You’re a prisoner with golden handcuffs. My wife hated me because I was in such a pissy mood when I got home every day. Leaving was the best decision I ever made.

  • @SupremeInvigilator
    @SupremeInvigilator 10 месяцев назад +152

    Taking a chit job because you need health insurance. Yay America!

    • @erikawwad7653
      @erikawwad7653 10 месяцев назад +36

      Take a chit job so boomers can call it not a real job

    • @chesspiece4257
      @chesspiece4257 10 месяцев назад +2

      i actually considered it because university of louisville has an agreement with them where you get a giant scholarship if you work the graveyard shift, but it sounded way too good to be true

    • @yyunko7764
      @yyunko7764 10 месяцев назад

      that's basic late stage capitalism, you are only allowed to live and exist if you take part and become a wage slave like the others, otherwise you are shunned from society and the economic system

    • @socrazybmx
      @socrazybmx 10 месяцев назад +8

      Alternatively, find a better job in the trades where they'll pay you to learn and then you'll have a good job and health insurance at the same time.
      Don't just toss your hands in the air and cry victim. Do something about it.

    • @erikawwad7653
      @erikawwad7653 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@socrazybmx I wish trade jobs were less stigmatized. High schools should market trade programs and state grants for them much better

  • @lindamannix1247
    @lindamannix1247 9 месяцев назад +1

    We have wonderful UPS delivery people ! Never ever saw one that wasn't pleasant . They rush, rush, rush , summer heat, snow storms, and just the best ! Always feel for them and try to run out with a drink or treat.
    Half the time I don't move fast enough to catch them ! They deserve anything they get ! Long overdue !
    A THOUSAND CHEERS TO THE BEST MEN AND WOMEN EVER !! GOD BLESS THEM !

  • @chris10878
    @chris10878 7 месяцев назад +1

    I have been driving for a year and worked as preload for a year. It is very hard work but it is rewarding. The insurance (covers your whole family for free) is amazing. I’m at 24/hr and makin better money then I ever have. 3 more years and I’ll be at almost 50 an hour. Can’t wait. I’ll be going and picking out a new truck lol.

  • @x77punk77x
    @x77punk77x 10 месяцев назад +57

    Definitely push back. I have been chewed up by jobs very similar to this and was always depressed by how all of my coworkers seemed to accept the status quo at their own expense because of the very effective war against organized labor.
    So many of us are out here rooting for you 🤝

    • @rockon8174
      @rockon8174 10 месяцев назад +1

      You are free to find another job

  • @TheCALMInstitute
    @TheCALMInstitute 10 месяцев назад +33

    I worked for UPS, on the Twilight shift, for 6 years. It got me through school. I worked there starting around 2002, and my wages were less than my dad, who worked there in the 1970s. I made $8.50, my dad made double that. Not inflation adjusted. 20 years later, I have arthritis as a 40 year old. The job just destroyed the bodies of people who worked there. I loaded trailers all night, and in my case it was boxes and boxes of hymnals.
    Please do whatever it takes to fix this. I’ve no concerns for the financial interests of a company that treats humans this way.

    • @solosix3991
      @solosix3991 10 месяцев назад

      And the company will continue to treat people this way until you start to call out the assholes that support this bs in the name of "capitalism" (as if its the most important thing, AND as if it couldn't happen to them)

    • @mathew3267
      @mathew3267 10 месяцев назад +1

      At least you had Jesus on your side.

    • @dollymae3383
      @dollymae3383 8 месяцев назад +3

      I hated working there too. It's hostile. This lady said she wanted to slap me for working so slow. Had to bite my tongue with people because people can't just shut up and do their work.

    • @LACHIVA1969
      @LACHIVA1969 6 месяцев назад

      When they send you someone like that it means they want yo to quit. UPS is not pro employees. They want part timers, seasonal workers, etc. just for a couple of weeks. That way they never see the benefits they pay to the Union members. They are doing the same thing with me, pairing me with youngsters that want to just break you. No way packages can be unloaded safely the way they do when they try to break you. UPS is in the business of recycling employees.@@dollymae3383

  • @zeroch1ll150
    @zeroch1ll150 10 месяцев назад +3

    The part time workforce is the exact reason UPS is so successful. They held their starting wage at $8 dollars an hour for decades. While they where bringing in billions

  • @gwen08g35
    @gwen08g35 8 месяцев назад

    My daddy retired after the 1997 strike! He got the hell outta there after years of bullshit. We had a great life, my mom never had to work, but my daddy worked his butt off, sick with the flu, you name it! They suck to work for. But, it was a great living for our family. He has LOVED being retired!

  • @Hoigwai
    @Hoigwai 10 месяцев назад +30

    I did a little holiday work for UPS. It was horrible. Not enough people, loading multiple trucks, struggling to keep up with the belt, my back was killing me and the pay was $1 above the pay for working at fast food places. They also weren't supposed to have packages over a specific weight for a single person and I had multiples that were 80, 90, and 100lbs and everyone was so slammed that I had to load them myself.
    Posted "UPS annual gross profit for 2022 was $74.152B"
    They have more than enough to pay real wages and stop screwing over their workers.

    • @wintertarzanjagrup2527
      @wintertarzanjagrup2527 9 месяцев назад

      And do you think they will pay you or care about you ?

    • @bmxcast00
      @bmxcast00 8 месяцев назад

      UPS isn’t for everyone I guess

    • @chuckygaye8402
      @chuckygaye8402 8 месяцев назад +1

      yeah it should not exceed 70 lbs
      bro istg i be gettin a lot of 80 lbs 90 and 100 lbs packages
      And you right, ppl cant really help you load those cauz they usually have some just like u😂😂😂😂😂

  • @dedik8SKB
    @dedik8SKB 10 месяцев назад +106

    I worked seasonally around 2018, and knew many, many people that were in some way stuck and trapped in their position. I'd even say most. One person I knew had been a package handler like me for 10 years. Let me tell you, that is not a great life.

    • @Perfidion
      @Perfidion 10 месяцев назад +15

      The work also breaks your body over time. The number of older guys with chronic back pain, sprains, strains, and joint issues, just from the constant lifting, twisting and dragging, is mind-blowing. But as soon as you're not fit for work due to injury sustained in the workplace, they have no further use for you. You're just a replaceable cog.

    • @MushookieMan
      @MushookieMan 10 месяцев назад +3

      Get out of dodge. California living expenses are insane

    • @blorblin
      @blorblin 10 месяцев назад +9

      ​@@MushookieManand moving expenses aren't?

    • @WaqasKhan-hx4hw
      @WaqasKhan-hx4hw 10 месяцев назад

      Why didn’t he become driver??

    • @blackhawks1870
      @blackhawks1870 10 месяцев назад

      @@StuartBailey-re4mhhow hard can driving class be?

  • @JuanJimenez.
    @JuanJimenez. 8 месяцев назад

    As an ex-part time worker at UPS for the last 2 years, I can simply say, FUCK UPS. Apart from having our wage get lowered, having to be a package handler was HELL. Since i was an unloader, it wasn't as hard as being a loader, but you'd constantly get hurt from having to unload huge and heavy packages and messy trailers with broken/busted packages, not to mention supervisors would play favoritism by having to place you in a fucked up trailer (which was the case for me, I worked too hard for 19 an hour), and having you to finish a certain trailer quick. Not to mention the trailers themselves would be very, very dusty. And if you happen to be a poor soul who worked during the summer, the trailers would be RIDICULOUSLY HOT. It be feeling like a goddamned furnace inside. Working for UPS is pretty much modern day slavery.
    The fact that they decided to lower my wage, even after having decent seniority, pissed me off. Especially since i was with the company for a while. I left sometime in March of this year and I never bothered to look back, even though I'm unemployed myself and I'm currently looking at options to work that doesn't involve back breaking labor.

  • @DaveKraft1
    @DaveKraft1 10 месяцев назад +13

    Good luck people! Those of us businesses who depend on you are also cheering for you. Get what you deserve!!

  • @burritobronson2680
    @burritobronson2680 10 месяцев назад +19

    Solidarity

  • @ScottiesHobbies
    @ScottiesHobbies 9 месяцев назад

    I unloaded trucks for a few months around 2004. I quickly moved on to a full time job after I quickly got automotive certification. Sounds like nothing has changed. Thank God I didn't get sucked in.

  • @JohnnyBlade12
    @JohnnyBlade12 9 месяцев назад +6

    I worked there for 12 years all together (I left once then came back) and I couldn't take it anymore and left. I couldn't make much money and my brother and I worked super hard and were constantly harassed by my full time supervisors. We had some of the best pph and if we dropped even a little because of exhaustion or whatever they would come in a berate us for it. So this video is full of so much truth. I stand with all of the employees.

    • @babyspider99
      @babyspider99 9 месяцев назад +1

      As an hourly at ups for over 30 years I don't believe you. I clearly understand you.may have had a few jack azz supervisors but you can't have one for 12 years

  • @ronnieam33
    @ronnieam33 10 месяцев назад +19

    I was a Teamster driving a cement mixer, and it was the same story with the company management. They always want you on the bubble, so they can fire you. That is the playbook for companies that have to deal with a union. It's a game, and they are great at it!!

    • @Bill-sp8kb
      @Bill-sp8kb 9 месяцев назад

      I drove a concrete mixer for seven years as a non-union driver, for $ 10.50/hr, no benefits whatsoever. I liked the job because I was home every day, met many good, hardworking people at construction and oilfield sites. The pay just wasn't worth a rip.

  • @tommynikon2283
    @tommynikon2283 10 месяцев назад +13

    My take: I worked p/t for UPS during college; nights M-F, 5-9'ish, 1978-82. Thereafter I worked all the Xmas slams, etc. in the Browns. It was a GRIND then! The package rates/expectations were insane. And now....nothing has changed! In the summers it was so hot on the various sort lines in the warehouse that on the breaks we would run thru the truck wash stations to cool off. Just get SOAKED. And now UPS is whining about actual air-conditioning in the trucks? INSANITY. I think management needs to take a few days in the field, making deliveries- to REMEMBER the grind that drivers, sorters, ALL package handlers go thru. And EXPERIENCE every day. I'm with the employees.....they've EARNED it.

  • @MezbahRijvee
    @MezbahRijvee 6 месяцев назад +1

    They caught me as well. I applied for the Driver Helper which was originally $21 an hour here in New York. But all of a sudden, I check back and the pay is now $16.20

  • @konradschnell6136
    @konradschnell6136 10 месяцев назад +2

    UPS Employee of 15+ yrs. They treat us hub employees like shit. We are worked to the bone and the pay is horrible. While the company bought back over 8 billion in stocks this past year and the new ceo makes 30 million a year w a 10 million sign on bonus. UPS stop being so cheap. We will strike!!!! WE ARE TIRED. WE ARE UNDERPAID. WE ARE SICK OF BEING TREATED LIKE SHIT! UNION STRONG! READY TO STRIKE!

  • @pangea1now
    @pangea1now 10 месяцев назад +23

    I worked part time doing graves at UPS. The major reason part time employees aren't being taken care of is because they don't participate in the union as much as the drivers.

    • @Praisethesunson
      @Praisethesunson 10 месяцев назад +7

      Sounds like they need a fresh dose of Solidarity

    • @pangea1now
      @pangea1now 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@Praisethesunson hopefully they are getting it right now

    • @anthonymaestas4863
      @anthonymaestas4863 10 месяцев назад +6

      It's a chicken and egg thing. If the full timers are also not looking out for the part timers, then they is little reason for the Parr timers to be involved. Especially of they get thrown under the bus. Over the past twenty years have seen companies wedge union members in ways like this.

    • @dosmastrify
      @dosmastrify 10 месяцев назад +1

      This

    • @MrBoker69
      @MrBoker69 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@anthonymaestas4863 Very well said.

  • @DevelopmentRobco
    @DevelopmentRobco 10 месяцев назад +152

    As a USPS employee I think many of us wish we had a union like UPS. At least they have balls to say "no deal". Postal unions can't say no and they can't strike... What good is a union at that point?

    • @aquafishsoup
      @aquafishsoup 10 месяцев назад

      Don’t you mofos just hide in the bathroom milking the government for all they’re worth?

    • @augustheat
      @augustheat 10 месяцев назад +2

      id rather be able to strike so WE can get ac in our trucks lol union is useless when you cant strike thats why im not in it anymore

    • @whereisthedollar
      @whereisthedollar 10 месяцев назад +4

      Electric utility retired manager here. We even got IBEW, A/C in trucks back in the mid 80's. They had some juice then. Then we called them Temp employees, before they could get on board as a F/T with all pay/benefits. These companies have taken it new levels to do more and get more from workers, with less pay for more profit and Unions were powerless to stop it. Same in the RR industry with PSR.

    • @-SP.
      @-SP. 10 месяцев назад +9

      @@Filling_tags At USPS you aren't stuck as a part timer with low hours and low wages. Most people I know that work at USPS work full time and get like $1-$1.50 pay raises each year

    • @imustbecrazy5626
      @imustbecrazy5626 10 месяцев назад

      Joe Biden bought the postal union and it was used to ship fake ballots to 5 key counties for the most votes any president has ever received.

  • @candicerichardson2836
    @candicerichardson2836 9 месяцев назад +2

    20 years with this despicable company and yes I have tons of horror stories!

  • @RichardBarnes0
    @RichardBarnes0 10 месяцев назад +63

    America is broken

    • @banjohero1182
      @banjohero1182 10 месяцев назад +13

      nah, that's just all the capitalism

    • @vizerandevir6422
      @vizerandevir6422 10 месяцев назад +15

      @@banjohero1182 Most people are so brain broken that they cant separate the capitalism and the protestant work ethic from the country.

    • @LexYeen
      @LexYeen 10 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@vizerandevir6422What if, and please come with me on this journey, it was both of those things amplifying each other?

    • @magicdance4273
      @magicdance4273 10 месяцев назад

      ​@vizerandevir6422 the protestant work ethic _is_ the capitalism.
      "Be thankful for work" is such a stupid fucking maxim that helps no one but the rich.

    • @magicdance4273
      @magicdance4273 10 месяцев назад +4

      The system is working as intended.

  • @fredb380
    @fredb380 10 месяцев назад +10

    I hope all you UPS WORKERS get your raises and benefits. I firmly believe you all deserve it as I’m one that does considerable E Commerce purchasing and see plenty of those brown UPS trucks in my area and neighborhood. I WISH YOU ALL THE BEST

  • @bobbycone2
    @bobbycone2 8 месяцев назад

    I hate when I see companies screw people over. I personally have experience with a company that chooses to keep people on as Temps through a temp agency, even though they hire them as a temp-to-hire position, but then they find every excuse in the book not to hire them on as a full time employee. It goes on for years. Some Temps have been there 3 plus years. That's not a temp!

  • @lanedj801
    @lanedj801 7 месяцев назад +1

    17 year part timer here. Ups cuts any and all corners on employees. They constantly delay my start times the day of shorting my hours by 15-30 min . Then they send workers home and have managers take thier positions. The average wait time in SLC for a fulltime hub position is 15 yrs and the only shift available is from 4pm to 3am. Then it will take atleast another 10 years to switch shifts based on opportunity and seniority. You will never see your kids as a fulltime employee. Not everyone can become a driver and the company doesn’t care about other opportunities.
    You can have a kid when you start at ups and they will graduate before you work on the day shift fulltime. That’s how long it takes.

    • @JuanJimenez.
      @JuanJimenez. 5 месяцев назад

      Same reason why i left. Not that it was my intention to, but after being there for 2 years, i see no reason to keep going. ESPECIALLY since they had lowered my wage due to some bullshit contract. And oftentimes, they would send me home, even after being there on time. It just wasn't satisfactory, and i became very depressed and miserable there. Upsetting to know that the 2 years i WASTED working for UPS was all for nothing. I feel bad for any poor soul still working, especially if you're getting under 20 an hour.

  • @johntaylor9381
    @johntaylor9381 10 месяцев назад +11

    Everyone’s got answers and advice until they’re in that position themselves. I’ve been in situations like this. It sucks. You feel hopeless and worthless and trapped. The problems here are fundamental. Work load is higher, yet pay is lower and there’s less hours. Clearly there’s a need for this industry. Where is all this money going?

  • @DROIDFARM
    @DROIDFARM 10 месяцев назад +53

    I used to work at UPS and I can say what these guys are saying is true.

    • @jragon9215
      @jragon9215 10 месяцев назад +1

      No it’s not, I think these workers have become spoiled, UPS is a company that anybody would want to work at, it’s the same as those people saying Disney isn’t a good company to work for, total nonsense….

    • @DROIDFARM
      @DROIDFARM 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@jragon9215 have you ever in your entire life ever worked for UPS in a position covered by the video?

    • @jragon9215
      @jragon9215 10 месяцев назад

      @@DROIDFARM I have never worked for UPS I have tried to apply and get a position at UPS because it’s a very good company and job to have and is why it’s so competitive to get hired for UPS…..

    • @DROIDFARM
      @DROIDFARM 10 месяцев назад

      @@jragon9215 I don't recommend it.

    • @venticated6012
      @venticated6012 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@jragon9215 i literally got hired 4 times in like 3 months lol i just kept quiting cause i didnt like my schedule im at amazon now way better

  • @zachweyrauch2988
    @zachweyrauch2988 6 месяцев назад +1

    Worked for UPS quite a bit. Was a temp twice and part time worker once.
    Got lied to consistently.

  • @kmatsanka
    @kmatsanka 8 месяцев назад

    I worked for UPS for 10 years. 2 years part time loading trucks, then part time driver at night, then eventually full time driver. You have no life at this place. Thank God I messed up my back here and they bought me out. I'd probably still be there because when your in it, the money and benefits make it hard to leave. But you have no life and your married to the corporation. I watched the teamsters union decline over the years, giving into the corporation demands as little by little was taken away. I still see guys from the hub I worked in, and they tell me how lucky I am that I got out when I did. I make less money now and my benefits suck, but I'm so much happier I have my life back. I get it people are here and they have to do what they have to do to survive. But once you leave you never look back and become so thankful.

  • @iranjohn
    @iranjohn 10 месяцев назад +34

    There’s also something weird going on with UPS where they will mark something delivered that has never gone out on the truck. The only reason I know this is my regular, UPS driver and I researched the package. Basically they’re trying to make it look like drivers are stealing and they’re not. Also, this cannot be flipped a reason to say that they are stealing because these things have little to no value for anyone, but the rare people who choose to buy them

    • @ChrisfromGeorgia
      @ChrisfromGeorgia 10 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@StuartBailey-re4mhThat's right💯

    • @okdenny
      @okdenny 10 месяцев назад

      Nobody is trying to frame drivers for theft. We can steal anything we like anytime we want. Put the conspiracy theories to rest.
      We make more money than our supervisors, we have no need to steal and the current management is too stupid to fire anyone, let alone frame them for theft.

    • @kellyandrews8161
      @kellyandrews8161 9 месяцев назад

      Most theft at ups is by management. Ups will set you up to see if you are a thief. They will be recording you, if they are setting you up, to be fired.😊

  • @derickbartlett1714
    @derickbartlett1714 10 месяцев назад +33

    As a Purple semi-truck driver, I really hope the workers of UPS get what they deserve and don't have to go on strike. I wish the current company I work for would provide benefits but that will never happen as it's a company of third-party contractors all trying to fill their retirement accounts.

  • @DruFil-de2ng
    @DruFil-de2ng Месяц назад +1

    Worked 1 year as a feeder driver . A classless and clueless company with AHOLES in mgmt

  • @em34ev3r
    @em34ev3r 8 месяцев назад +1

    I wish they could fire more federal workers and stupid city workers. Working in the private sector is tough, I feel for all of these people.

  • @carlosmacias275
    @carlosmacias275 10 месяцев назад +33

    I worked part time there from 1995 to 2001, went from loader to sorter, went from $8 an hour to $14.25 when i left. For me it was a great way to make money while getting my college education! It was tough, very labor intensive! I could not imagine doing this for a living!

    • @viking956
      @viking956 10 месяцев назад +1

      Sounds like this should be a job new entrants to the national workforce would do to "get started". Like McDonald's, or Walmart, or your local grocery store. Sounds like you'd have to be crazy to make this a career. But if you do make it a career, what are they complaining about? It's not like they didn't know the pay and benefits schedule BEFORE they signed up.

    • @Dan16673
      @Dan16673 10 месяцев назад +1

      Its not meant for folks q formal education

    • @Filthy_Larry
      @Filthy_Larry 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@Dan16673not all ups workers are dumb. I’ve seen nurses that I question how they got the job.

    • @h.p.lovecraft936
      @h.p.lovecraft936 9 месяцев назад +2

      I did the same. And what I've seen the Union & ups are fucking the workers over.
      Does anybody find it fucked up that you have to pay a Union fee (literally pay to work)/ then state tax/then federal / a tax on the gas to get to work/ tax on the food for lunch/ we need to pay insurance to drive/ registration fee, inspection sticker etc.. taxes, fees, fines, tickets.

    • @somebitchfromluckystar
      @somebitchfromluckystar 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@viking956you don't have any idea how difficult working for that company is. Its not a "get started" job, unlike flipping burgers you're loading trailers or package trucks with over 400 packages each in a 3-5 hour span and the weight variances are all over the place, in my time working there a lot of people had severe back injuries even when trying to lift safely.

  • @EmilyEverglot
    @EmilyEverglot 10 месяцев назад +7

    This is so awesome! My son worked for UPS for about a year. They always had 0 injuries on the injuries thing! It turned out they just never report the injuries. My son was injuried when o box too nig for the conveyer belt came down. He worked for them back in 2017. It's the same facility though that a young man died at in Kansas City Mo in 2020. I hope that these works are able to unionize and getting what they deserve!!!!

    • @traybern
      @traybern 10 месяцев назад

      They ARE ALL unionized!!!!!

  • @jevonholt9051
    @jevonholt9051 9 месяцев назад +1

    As a former UPS employee in 95 and I was in the strike and 97 I hope y'all break they ass 🙏🏾👍🏾🤌

  • @bill3641
    @bill3641 10 месяцев назад

    When I was younger, I was working a job that didn't give me what I thought I was worth . I found one that was . They are out there .

  • @bigk9000
    @bigk9000 10 месяцев назад +15

    I had worked part-time at UPS third-shift for 8 years until summer of 2015.
    Thankfully, I was only there for college -- I know, it took me far longer than it should have -- and I hated every bit of it.
    Even after I received my degree, I tried to change positions at UPS where I could put it to use, because they did have great benefits with its health insurance and pension, but they expected me to quit AND THEN APPLY for the position -- with absolutely no guarantee if I'd get the position of not.
    Not only was that ridiculous for the more obvious reasons, but it would've meant I'd lose my 8-year seniority, which is a thing that's incredibly important to UPS workers.

    • @SeniorBillzy
      @SeniorBillzy 10 месяцев назад +2

      Geez man that is the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever heard, and it happened less than a decade ago? Everything about UPS seems so backwards I truly feel for anyone who gets trapped in that soulless company.

    • @bigk9000
      @bigk9000 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@SeniorBillzy Thankfully, my dad doesn't have long until retirement -- about a year-ish tops. But yeah, his injury happened a few years back, and the thing going on with Liberty Mutual, the accident, and the nurse & the recording happened less than a month ago.

    • @bigk9000
      @bigk9000 10 месяцев назад

      @@SeniorBillzy Oops! I thought your comment was in response to the comment I left on the video about Liberty Mutual having PIs follow UPSers around where I commented about how my dad was going through that now.
      Sorry about that. 😅

    • @michaelnickels8638
      @michaelnickels8638 9 месяцев назад

      UPS was always meant as a p/t gig 4 college students 2 have some dough n there pockets every week. The full time benefits was the real bonus

    • @bigk9000
      @bigk9000 9 месяцев назад

      @@michaelnickels8638 I fail to see why that offer couldn't be made to full-timers. Granted, I needed to stay part-time due to my school schedule, but there may be some who may need that if they wish to go back to school.
      Aside from that, I still don't understand the reason why they won't hire internally for positions that required college degrees that they paid for.

  • @Mike__B
    @Mike__B 10 месяцев назад +17

    As a college professor/teacher/instructor in California I feel this. 17 years, part time, and there is no "advancement path" for teachers the only way they can get to a full time position is if the administration gives the department permission to do so, then it's a fight against every other person who wishes to apply for it as it has to be a public search, and as a part time worker for the school the only advantage you get is a "tie breaker" but considering all those decisions are made behind closed doors there practically is no advantage, the last position I applied for (one of 3 that opened up in the last 17 years I've been there) it was told to me by the department chair that they made the decision that there were too many men in the department so wanted to pick a woman... oh if I only had a recorder on at the time maybe I could have used that to my advantage. As a part timer we're paid less of a wage than full time on an class for class basis even though we are required to go to department meetings and the like, our benefits are less, retirement security is non-existent, and to make things work, we often have to teach in multiple counties because there's a limit on how much we can teach in any one county so "they don't abuse part timers" ... yeah that's working out great. Often part time instructors teach more classes than full time in multiple districts and still don't make the same as a full time instructor.

    • @IamJ007
      @IamJ007 10 месяцев назад +1

      There is a whole country for public union jobs, you could find a full time public union job in many parts of the country, but a few or several factors keep you from making such change, which are all personal...

    • @jersefrenzer1265
      @jersefrenzer1265 10 месяцев назад +1

      Not a California hater, but I'd suggest leaving California if you're trying to teach undergrads. There are other universities out there looking for instructors while located at places with a substantially lower cost of living. I'm not trying to put anyone down or anything, just some food for thought.

  • @westcoastogee585
    @westcoastogee585 10 месяцев назад +1

    I only work in a UPS Store- which is a franchise. But i will say that the volume increase has been staggering. The amount of work i do now vs. when i started 7 years ago is at least double after the pandemic and peoples addictions to e commerce. Some days it just makes you want to cry. Pay these men and women commensurate with the value theyve provided to the company.

  • @coffeecup3177
    @coffeecup3177 10 месяцев назад +1

    Mr. Mendoza and Mr. Thomas. You both acknowledge some of the positives at the company along with the negatives. If you are not happy why don't your take your skill set to another company that more accommodates your your schedule. You have a lot to offer other employers.

  • @evangravitz4029
    @evangravitz4029 10 месяцев назад +32

    I was a UPSer from 2001 until 2007. I stand with UPS Teamsters.

  • @piku5637
    @piku5637 10 месяцев назад +41

    UPS Canada still doesn’t pay us a living wage. At least we have benefits. We have a union.

    • @SocraticMind89
      @SocraticMind89 10 месяцев назад +4

      I’m curious what benefits do you even have when health insurance is free in your country?

    • @christal2641
      @christal2641 10 месяцев назад +3

      Without a Union, many jobs were like this. Unions made the 8 hour day the norm for sectors that had never been Unionized. Same with overtime safety, pay, benefits, and wages.
      UNIONS MADE THE LARGE MIDDLE CLASS AMERICA HAS HAD SINCE WWII. BIG BUSINESS has systematically attacked the idea of.unionizing for ECONOMIC DEMOCRACY.

    • @ionparticle
      @ionparticle 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@SocraticMind89 dental and vision sadly isn't universal in Canada, so most benefits will include private insurance covering that.

    • @mr.stonerUDX714
      @mr.stonerUDX714 10 месяцев назад

      you dont have a livable wage BECAUSE OF THE UNIONS. WAKE UP !!! unions are the death of this country

  • @richardmiller2313
    @richardmiller2313 10 месяцев назад +1

    Back in the 80s, UPS was a great company and I say great emphatically.
    For holiday gatherings, UPS would rent a banquet room at the local hotel and have a great spread -you bring your family you socialize you got along with management.
    For safety & service milestones, you would choose from a gift catalog.
    I still have my Makita power tools set!
    You would get your birthday off.
    UPS had a reefer trailer and would hand out frozen turkeys for Thanksgiving
    Then, as has been mentioned, when UPS went from a privately owned stock to a publicly traded stock the service started going downhill and it was all about making the money $$$
    Ahhh, the good ol days…..
    I say thank you to UPS management and the union for these special times & memories👍

  • @SCORPAIN88isme
    @SCORPAIN88isme 10 месяцев назад +1

    I got hurt at UPS, my boss told me I was fine. It’s been a year and I still can’t walk

  • @ItsMe-yv9jd
    @ItsMe-yv9jd 8 месяцев назад +1

    It's the same with the HOME DEPOT, as most staff are part-time and the pay is minimum wage. (They can call you the same day, to cancel your shift, and there's nothing you can do... even though you scheduled your day to be free, to go in and work.)

  • @andrewvoigtdesign5536
    @andrewvoigtdesign5536 10 месяцев назад +4

    I interviewed for a UPS about 13 years ago. The hours, the pay, and expectations all seemed out there. I wanted more than part-time. That's what they were hiring for, so I passed. I've never gave it a second though.

  • @scottspa74
    @scottspa74 10 месяцев назад +9

    DSA is enacting a strike-ready program to support UPS workers if they strike. If you want to help support that, I guess just Google it (sorry, I don't have a link handy).

    • @addammadd
      @addammadd 10 месяцев назад

      Way to represent the DSA, bud. I wonder why they have such a terrible time organizing with the gumption of folks like yourself who couldn’t even bother to locate the necessary information before opening your mouth. Seriously make them look like a group of idiots through your association. If you gave a damn you’d delete this bullshit.

    • @dosmastrify
      @dosmastrify 10 месяцев назад

      All 100 of them huh?

  • @AlmightyTod
    @AlmightyTod Месяц назад

    I currently work for this company and this coming Monday i will be speaking with management along with my local Teamster President.
    I had my manager srceaming in my face for doing what my fulltime Supervisor asked me to do. He srceamed in my face for 5 mins on the floor in front of everyone to see. When asked a question and tried to respond i was told i wasnt allowed to speak. And then he asked where my badge was, so i asked if he was threatning my job he said yes. I then asked if he was just going to over supervise me and write me up. He said yes just so he could walk me out of the door.

  • @henryerrol1
    @henryerrol1 10 месяцев назад +6

    I worked at UPS in college 27 years ago. As a part-time truck loader. The benefits were great. they were through the Teamsters union. It was a really strict place to work. 10 minute breaks on a four hour shift. But it really taught me a lot about working hard and help me excel in my current position. I’ve been with the same company for 27 years since I’ve left ups. It’s a great steppingstone. And should be used as such. Use it to get to the next level.

    • @logans3365
      @logans3365 10 месяцев назад +4

      Not everyone can use it to get to the next level, if everyone did that then there would be no one to deliver packages.
      Majority of jobs are lower level, but the people working them still have needs, the real answer is cutting out greedy capitalist profits and distributing them to those who put in the work.

    • @jasonsolis5416
      @jasonsolis5416 10 месяцев назад

      That sounds incredibly simple minded. Not everyone is in a position to use a stepping stone at the moment. There’s an incredible amount of foster kids like myself, who at 18 begin supporting themselves full time financially. I see no shame in working a full time job after exiting the military, especially since e-commerce is so high, it should definetly be a livable wage as well as career. I hate UPS but hats off to all the service workers out there, I have nothing but respect for y’all.

  • @sk8razer
    @sk8razer 10 месяцев назад +4

    I've never once thought of UPS when thinking of good middle class jobs.

    • @dosmastrify
      @dosmastrify 10 месяцев назад

      The drivers, it is, brown truck make 95k a year without OT.
      Tractor trailer drivers can make twice that

    • @fishordie1992
      @fishordie1992 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@dosmastrifyI make 90 @ ups. Not a driver. 30+ year employee. I live in a low cost of living area. UPS needs to seriously compensate those employees who work in the high cost areas such as Cali or the Northeast. Personally, I never understood why someone would want to live in those areas anyway. Unless someone can't leave those areas due to Family obligations and the like, they'd be much better off leaving there and moving somewhere where there money really goes a long way.

  • @mikeiswhite3
    @mikeiswhite3 10 месяцев назад +9

    Only there for a year and a half. But besides the benefits, there's no reason to work there. If you can find a different job that offers similar benefits, take that. Its rough on the body, especially during summer, unloading trailers while its 104f.

  • @rickgsx1387
    @rickgsx1387 8 месяцев назад

    I was management in Philly during the 1997 strike. We broke their picket line and delivered package ourselves. I thought it was wrong but, I worked under the same intimidation they did. At least they had a union. If I said no, I would’ve been fired on the spot.

  • @celinehary3222
    @celinehary3222 9 месяцев назад +1

    It's all about greed and profit on the part of UPS. Unbelievable! Power and blessings to the workers!

  • @kennethschlegel870
    @kennethschlegel870 10 месяцев назад +15

    hope this strike doesn't get busted like the rail strike 😡

    • @user-dd1bb4tw4r
      @user-dd1bb4tw4r 10 месяцев назад +8

      The rail unions have an agreement with the government in their contracts where they can bust the strike. UPS teamsters have no language in our contract that gives the government to do that they couldn't do anything to stop a strike. They may however be able to force UPS to accept a contract 😎

    • @RedLion502
      @RedLion502 10 месяцев назад

      @@user-dd1bb4tw4rjust curious, how can they force the Teamsters to accept a contract?

    • @user-dd1bb4tw4r
      @user-dd1bb4tw4r 10 месяцев назад +2

      @RedLion502 they can't. That's what I was saying. The rail unions on the other hand can have congress force accept their contracts. Pretty bs if you ask me

    • @RedLion502
      @RedLion502 10 месяцев назад

      @@user-dd1bb4tw4r oh crap I had no idea

  • @DG-ne6ch
    @DG-ne6ch 10 месяцев назад +10

    Also keeping you as a parttime driver (aka. cover driver ) for 2-4 years. So UPS don't have to pay into Fulltime pension