3 minute read
‘Everybody’s Mad’: UPS Workers Prepared to Strike
BY JOE PORELLO
The more than 300,000 people who work for the United Parcel Service, including 1,500 in Richmond, may go on strike this summer — if the International Brotherhood of Teamsters union and UPS management can’t reach an agreement by July 31. A strike could have major economic consequences.
Advertisement
The Teamsters and UPS management began negotiations in Washington, D.C. last month. The workers’ contract expires Aug. 1.
According to the Teamsters, UPS is the single largest employer in the union and holds the largest private sector collective bargaining agreement in North America. So a strike could have adverse effects for many.
“It’s scary because everyone would miss out on a lot of money,” said Emile “Zach” McDonald, a five-year UPS employee.
The only previous national UPS strike was in 1997. It lasted 15 days, costing the company approximately $850 million.
If an agreement is not reached by the July 31 deadline, it could send ripples through the economy. UPS says it transports 6% of the U.S. gross domestic product.
Some employees at Richmond’s North
Us
Bay Hub currently earn $15.50 per hour — less than the local $16.17 minimum wage. The Teamsters Union wants the base pay to rise $5-10 per hour.
“Having your labor contract be below the minimum wage is ridiculous,” said Teamsters for a Democratic Union founder Ken Paff. “It’s not like they’re tipped employees.”
Paff started TDU in 1975. It is a nonprofit organization independent from the union.
“We’ve been working for decades to reform the union and really make it a model to reform the whole labor movement,” said Paff.
The union is also pushing for more full-time work, as the ’97 strike slogan “Part-time America Won’t Work” reverberates.
“There’s a lot of turnover because of people being desperate for money and then leaving as soon as they find something that pays better,” said McDonald.
“It’s unsafe to have a bunch of untrained people working in the warehouse and loading trucks.”
Part-time employees guaranteed only three and a half hours of work daily make up more than half the workforce.
“The full-timers are the engine because they’re more the longtime workers, the leaders, the stewards of change,” said Paff.
In addition, Teamsters and UPS employees want to end the two-tier system added in the last contract that requires roughly four years of employment before workers reach the higher tier.
“We’ve seen other unions use tier systems, and over time, it brings everyone down,” said McDonald. “It’s intolerable.”
Employees in the bottom tier make less money, have fewer benefits and protections, and in some instances, replace more experienced top-tier workers to save the business money.
“Everybody’s mad, including the ones on the top tier,” said Paff.
Eliminating driver-facing cameras and nixing excessive overtime are part of the desired agreement as well.
Protection from hot weather is also being pursued after the 2022 death of a 24-year-old UPS worker who collapsed on the job. And last summer, delivery drivers shared posts that went viral of severe temperatures in their trucks.
“Even at McDonald’s, employees have air conditioning and at least make minimum wage,” said Paff.
At a “Teamster Rebellion” fundraising event in Richmond earlier this month, donors, activists and UPS employees gathered to spread awareness.
JOE PORELLO
According to Paff, employee involvement in the union is at an all-time low. That’s not true only of UPS. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported in January that 10.1% of U.S. workers were unionized in 2022, making the union membership rate “the lowest on record.”
“We are trying to put the ‘movement’ back in ‘labor movement,’ ” said Paff. “The reason inequality has spiraled out of control in this country is, in large part, due to the weakening of unions.”
UPS broke a company record by generating $100 billion and CEO Carol Tomé took home $19 million in salary.
“(UPS) is making record profits every quarter, and it’s really disgusting they would take somebody’s wage and cut it just to buy back more of their stock,” said McDonald. “These are the people that do the work that actually makes them money.”
The Teamsters seek an agreement sharing the lump sum of pandemic profits with employees.
“Not unlike a lot of workers in this country, they’re sick of being pushed around,” said Paff.
If a strike happens, the Teamsters have a $300 million fund to help with worker-
Staff
Publisher Malcolm Marshall
Editor
Danielle Parenteau-Decker
Contributors
Julia Métraux
Amadi Ji Jaga
Michael J. Fitzgerald
Joe Porello
Samanatha Kennedy
Mitzi Pérez-Caro
Kelsey Oliver