Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
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#17
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Obsolete job titles are kept in contract books as a holding spot. Unions and management meet in arbitration and sometimes to settle a discilplinary action the individual rather than being discharged is transferred to that title. So effectively their pay is cut and they are generally used as helpers with the chance of regaining their former position by accrediting themselves in the future |
#18
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#19
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Precisely. The traditional media sells more advertising by raising passions of outrage, worry, and so on. Social media is mostly an echo chamber of whatever group you want to listen to. The noise-to-signal ratio from our devices is very high. More device time isn’t healthy. But it’s easy to tune out much of the noise if we try — beginning with the on-off switch.
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#20
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Personally I have no experience with how a railroad works or should work. I only have maritime transportation industry experience. The article gave me insights to how the optimization processes have transformed a traditional industry from labor intensive to minimal labor. However, the industry appears very similar to the airline industry with scheduling optimization. Lots of federal airline regulation for labor requirements, max hours, backup requirements, similar to the maritime industry with continuous testing and safety education requirements, minimum labor requirements to work in the industry. Not so much with railroads. . . . obviously. That technology transformation in labor reduction means less opportunities for future employment, seen it, been part of it, assisted in it in some places. There are many, many secondary and tertiary effects which are very similar to the monopolies and trusts of the 1920s and 30's, with the industrial transformation. glad I am almost watching and not participating. |
#21
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#22
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Check into the history of railroad Union negotiations for a point where increased wages were traded for no or little sick leave. Therein may be the answer to the reluctance to add it now...
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#23
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When I was getting my MBA in the 70s, the economics course I had to take taught that when unemployment went below 5%, inflation would result. When unemployment started dropping after the COVID recovery, I posted that concern and was poo-pooed by friends saying that theory had been debunked. And yet here we are, with unemployment low and inflation raging.
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#24
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I represented the union I belong to and was the single negotiator for a number of contracts. One that I was proud of had 27 signatures, 26 from their side of the table and mine. What it boils down in most cases is the employer's representatives are sent in with a parameter they have to stick to, and they usually try to go below that to secure their own jobs. The employers send in his representatives with one thing in mind, profits and what it takes to get what they want doesn't matter. I on the other hand would go in with a number of demands from my members which I knew many were ridiculous, but I had to put it on the table. Once you pass the nonsense and if everyone entered this in good faith you would come with settlement. I settled one contract in day most others took months. It's a tug of war. As in many negotiations you knew you had a fair contract when either both parties left the table happy or unhappy. I approached these negotiations with two priorities to ensure my members had a safe environment to work in and to get them what would be a fair salary. Many people will blame the employers and many people will blame the unions, but until you're sitting at the table you really shouldn't pass judgment.
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#25
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The complaining is from the self-inflicted wounds.
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#26
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Think the writer had his point of view and was not at all a balanced article. Wonder if the writer was a member of the railroad union? |
#27
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Best reply to a ? where in 90%+ of the world do not have the expertise to answer these ?s.
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#28
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#29
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Most of those jobs are for very unskilled labor, such as in the restaurant industry. Went to 2 restuaruants last week. Both 1/2 full and both had 15 minute wait times. Saw 1 maybe 2 wait staff walking around when we waited to hear that there was a 15 minute wait. Also, affecting skilled workers. Have a relative who can not find engineers in S. Florida. They can not afford to live there in a decent neighborhood, with a starting salary of 125K+.
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#30
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When I had a state job in the '70s we had sick leave. When I quit I had many sick leave days available. I was told by my fellow workers to be sick during the last month to use up my sick leave.
Dad called it slick leave. |
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