Quote:
Originally Posted by firstdown
My buddy is a good example of what the union does in the way of getting in the way. He was installing things into the dash of F150 trucks which kept him pretty busy. After some type of review done by the union his mgr informed him that he would now have two other guys doing this task. When he asked why the mgr said it had something to do with union regulations. So now he had 2 other guys doing a job that he was doing on his own. These were guys they had to higher and would guess that had to be a cost close to $200,000 a year on Ford. MY buddy tried to talk them into just paying him more if they thought he was over worked. Mgr said that would be great if the union would allow that.
|
this works both ways. in January, my work laid off about 100 people. guess who absorbed their jobs? the remaining employees. guess who doesn't get any more money? the remaining employees. sure, im glad to have a job. but since that lay off, we have added a handful of salary jobs. do you really think this happens if there is a union? and the people that point to the hourly workers at G.M as the root of the problem make me laugh. what about those C.E.O's making all the decisions, and millions to boot? think they might have had something to do with it?