T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
498.1 | who paid for this | PRIMES::ZIMMERMANN | VOTE for 'REAL CHOICES' to the DCU BoD | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:19 | 8 |
| Any idea who sponsored this mailing. If it was sent by John Sims, how
did he get the addresses of all of the members of DCU. If it was sent
by my credit union, I have to wonder if this was an effective use of
funds.
Just wondering,
Mark
|
498.2 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | DCU Election: Vote for REAL Choices | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:24 | 12 |
| > Digital urges you to...
> (3) familiarize yourself with the
> credentials of those standing for election
Well, there we have it, from no less a person than the Vice President
of Strategic Resources. Digital wants Digital employees to familiarize
themselves with the credentials of those standing for election. So if
anyone gives me any grief about handing out information that contains
the credentials of those standing for election, I'll tell them I'm
just helping John.
Tom_K
|
498.3 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | DCU -- I'm making REAL CHOICES | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:34 | 10 |
|
If it had just mentioned points 2, 3 and 4, this would have been a
neutral "do the right thing" message. As published, it's more an official
DEC position that favors the candidates by nomination while continuing
to duck the real issues.
Sort of a "Do the right thing -- (not)" [(not) is whispered]
I'm disappointed -- sadly, not suprised, but disappointed.
|
498.4 | Base note sent US mail from Digital Equip Corp. | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:51 | 21 |
| I just got home (I'm on vacation time today) and found out that both my
wife and I received the text contained in the base note via US mail today.
The envelope is marked "Digital Equipment Corporation, 146 Main Street,
Maynard Massachusetts 01754-2571". So it wasn't the DCU or a private
individual who sent it.
My wife is not a Digital employee, though she and I are both DCU members.
So it wasn't sent to a database of Digital employees.
The text says "Digital urges you to (1) read the Report of the DCU
Nominating Committee which discusses the qualifications used to select
nominees for DCU's Board positions." The Nominating Committee has
elsewhere said (repeatedly) that they picked the "best" candidates.
Is there anything that isn't clear about this mailing?
Larry Seiler
PS -- It was sent bulk rate -- 24.8 cents instead of 29 cents.
Is that more evidence that the DCU didn't send it? :-)
|
498.5 | | BSS::C_BOUTCHER | | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:58 | 8 |
| I am not disappointed. The way I read John's memo he is asking people
to get out and vote for this election. No matter what his intent
(which is what I read being questioned here IMO), I think he is asking
people to do what they need to do to pick people that will best
represent them on the DCU BoD.
Let's try to focus on the fact that it is everyone's best interest to
vote for those you think will represent you best on the BoD.
|
498.6 | US mail. And mine was first class | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Mon Mar 16 1992 13:07 | 22 |
| Several people have written to me about how the John Sims letter got to me.
Although I mentioned a postmark in the title, I neglected to make it clear.
It arrived via US mail, at my home address. (Which happens to be a PO Box.
That's the address DCU uses for my statements, of course. It's also the
address Digital uses.)
As Larry says in .4, the envelope is Digital stationery, "146 Main Street,
Maynard", etc. Although that does not necessarily mean to me that DCU
didn't mail it, especially since it had to have been DCU's mailing list which
was used, given that Larry's wife got a letter. (Rathole: although it isn't
clear whether Digital's money or DCU's money went for the postage, I'd think
that someone, either Digital stockholders or DCU shareholders, might want to
better understand why $38,000 of SOMEONE's money needed to be spend on a memo
which merely says "vote". I was going to do that anyway. :)
My letter was evidently different from Larry's, though, in that it was first-
class metered mail -- the full 29 cents.
Incidentally, I thought it curious that the postmark was Jaffrey, NH. I don't
get much mail from Jaffrey. But I'll give good odds that in the next day or
two I get another envelope via exactly the same route (the ballot).
|
498.7 | But "most importantly, to (4) vote" IS right | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Mon Mar 16 1992 13:21 | 21 |
| .5> I am not disappointed. The way I read John's memo he is asking
.5> people to get out and vote for this election. No matter what his intent
.5> (which is what I read being questioned here IMO), I think he is asking
.5> people to do what they need to do to pick people that will best
.5> represent them on the DCU BoD.
What stood out for me from his letter was (1):
"read the Report of the DCU Nominating Committee which discusses the
qualifications used to select nominees for DCU's Board positions"
I expect this "Report" to be a campaign statement. I wish the candidates
nominated by us, the membership, were going to be given a similar opportunity.
I'm not disappointed either. I interpret his letter as asking people to
focus their attention on the Nominating Committee's preferences, and on
"qualifications" and "credentials". Those things are important, but so are
statements of direction and principle, as is track record of incumbents, and
as were constitution and conduct of the Nominating Committee. John Sims's
letter would have people ignore those things.
|
498.8 | Vote, when appropriate | YNGSTR::BROWN | | Mon Mar 16 1992 13:27 | 13 |
| Tangent to DCU, but...
One has to wonder why DEC shareholders aren't given the same
get-out-and-vote rah-rah from upper management when it comes
time for the company's own annual meeting proxy.
Could it be that if shareholders voted, that the collection of
non-shareholding tired old white octagenarian males that DEC
has as a board might come under some pressure? And if they
started to represent shareholder's interests like a COMPAQ or
Data General board, that upper management could find itself
with the same fate as a Canion or DeCastro?
|
498.9 | | AOSG::GILLETT | Petition candidate for DCU BoD | Mon Mar 16 1992 13:36 | 26 |
| re: Last Few...
I'm disappointed that the memo was sent because it is clearly an
endorsement by a high-ranking official within Digital of only those
candidates whose names were placed in nomination by the nominating
committee. Without a balancing statement by petition candidates (whether
or not they are petition candidates), it would appear, in my opinion
with no attempt to impune Mr. Sims reputation, that Mr. Sims is saying
that the nominated candidates are more qualified than those running
by petition.
The NH postmark is interesting. My Special Meeting announcement was
postmarked somewhere in NH. This says to me that the letter was sent
on DCU's mailing list. Does the letter clearly state anywhere that
the source was not DCU? In written correspondence to Phil Gransewicz
and myself, DCU agreed to mail material to all members provided
that the material acknowledge that it was not sourced via DCU, and
that we subject it to DCU's editing, and that we, of course, pay
big bucks to send one page.
This is very disappointing. Digital has entered the fray, so to speak,
clearly on the side of nominated candidates. Sim's letter is on DEC
stationery, so I can only conclude that his memo constitutes an
endorsement by the Corporation.
./chris
|
498.10 | Deja Vu Again | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | I'm voting for REAL CHOICE candidates next week | Mon Mar 16 1992 14:28 | 23 |
|
So what has changed here people? It can be stated in one word,
*nothing*.
The week before the Special Meeting Digital's Treasurer Ilene Jacobs
steps forward and endorses the current board on VTX and over the
network. Warnings of dire consequences should they be removed. Now
where was Digital P&P then?
Now we have a direct mailing, on Digital letterhead from a
Vice-President with questionable intent in my opinion based on the time
of its arrival (with ballots). As a petition candidate, his message
fails to mention my (as well as 10 others) candidacy while urging
people to read the Nominating Comm. statement. Any guesses as to what
our 'independent Nominating Comm.' will say?
As a Digital employee and stockholder I have to ask, "Is this appropriate
use of Digital Equipment Corp. money at a time when we are laying
people of and posting losses?". As a DCU owner and board candidate I
have to ask, "Why is Digital again attempting to influence an election
concerning DCU? Why are they SO vested in the status quo?".
|
498.11 | Mailing list for the letter | PLOUGH::KINZELMAN | Paul Kinzelman | Mon Mar 16 1992 14:51 | 3 |
| I just spoke to Patti - she said that John Sims purchased the DCU mailing list
to send out his letter in the same way that we could - by paying $20K to
$30K or whatever the exact figure is and going to a mailing house.
|
498.12 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Mon Mar 16 1992 14:53 | 4 |
| >> concerning DCU? Why are they SO vested in the status quo?".
I've been wondering that too, considering the mess the status quo
managed to get DCU into.
|
498.13 | | RANGER::CANNOY | Perpendicular to everything. | Mon Mar 16 1992 14:55 | 1 |
| So how could they send it out on DEC letterhead?
|
498.14 | | AOSG::GILLETT | Petition candidate for DCU BoD | Mon Mar 16 1992 14:57 | 11 |
| >I just spoke to Patti - she said that John Sims purchased the DCU mailing list
>to send out his letter in the same way that we could - by paying $20K to
>$30K or whatever the exact figure is and going to a mailing house.
Cool....who wrote the check? Did my employer pay for this ringing
endorsement of nominated candidates? The letter appeared on company
letterhead. Usually stuff on corporate letterhead implies "this is
what the company says."
./chris
Who-ain't-got-$30,000
|
498.15 | I believe DEC paid for the letter | PLOUGH::KINZELMAN | Paul Kinzelman | Mon Mar 16 1992 15:20 | 17 |
| I don't have proof of this, but I speculate that DEC paid for it because
it's on DEC stationery, as well as John endorsed the nominated candidates
*IN DIGITAL'S NAME*.
In my opinion, the letter is not an overt endorsement. I beleve, however,
that the letter implies an endorsement of the nominated candidates.
To paraphrase, he said:
1) read the report discussing the qualifications used to select candidates
2) familiarize yourself with the credentials of those standing for election
I agree that the credentials of the nominated candidates are quite
excellent. But then the current board is made up of people with excellent
credentials. Excellent credentials don't necessarily equate with an
effective board.
Since we don't have an extra $25K hanging around, we can't let the
membership know. Sigh.
|
498.16 | An even better question | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | I'm voting for REAL CHOICE candidates next week | Mon Mar 16 1992 15:25 | 10 |
|
Another damn good question for you all to ponder. John Sim's
references "the report of the DCU Nominating Committee which discusses
the qualifications used to select nominees for DCU's Board positions".
The election material sent out by DCU for the last 4 years contains no
such "Report". How does Sim's not only know the it *has* one but that
*what it says*???
Seperate entities or is DCU a seperate division of Digital?
|
498.17 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | DCU Election: Vote for REAL Choices | Mon Mar 16 1992 15:30 | 5 |
| So DEC paid $20K-$30K to DCU for the list, and then on top of that
paid ~$26K for postage to actually mail it (plus stationary costs)?
Or was did the $20K-$30K paid to DCU include stationary and postage?
Tom_K
|
498.18 | | AOSG::GILLETT | Petition candidate for DCU BoD | Mon Mar 16 1992 15:35 | 13 |
| Phil & I sent mail to DCU requesting access to the
mailing list. They wrote to us that they would
take our text, provided we submitted it for edit,
and clearly acknowledged that it was not sourced
by DCU, duplicate it, and mail it "on our behalf"
for a sum of money around (don't have the letter
here today) $20,000.
That would be for a one-page document. Our requests
for a version of the list on magtape was flatly
refused at any price.
./chris
|
498.19 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Mon Mar 16 1992 15:38 | 12 |
|
I don't care how much Sims paid for the list. I'd like to know why the
DCU is selling a mailing list of its members to *ANYONE*! I get enough
crap in the mail that I don't want. Does this mean that some mail
order business with $20K can purchase the DCU list? If not does this
mean that the $20K is just a token so the DCU can disclaim any
collusion with DEC to influence the outcome of the election?
Compared to how mad I am now I was happy before!
Steve
|
498.20 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon Mar 16 1992 15:45 | 11 |
| Consider the following possibility. The DCU won't give out its list to
the REAL CHOICES folks because it has a policy of not giving out its
list to anybody. (Actually, I think I like that idea, however
inconvenient it may be in this case.) Therefore, the only way to use
the list is via a mail-order house that is known to treat the list
confidentially. That would reasonably absolutely everything that has
happened.
It does assume there is a mail-order house that does treat the lists it
receives confidentially, but I'm willing to believe that one of those
exists.
|
498.21 | | MIPSBX::thomas | The Code Warrior | Mon Mar 16 1992 15:47 | 3 |
| I find it interesting to note that 345 in the "... $345 million ..." is of
a different typeface than the rest of the document. Did DCU edit the mailing
and add/modify this figure?
|
498.22 | Comments | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Mon Mar 16 1992 15:52 | 24 |
| Re .20
As has been pointed out elsewhere the "REAL CHOICES" support group did
inquire about using the DCU mailing list. We were told we could use
it through a mailing house for about $25K. Unfortunately we don't have
the deep pockets that Digital the corporation has so couldn't come up
with the $25K.
I fail to understand why it is in Digital's Business Interest to use
money simply to tell DCU members to vote. For those of you that say
that this is an endorsement of the "nominating committee" candidates
note that the Sim's memo skirts right on the edge of endorsing them,
instead pushing it off to the "Nominating Committee Statement".
I'm waiting in anticipation to see what this "statement" says in the
election flier. I bet reading between the lines it is going to say
something like:
"Vote for the nominated candidates. Don't even think of considering
those 'petition' candidates listed at the end."
We'll see.
Dave
|
498.23 | How renting an address list works | KALI::PLOUFF | Owns that third brand computer | Mon Mar 16 1992 16:06 | 13 |
| re: .20 trustworthy "mail-order house"
The normal procedure in the direct mail marketing industry is this:
Company A rents its mailing list to Company B. B never sees A's
mailing list. Instead, bonded Company C makes up labels from A's list,
applies them to B's flyers, then sends them out in the mail.
These bonded mailing companies survive only because they can be trusted
to keep lists confidential.
DCU is following industry standards here.
Wes
|
498.24 | $ clarification | PLOUGH::KINZELMAN | Paul Kinzelman | Mon Mar 16 1992 16:11 | 6 |
| Sorry I wasn't clear before. The $20K-$30K quoted previously is how much it
would cost if *any* DCU member wanted to communicate with the members about
the election. You pay the money (depending on whether it's 1st class or
bulk), give DCU one copy of what you want to send out, and DCU contracts with
the mailing house to get it sent out. They won't release the magtape
directly to anybody other than the mailinghouse.
|
498.25 | | AOSG::GILLETT | Petition candidate for DCU BoD | Mon Mar 16 1992 16:31 | 5 |
| Further clarification to avoid unnecessary flames -
my understanding is that DCU doesn't rent its list out
for non-business purposes. Our request for the
list was directly related to the election.
./chris
|
498.26 | Is there a precedent? | TPSYS::SHAH | Amitabh Shah - Just say NO to decaf. | Mon Mar 16 1992 18:01 | 11 |
|
I'm too new to Digital and to DCU to know this, but did the Office
of Vice President, Strategic Resource (which Mr. Sims now holds) send
out similar memos to all DCU members at previous elections also?
If yes, then I see nothing wrong with this time.
If no, then I have to wonder why this election is special.
Would any of you oldtimers know about the precedents?
|
498.27 | | AOSG::GILLETT | Petition candidate for DCU BoD | Mon Mar 16 1992 18:09 | 5 |
| I'm not an oldtimer (3 years), but in previous
elections I've voted in, there has been no such
mailings.
/chris
|
498.28 | | TOOK::LEIGH | DCU: I'm voting for REAL CHOICES | Mon Mar 16 1992 18:13 | 1 |
| I've been a DCU member since 1982. It's never been done before.
|
498.29 | | MLTVAX::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Mon Mar 16 1992 19:08 | 4 |
| I've been a member since DEFCU was formed. This has never hppened in the past.
-Jack
|
498.30 | Letter of complaint to Ron Glover | ESBLAB::KINZELMAN | Paul Kinzelman | Mon Mar 16 1992 21:24 | 41 |
| I called Ron Glover to register a formal complaint. He had just returned
from a business trip and had not seen the John Sims memo so I appended it
to the end of this message (I'll leave it out here since it's at .0).
Ron promised to meet with me tomorrow. I sent it to Ron, with a CC to
John Sims (as Ron suggested):
I received a letter sent by John Sims to DCU members today. I am very
concerned about this letter because many people will take the letter as
Digital *the company* endorsing the nominated candidates. While some
may say that the letter skates on the very edge of a direct endorsement,
I believe that this letter is a violation of the spirit of
non-involvement by the corporation in the DCU election, especially
because John represents Digital and not just himself. Furthermore, he
refers to the DCU Nomination Committee report which I have never seen
and doubt that anybody else outside of DCU and John have also seen. How
did John as a DCU member get ahold of this?
I assume that Digital paid DCU for the mailing because the letter was on
Digital stationery and because John said he represented Digital. If
this is true, I am deeply disturbed that Digital funds were used in
support of the nominated candidates in this way. Incidents such as this
have caused the election to achieved an emotional pitch in the extreme.
SMAUG::DCU note thread number 498 discusses John's memo so you can see
for yourself what issues the memo has raised. It was not my, nor any of
my associates' choice for this to happen. An endorsement by John in
this way, similar to the endorsement by Ilene Jacobs of the board
previous to the special election *in the name of Digital*, can only
serve to raise the emotionalism of this election.
I believe that John's memo represents an endorsement of the nominated
candidates because it stresses the importance of the nomination
committee's qualifications. Nominated candidates are obviously
qualified under these guidelines, and the candidates by petition did not
qualify. Therefore, it's clear from John's letter one should vote only
for candidates that did qualify under the nomination committee
guidelines. Note also that the nomination committee itself violated
DCU's Election Guidelines and thus may not even be qualified to endorse
candidates in the first place.
[John's letter follows]
|
498.31 | They still can vote for whomever they wish | ERLANG::MILLEVILLE | | Tue Mar 17 1992 05:52 | 22 |
| There is a part of .30 that I cannot see:
.30> Therefore, it's clear from John's letter one should vote only
.30> for candidates that did qualify under the nomination committee
.30> guidelines.
His letter clearly states that we should consider what the Nominating Committee
used in considering candidates. The key word is 'CONSIDER'. No matter how
strong he urges it, it is still a WISH that we CONSIDER their criteria. It does
not mean the expression 'OBEY' as you are infering in your statement by saying
'...SHOULD vote...'. The reader is still free to vote for whomever they wish.
I certainly will, nominated or petition, look at all candidate's qualifications
and vote for the best.
Emotions are running very high in this election. It is very easy to read some-
thing into a letter that is NOT there. True, some people will take him up on
his suggestion, but ONLY BECAUSE they have the FREEDOM to believe he is RIGHT.
That freedom seems to scare some people including yourself. The bottom line is
that they are still free to vote for whomever they wish. He is not telling any-
one they SHOULD vote for anyone.
P.S. My letter was also from Jaffrey NH with 24.8� postage.
|
498.32 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | DCU -- I'm making REAL CHOICES | Tue Mar 17 1992 07:24 | 16 |
|
On the plus side: my wife (DCU member, not DEC employee) showed me her
copy of the letter yesterday evening. When I asked her if mine came,
she said, "Yes, but it's not important -- it just says to read the
information and vote."
On the minus side: after a few minutes, she wondered aloud, "Why does
Digital care about the credit union election?"
Regardless of the words chosen in .30 and .31, it cannot be disputed
that the letter shows a strong interest in the credit union by Digital
Equipment Corporation. It cannot be disputed that John has used his
position within the corporation, the corporate name, and by inference
the corporate coffers, to advance the position of a subset of
candidates, those nominated by committee.
|
498.33 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Tue Mar 17 1992 08:21 | 13 |
|
Re: .31
The question is not whether anyone reading that letter can still
choose whom they want, but whether Mr. Sims as a Digital officer
using a Digital letterhead should have sent a letter to Digital
employees who are also DCU members about *anything* with regard
to the upcoming DCU election.
It is inappropriate.
Steve
|
498.34 | | CVG::THOMPSON | DCU Board of Directors Candidate | Tue Mar 17 1992 08:30 | 20 |
| RE: Postmark costs. Mine came with a .29 postmark. The last four
digits of the 9 digit zip were wrong though. I suspect that the
cost of the "stamp" was based on being able or not to use sorted
mail, sorted by 9 digits, and other random factors.
RE: Topic in general. My wife viewed it as a sleasy attempt to
get people to vote for the nominated candidates. She was also
rather upset to get a letter from a Digital VP telling *her* a non
employee what to do. I'd like to assume that she got this letter
only because the DCU would not sort out the non-employees.
In my opinion the push to read the Nominating Committee report is
a defacto endorsement of it. This by extension supports the conclusion
of the Committee. This is not, IMO, a proper thing for the company
to do. Especially if Digital and the DCU are as we've been told
completely seperate organizations. The DCU doesn't, to my knowledge,
attempt to affect Digital Board of Directors elections. I suspect the
company would object if they did. It should work both ways.
Alfred
|
498.35 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | I'm voting for REAL CHOICE candidates next week | Tue Mar 17 1992 10:00 | 7 |
|
RE: .31
Are you saying that there aren't any people out there that might not be
influenced by Mr. Sims memo?
|
498.36 | What report of the DCU Nominating Committee? | XAPPL::CLARK | Ward Clark | Tue Mar 17 1992 10:05 | 15 |
| John Sim's letter says ...
Digital urges you to (1) read the report of the DCU Nominating
Committee which discusses the qualifications used to select
nominees for DCU's Board positions;
Since I don't recall seeing any such report (except for commentary in
this conference), I'm expecting to see this report as part of the
candidate statements. Has this been the practice in the past?
-- Ward
P.S. I, like many other DCU members, haven't paid much attention to
previous elections. But this time the Clark family (4 voting members)
can't wait to vote.
|
498.37 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | I'm voting for REAL CHOICE candidates next week | Tue Mar 17 1992 10:15 | 14 |
|
I have copies of the election material sent out in the last 4
elections. The only statement is from former President Richard
Mangone. There is no "report" from the Nominating Committee.
Maybe DCU President Chuck Cockburn gave up his statement so that the
committee could "report"? I wonder if Mr. Cockburns message will say
he participated in handpicking the nominated candidates?
We'll have to wait and see what this 'report' is. But isn't
interesting the Nominating Comm. would give a scant 150 words to the
candidates to help save mailing costs? Anybody venture to guess the
word count of the "report"? Would the space have been better used for
more candidate info?
|
498.38 | Bottom line -- This letter costs us money. | NROPST::MPO13::CWHITTALL | Only lefties are in their right mind | Tue Mar 17 1992 10:32 | 15 |
| Let me see if I have this right..
DCU sells its address list for ~ 25K
DIGITAL sends out a letter for ~ 25K (postage)
-----
~ 50K total out of DIGITAL's
bottom line expenses.
Does the ~25K DCU gets cover the printing costs with the
outside contractors (ie stationary & envelopes)? I would
assume it did, otherwise we are talking a lot more money..
So, DIGITAL Equipment Corporation spent ~50K dollars to
urge the Credit Union Members to read the literature and
vote in the coming election.
|
498.39 | Your answer is in .31... | ERLANG::MILLEVILLE | | Tue Mar 17 1992 10:34 | 7 |
| .35> RE: .31, Are you saying that there aren't any people out there that might
.35> not be influenced by Mr. Sims memo?
My .31 answers that question for you:
.31> .... True, some people will take him up on his suggestion, but ONLY
.31> BECAUSE they have the FREEDOM to believe he is RIGHT.
|
498.40 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | DCU Election: Vote for REAL Choices | Tue Mar 17 1992 10:50 | 20 |
| >Digital urges you to (1) read the report of the
>DCU Nominating Committee which discusses the
>qualifications used to select nominees for DCU's
>Board positions; (2) read the Candidates'
>Statements; (3) familiarize yourself with the
>credentials of those standing for election and,
>most importantly, to (4) vote.
The problem with the above is that Digital is making the
DCU Nominating Committee standards for Candidates *the* *standards*
by which a candidate will be judged. I expect the NC report
to state that all NC nominated candidates meet that standard,
(otherwise they would have been nominated), and that no
other candidates do (otherwise they would have been nominated
by the NC). Sure, it's subtle, but if 5% of the members can be
influenced in this way, that's 4400 votes, more than enough
to swing the election.
Tom_K
|
498.41 | Only $25K | PLOUGH::KINZELMAN | Paul Kinzelman | Tue Mar 17 1992 10:53 | 7 |
| Re: .38
To clarify, it's only $25K (approx) for mailing. The $25K cost is what you
pay DCU and they send out the mailing. It's the full cost of anybody doing
a mailing to the DCU member list.
We also don't know for sure who paid for the mailing. Perhaps John paid for
it out of his pocket... :-)
|
498.42 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | I'm voting for REAL CHOICE candidates next week | Tue Mar 17 1992 11:02 | 6 |
|
RE: . 39
So you're saying it's OK for a Digital VP to influence an election
involving another corporate entity?
|
498.43 | his opinion, or Digital's? | PRIMES::ZIMMERMANN | VOTE for 'REAL CHOICES' to the DCU BoD | Tue Mar 17 1992 11:09 | 6 |
| re: 42
It might be ok for John Sims to state his opinion, but not in the name of
Digital Equipment Corp. (assuming John paid for this out of his pocket).
Mark
|
498.44 | | OASS::MDILLSON | Generic Personal Name | Tue Mar 17 1992 11:16 | 2 |
| Not on Digital letterhead with his name on position on it. THAT'S
company endorsement.
|
498.45 | Another "my wife" story | AOSG::GEORGP::jmartin | Joseph A. Martin, Alpha VM | Tue Mar 17 1992 11:29 | 19 |
| Mine said, "You got some junk mail about DCU." I asked "What's it about?"
She replied--on the basis of reading her copy, "Some VP going on about
nothing."
The point is that many of us tend to scan "official communications" for
1) a check, 2) a demand for payment, 3) general menace (e.g. "Mumble,
mumble,...competitive...blah,blah...your health care benefits [alarms
clang loudly, stomach knots here]"). If the communication fails these
tests, we throw it away quickly in the hopes that we won't be buried
alive in our own homes under a mountain of paper.
The letter in question was very circumspect. The reaction of the naive
public has been indifferent. Maybe 5% will make a difference; maybe it
won't. I'll try to remember to wear my "Real Choices" button and to talk
about it with people who ask. What seems important now is to spread the
good word. Some injustices are just too ineffectual to get upset over.
It's time to project some winning confidence in the justice of the cause.
\Joe
|
498.46 | What a waste... | STAR::BUDA | DCU Elections - Vote for a change... | Tue Mar 17 1992 11:41 | 13 |
| RE: .31 (Milleville)
>P.S. My letter was also from Jaffrey NH with 24.8� postage.
I expressly looked at the postage cost and it was $.29 for the one I
received and the one my wife received. Her first question was why is
DEC wasting money in such a wasteful way. Figure that the total cost
will be around $25-$30k, including printing and paper/envelope costs.
In times of belt tightening, it as the wrong thing to occur.
- mark
|
498.47 | | VSSCAD::MAYER | Reality is a matter of perception | Tue Mar 17 1992 13:58 | 52 |
| I was going to dash off a comment in this note last night as soon as I
received my letter but I thought it better if I slept on it. My thoughts are:
1) This is an official letter from Digital Equipment Corporation since it
was sent in an official Digital envelope and was on Official Digital
Stationary.
2) The mailing list was obtained from DCU since it has my DCV #2 (my vanpool
number) on it rather than what is in my Personnel file for a home address.
3) Digital Equipment Corporation has an Official interest in the election to
the Board of Directors of the DCU.
4) John Sims being a Vice-President has enough in discretionary funds to
fund the sending of this letter to DCU's mailing list.
5) If John Sims is attempting to influence the outcome of the election by
getting employees to vote for the nominated candidates, it is quite improper
(if not an outright violation of his on P&P). If he is trying to influence
non-employees, it's none of his business.
6) It occurs to me that there may be an attempt here to keep DCU in Senior
Management hands and until its control.
7) It would be something to raise at the next DEC Shareholders' Meeting as
to why John Sims spend corporate money on this.
8) The DCU is considered a company benefit and as such comes under John Sim's
Management. As such he can do what he wants.
9) The letter was carefully sent out a few days before the ballots preventing
anyone from having a chance (and the money) from responding to it to the same
people who received the letter.
10) I think that John Sims may have misculculated the effect that this letter
may have on the electorate in general and employees in particular. If
anything, if I had been intending to vote for one of the nominated candidates,
this would have encouraged me to switch my votes, after all "effective
governance of the DCU by its Board of Directors is critical to us all".
11) John Sims apparently has read the Report of the DCU Nominating Committee,
which no other DCU member has (except maybe the BOD), according to comments
in this notes conference. Either that means the Report is being sent with
the ballot materials (a first for DCU), in which case he must have seen the
ballot materials (something the DCU and BOD should not be doing) or it was
provided to him separately giving ghim information that noone else has.
12) If I were John Sims I'd worry about how DEC's Board of Directors is going
to look at this attempt to influence an election.
Danny
|
498.48 | | F18::ROBERT | | Tue Mar 17 1992 14:03 | 12 |
| I am waiting to receive this letter. My wife should get one also. I am
going to make sure that the letter states what has been written here.
If so, my wife and I will talk it over.
If she gives me the ok, I am going to call Ken Olsen's secretary
and ask why such a thing is being allowed to happen. What about Ken's
well published rules of conduct to be adhered to by all employees.
Will keep you posted.
Dave
|
498.49 | Don't underestimate the members | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | I'm voting for REAL CHOICE candidates next week | Tue Mar 17 1992 14:14 | 16 |
|
RE: .47
Excellent writeup!
I am on vacation today but went to SHR1 cafeteria from 11:30 - 1:00pm.
The reception is great among DCU members. I enjoyed speaking with many
voters and got what I got consider a great idea (more later) as a
result of speaking with a member.
As for the point about the letter backfiring, you are absolutely right.
Almost everybody we spoke to mentioned it and questioned its intent and
wondered why Digital was spending money on it. I think it will have
the same affect on voters that a similar outside influence attempted to
have on Arizona voters a few years back.
|
498.50 | Curiouser and curiouser | TLE::EKLUND | Always smiling on the inside! | Tue Mar 17 1992 14:46 | 32 |
| A tip of the hat to the eagle-eyed observer who noted the DIFFERENT
type font for the 345 in the letter (that's 345 million in assets). It
appears that the number was filled in AFTER the letter was created or
was corrected at the last minute. Very curious.
What's most interesting is that this number is much lower than the
more commonly cited number of about 380 million. I have to believe
that the 345 is much more current than any other numbers generally
available in monthly statements which lag considerably.
I must admit that I don't find the letter from Mr Sims all that
offensive. It is peculiar in how much space is devoted to urge us
to "read the Report of the DCU Nominating Committee ...". He could
have ended bullet number (1) right there. Peculiar.
All things considered, I have to question why there are so many
strange things happening to influence the election. I do have a bit
of advice for those actually elected. It is possible that you may
discover past practices that were questionable, once you have greater
access to the DCU files. I would encourage you to do NOTHING which
would prevent you from disclosing what you find of an illegal nature.
Please don't sign any agreements which would tie your hands in any way.
For example, let's suppose that you discovered loans which you believe
were illegal (for whatever reason). If you agree to keep confidential
information pertaining to individuals (and individual loans), you may
discover that you cannot easily prosecute any wrongdoing and/or discuss
it in this file. I'd like to suggest that you avoid that problem by
not signing away rights which you might like to retain!
Cheers!
Dave Eklund
|
498.51 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Tue Mar 17 1992 15:06 | 11 |
| Clearly, if the D.A. came and said, "We are conducting an investigation
and request that you make no statement or even acknowledge that you
know about such-and-such activity," I would expect any board member
to be responsible enough to keep quiet. (I would also expect any
board member to make VERY certain the investigation happened!)
I assume that's not what you are suggesting, however. I assume you
are talking about (for example) A Very Important Poobah In Charge Of
Something coming to a board member and saying, "Look, if this ever got
out it could be really embarrassing to so-and-so, and we expect you not
to talk about it."
|
498.52 | | FIGS::BANKS | Just a deer, caught in life's headlights | Tue Mar 17 1992 15:19 | 7 |
| My opinion on why so many strange things are happening around the election is
that it's really simple: Power.
A bunch of fairly senior managers "own" DCU, and they don't want to have to
give it up to anyone, including the people who really own it.
Just my opinion.
|
498.53 | *Digital* paid for the Sims letter | PLOUGH::KINZELMAN | Paul Kinzelman | Tue Mar 17 1992 15:29 | 23 |
| I just got confirmation from Patti D'Addieco concerning who paid for the
"Sims" letter. She said that *Digital* requested the mailing and paid
the appropriate fee (documented elsewhere, on the order of $25K).
She would not tell me the actual person who requested the mailing.
Re: .51 and others
If I make it to the board, there are certain confidential pieces of information
which I would not be allowed to disclose I would respect that. But I would
fight any attempt to widen the set of data that must be protected beyond
the bare minimum required by law. Also, if disclosure of certain
events would make the prosecution of any wrongdoing more difficult, I would
not disclose them, but would make sure the issues were prosecuted to the
fullest extent of the law (at which time they would become public) no matter
who the wrongdoer was.
That said, I intend for the members to be aware of what happened and
perhaps the cause of the great interest by high Digital management in the
outcome of the election.
I think I have demonstrated my commitment to stand up to any Digital
manager at *any* level who might attempt to prevent me from "doing the
right thing" which in this case is the disclosure of what's *really* going on.
I think that commitment is of prime importance in this election.
|
498.54 | my .02 | CSC32::R_HARVEY | Hi Tech goes BOINK! | Wed Mar 18 1992 17:53 | 14 |
|
Jusy my .02. Being asked to turn off lights, terminals and
printers to conserve energy and reduce energy costs I find
the spending of $25,000 an outrageous excess.
Ever other light in some facilities is taken out, why?
To SAVE cash, and this MANAGER decides to spend 25K of
company cash to push his vavorites in an election!! Sounds
like another day at the ANIMAL FARM...to quote "some are more
equal than others".
makes me ill
rth
|
498.55 | DEC stockholder meeting strategy? | DPDMAI::RESENDE | Spit happens, Daddy! | Wed Mar 18 1992 23:13 | 12 |
| Several folks have suggested raising some questions at a DIGITAL
stockholder's meeting.
According to the conversations in the DIGITAL conference, this appears
to be an extremely career-limiting thing to do.
One possible way to achieve this is to recruit former or soon-to-be
former (SERP anyone) employees, who are still DIGITAL stockholders to
raise the issues there.
Presumably, they would be immune from retaliation (altho nothing would
surprise me anymore).
|
498.56 | | AOSG::GILLETT | Petition candidate for DCU BoD | Thu Mar 19 1992 09:33 | 8 |
|
Question: How many average employee salary actions can be funded
by $25,000?
Think about it....
./chris
|
498.57 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | I'm voting for REAL CHOICE candidates next week | Thu Mar 19 1992 10:00 | 8 |
|
RE: .55
>One possible way to achieve this is to recruit former or soon-to-be
>former (SERP anyone) employees, who are still DIGITAL stockholders to
>raise the issues there.
I have a feeling there will be no need to recruit anybody for this.
|
498.58 | Paul must have the Midas touch... | TOOK::LEIGH | DCU: I'm voting for REAL CHOICES | Thu Mar 19 1992 10:16 | 6 |
| I sent mail to Ron Glover on Tuesday morning saying that I had
questions about whether the Sims letter conflicted with PP&P and asking
several specific questions.
48 hours later, I have not received any acknowledgement that my
inquiry was even received.
|
498.59 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Mar 19 1992 11:36 | 8 |
| � We'll have to wait and see what this 'report' is. But isn't
� interesting the Nominating Comm. would give a scant 150 words to the
� candidates to help save mailing costs? Anybody venture to guess the
� word count of the "report"? Would the space have been better used for
� more candidate info?
Do you really think the average voter would read in its entirety a
statement of more than 150 words?
|
498.60 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Mar 19 1992 11:49 | 6 |
| Re: .-1
They would if it were interesting, and allegations of scandal by
insiders are always interesting.
Resumes are not interesting.
|
498.61 | | STAR::BUDA | DCU Elections - Vote for a change... | Thu Mar 19 1992 12:06 | 7 |
| > Do you really think the average voter would read in its entirety a
> statement of more than 150 words?
The average person who CAN vote will NOT vote. The people who vote are
the people who usually pay attention and read what is available.
- mark
|
498.62 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | DCU -- I'm making REAL CHOICES | Thu Mar 19 1992 12:20 | 22 |
|
Re .59:
I believe the voters span a wide range, from those who will vote for the
first seven people in the statements booklet (or the first seven people
on the ballot, which is ordered differently), to those who will try to
understand the issues as best they can. But it's a poor excuse to limit
the statement to 150 words simply because the "average voter" won't read
more than that. DCU knew that there was more to talk about this time
than experience. They knew that limiting the statements to 150 words
would force candidates to choose between listing "qualifications" and
addressing the real issues. The nominated candidates chose to list
qualifications; the petition candidates chose to address the issues;
the real pity, and disservice to voters capable of reading more than
150 words at a time, is that they were forced to make the choice at
all.
It's an even poorer excuse to limit the size of the statements because
of mailing costs (a reason cited to me by DCU), only to produce a
separate and unprecedented mailing to advertise the names of the
nominated candidates.
|
498.63 | better luck next year | SASE::FAVORS::BADGER | One Happy camper ;-) | Thu Mar 19 1992 12:21 | 6 |
| I had an employee express his concern over the Sims memo and his
badge number appearing on the ballot. In these days of hard to find
jobs, this is strong arm tactics. Employees will choose their job
over the DCU.
ed
|
498.64 | What % of voters read the statements in #489.2+? | ERLANG::MILLEVILLE | | Thu Mar 19 1992 12:59 | 9 |
| .62> But it's a poor excuse to limit the statement to 150 words simply because
.62> the "average voter" won't read more than that.
I agree. I wonder what percentage of those who ARE going to vote have INSTEAD
read all the candidate's entries in #489.2+. There they have all the room to
cover whatever they wanted. Note that I was able to enter statements from the
petition candidates, but only a minority of nominated candidates gave me any-
thing to post. If they read my VAXMail request for an entry to post and decided
to ignore it, maybe all they HAD to say DID occupy the 150 word limit!
|
498.65 | SIMS memo backfired here... | YNGSTR::BROWN | | Thu Mar 19 1992 14:18 | 10 |
| re .63 After reading the SIMS memo, I was so incensed that I changed
my mind and didn't vote for any of the nominated candidates, where
previously I was going to include at least one. So the SIMS memo
backfired as far as this voter was concerned. Hopefully others like
myself will make up for those voters that were intimidated enough by
the letter to change their votes the other way.
NOBODY tells me who to vote for, and NOBODY is Digital management
should have anything to do with this election...
|
498.66 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Thu Mar 19 1992 14:39 | 7 |
|
Re:
Perhaps John Sims is a shrewd Real Choices supporter. ;^)
Steve
|
498.67 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | I'm voting for REAL CHOICE candidates next week | Thu Mar 19 1992 15:06 | 6 |
|
>Perhaps John Sims is a shrewd Real Choices supporter. ;^)
Steve, you weren't supposed to tell anybody until *after* the
election... 8-)
|
498.68 | who wrote the letter? | PRIMES::ZIMMERMANN | VOTE for 'REAL CHOICES' to DCU | Fri Mar 20 1992 16:49 | 14 |
| It struck me yesterday, that since:
John Sims couldn't (shouldn't) have known about the NC report
DCU will not say who paid for the mailing (other then Digital)
Maybe all John did was sign the letter. Maybe someone else wrote it
and paid for the mailing, and only asked John to sign it. John may
not have known that what he was signing may have had a hidden message,
like 'vote for the nominated candidates', in some peoples opinion,
including mine.
Just a thought...
Mark
|
498.69 | Digital paid for the Sims letter | ESBLAB::KINZELMAN | Paul Kinzelman | Sat Mar 21 1992 08:35 | 3 |
| I spoke to Patti last week and she confirmed that Digital requested and paid
for the Sims' mailing. She would not tell me the name of the person who did
the requesting.
|