T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1315.1 | Maybe I could get a cup and stand outside the cafe... | TOOK::DMCLURE | DEC is a notesfile | Thu Dec 13 1990 18:26 | 6 |
| re: .0,
You're kidding right? Please, don't depress me! I may decide
not to bother returning from Xmas vacation.
-davo
|
1315.2 | Makes me ill | SHRCAL::BOYAN | | Fri Dec 14 1990 07:53 | 10 |
| re.1
And what sickens me are the projected "compensation increase
projections" for 1991 averaging between 4.9%-6.8% for managers
and F/A's. All this in the face of a deepening recession forecast
for our industry in 1991 and anticipated forced layoffs. And let
us not forget that many of us have realized a "compensation increase"
of 3% over the last two years.
As the stomach churns......
|
1315.3 | What's the problem? | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Sat Dec 15 1990 09:19 | 12 |
| I would think that most of the readers of this conference are in positions
that are close to the following:
Sr. System
Analyst 75,000 30,000 48,729 75,000 32,000 51,116 4.9%
System Analyst 72,000 21,000 41,032 75,000 21,000 43,359 5.1%
Sr. Programmer/
analyst 82,000 22,000 46,535 87,000 22,000 47,804 4.9%
Programmer/
analyst 100,000 15,000 36,946 105,000 12,000 38,988 5.7%
I'm sure that almost every reader is paid something in the 12K-105K range.
|
1315.4 | easy solution, no? | SMOOT::ROTH | Iraq needs lawyers... send some NOW!! | Mon Dec 17 1990 22:52 | 7 |
| There's an oft-quoted simple answer if your pay is too low:
"Pay For Performance"
Lee
|
1315.5 | PFP- HA! | KYOA::SACHS | Black, with extra Caffeine, please! | Tue Dec 18 1990 00:22 | 8 |
| PFP is B.U.N.K.!!! There is much to much politics and favoritism in
addition to Performance.
If it only WERE true! There probably wouldn't be so much dead-wood
within the company that we are being forced to find and clean out.
Mark
|
1315.6 | How about a bonus? | 501CLB::GILLEY | Digital - It's not just a job, it's an adventure! | Tue Dec 18 1990 09:25 | 24 |
| >> PFP is BUNK!
I agree, but there is nothing you can do about it except go to work for
yourself. How many times have I heard, "Charlie, you do outstanding
work, but there is only so much of the pie. Since you are already very
well compensated, we know you will understand."
Well, I'm not complaining about my salary - I feed my kids, etc. I
could be ALOT worse off. But, I hate people trying to sell me a line
of BULL when everybody knows it just isn't so, PFP that is.
What I suggest is that all companies (all companies collaborate on
salaries) simply declare that all employees will receive a cost of
living increase equal to the government treasury bill rate ( a real
indicator of inflation) PLUS a bonus determined beforehand by the
employee and the manager. This will result in two things: all them
managers will have to work and earn their pay (note: no manager rat
hole, 8-)) and the employees will have REAL targets to shoot for.
Their performance, efficiency, dedication, productivity, etc. will
DIRECTLY impact their pocket.
Comments?
Charlie - who would prefer the bonus system
|
1315.7 | Send it in!! | BPOV02::MUMFORD | Czarcasm | Tue Dec 18 1990 10:26 | 14 |
| re: -1
I think you ought to clean out the BULL and the MANAGER RATHOLE, and
send it along to CAPNET::IDEASCENTRAL, so that it will get a fair
hearing before the compensation folks. I sent them a suggestion which
also advocated some form of bonus compensation for truly outstanding
performers, and Corporate Compensation replied that they were pursuing
several proposals along those lines with the Executive Committee. So,
there may be hope that things will change. I did not address the idea
of COL plus bonus, however, so your idea is really not the same.
Such programs may not be put into effect until the current clouds clear
from the earnings picture, but this is a great time to get the
compensation folks to consider alternatives to the oft-violated PFP.
|
1315.8 | buy low, sell high | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Tue Dec 18 1990 10:56 | 33 |
| I've been told that Digital participates in a salary comparison
program with other companies on an annual basis. I've also been
told that this years results indicated that Digital paid less
then the competition. In the case of software job codes the
difference was even more significant. I'm told that this is why
we're getting raises at all next year. It is apparently a goal
to have industry average compensation for Digital employees.
A question I've asked but not had really answered is "isn't
a goal of industry average compensation somewhat inconsistent
with a goal of industry leading services and products?" I keep
thinking of the old "you get what you pay for" adage.
I am also reminded that there are things other then pay that
keep people at Digital. At the same time I'm not so sure that
Digital's other benefits are as industry average or leading as
they once were. Anyone seen a study of health care benefits at
different companies lately? Are we still up there in the average
range?
I know that for a lot of people security has been a big reason
to stay with Digital for a long time. However with the buy outs,
rumors of layoffs, and Ken Olsen telling people straight out that
is they want security they should not expect it at Digital I see
that reason going away.
Now I still want to work at Digital (my wife keeps asking "Why?")
but it seems that Digital is less interested in keeping people then
they are is saving money. How are we going to make industry leading
products and give industry leading service if we can't hold onto
industry leading people?
Alfred
|
1315.9 | Average all the way!!! | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Tue Dec 18 1990 11:35 | 16 |
| When I was doing salary planning and sitting on salary committees, I
know for a fact that we had a policy to compensate at the "average"
level. Perhaps that's why our performance is so average.
All of this is particularly offensive when you sit here in Colorado
Springs and read in the paper that HP's QUARTERLY profit-sharing
checks will average over $800 bucks per person. In addition, HP is
also the best payer in the Springs.
It is a little upsetting to realize that after 30 years in the computer
business, and achieving the old Level 14 some years ago, that my 27
year old son-in-law who drives a newspaper truck in Boston, makes more
money that I do......and has much better bennies, and just qualified
for six weeks vacation.
I feel that Digital is, has been, and always will be cheap.
|
1315.10 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Dec 18 1990 11:52 | 7 |
| > It is a little upsetting to realize that after 30 years in the computer
> business, and achieving the old Level 14 some years ago, that my 27
> year old son-in-law who drives a newspaper truck in Boston, makes more
> money that I do......and has much better bennies, and just qualified
> for six weeks vacation.
Yeah, but I bet he has to belong to a nasty old union.
|
1315.11 | | WKRP::LENNIG | Dave (N8JCX), SWS, Cincinnati | Tue Dec 18 1990 13:03 | 14 |
| Interesting problem... I wonder what the mathematical dynamics are of
computing average compensation, when the participants in the average are
striving to *be* average compensators. Does the average oscillate
around a mean, or does a trend get established?
For example, the survey results supposedly were that Digital was below
average. However, that means that the average was lower because of
that. So Digital is now going to adjust to be average, which will
accordingly raise the average, which means that those that were at
average will then be below... On the other hand, those that were at
average before Digital fell below then became above average, and
accordingly adjusted downwards, which futher reduces the average.
Sheesh!
|
1315.12 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Tue Dec 18 1990 14:50 | 5 |
| re -2. Yup, he's a Teamster. But, I hardly think he thinks of
himself as "having" to belong. There are also Teamsters in our
industry. When I was the IBM service guy for Collins Radio in
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, would you believe that all the key-punch operators
were Teamsters?
|
1315.13 | the theory, anyway | LABRYS::CONNELLY | House of the Axe | Tue Dec 18 1990 14:52 | 14 |
| re: .6,.7
Pay For Performance .NEQ. Raise Proportionate to Performance -- that's a
misconception that assumes everyone starts at an optimal level.
Pay For Performance does mean that relative standing in the work-group, in
terms of salary and job level, should be roughly equal to performance (plus
another ill-defined quality that i would call "value to group"). That's the
goal that the manager should have uppermost in his or her mind when doing a
salary plan. What's unfortunate is that it may take several years of salary
planning to correct a situation where the initial state is not one of pay
equity (for performance/value). Usually the players change before a viable
state can be reached--it's a moving target.
paul
|
1315.14 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Dec 18 1990 16:46 | 3 |
| re .12:
I thought my sarcasm was self-evident.
|
1315.15 | Has something to do with 'how little will X work for?' | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Wed Dec 19 1990 16:34 | 5 |
| .11:
Isn't your "other hand" a variant of the "Iron Law of Wages"?
Dick
|
1315.16 | | MILKWY::SLABOUNTY | Why don't you bend for gold? | Thu Dec 20 1990 14:30 | 12 |
|
>When I was the IBM service guy for Collins Radio in
>Cedar Rapids, Iowa, would you believe that all the key-punch operators
>were Teamsters?
So if someone breaks a nail, the whole place goes on strike
for better working conditions.
[Ahem. Sorry.]
Shawn L.
|
1315.17 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Fred was right - YABBADABBADOOO! | Thu Dec 20 1990 15:11 | 12 |
| re .9 I work in shipping/receiving/warehousing. My job requires
lifting, fork lift operation, data entry, and lots of other
stuff. I could go to work for the Post Office, with less headaches,
and realize an immediate raise of well over a dollar an hour.
Hell, I could go sweep floors, the lowest-level job in the shop,
at the place my dad worked (union) and do likewise.
DEC is indeed 'cheap'. Then they have the gall to push raises out
for six months, they've done it twice as I recall. There is no
cost-of-living adjustment. My last raise, after 4 *years*, was
too small to be called an insult. Way _below_ what the COL has
gone up in that time. Incentive ? Zilch.
|
1315.18 | | FSTTOO::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Fri Dec 21 1990 09:16 | 13 |
| re: .17
>I could go to work for the Post Office, with less headaches,
> and realize an immediate raise of well over a dollar an hour.
> Hell, I could go sweep floors, the lowest-level job in the shop,
> at the place my dad worked (union) and do likewise.
>There is no
> cost-of-living adjustment. My last raise, after 4 *years*, was
> too small to be called an insult. Way _below_ what the COL has
> gone up in that time. Incentive ? Zilch.
Why on earth don't you go?
|
1315.19 | why I stay :-) | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Fri Dec 21 1990 09:22 | 5 |
| > Why on earth don't you go?
A lot of us stay because we are crazy. :-)
Alfred
|
1315.20 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Fred was right - YABBADABBADOOO! | Fri Dec 21 1990 09:33 | 3 |
| re .18 'Cause I ain't a quitter - I want to change things where
I _am_, not walk/run away. (It's why I still live in Massachu-
setts ;-) )
|
1315.21 | Me, too ! | ATLANA::SHERMAN | Getting closer to the Son! | Fri Dec 21 1990 10:15 | 5 |
| RE: .19 A lot of us stay because we are crazy. :-)
The Quakers have a saying (dating back to before the U.S. Civil War) that:
"Everyone's crazy but me and thee, and sometimes I wonder about thee!" 8-)
|
1315.22 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Just give me options. | Fri Dec 21 1990 13:40 | 9 |
| .20> I want to change things where I _am_, not walk/run away.
So why are you complaining _here_ instead of where you _are_?
Instead of complaining, why don't you make those changes and
tell us how/what you did to make it better? That would seem
so much more valuable!
Joe Oppelt
|
1315.23 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Fred was right - YABBADABBADOOO! | Fri Dec 21 1990 14:39 | 3 |
| re .22 Joe, I'm scarcely in a position to change the salary
structure. I do hope those in a position to do so read this
and take a hard look at DEC pay scales.
|
1315.24 | Attacking people for using communications? | TPS::BUTCHART | Machete Coder | Sat Dec 22 1990 21:41 | 15 |
| re .22
Why do you ASSUME that the complaint hasn't been made elsewhere?
Why not here AND everywhere else that might be relevant, using this
conference to gather support and allies, as well as vent frustration.
(Not to run down the value of a place to vent - that can be extremely
valuable, but so is sounding out others and gathering support.) In
an extended company, the notes file is a good way to extend contacts
beyond the immediate area and gather the support needed to create the
momentum for change.
If the pay issue is company wide - seek a company wide forum for
change!
/Dave
|
1315.25 | I also don't believe in minimum wage... | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Just give me options. | Sun Dec 23 1990 16:03 | 33 |
| I don't assume that the complaint hasn't been made elsewhere.
I just don't see any value in complaining about it here other
than to raise the level of hysteria regarding pay imbalances.
I think that many of the pay issues "documented" here are only
issues in the mind of the beholder.
We (in the USA anyway) work in an open and free market. If pay
is better elsewhere, we are free to pursue that pay. If a
company can "get away" with "substandard" pay, more power to them!
It simply means that someone is willing to work at that substandard
pay rate, making it the true market rate. If nobody is willing
to hire me at the pay rate I expect to get, then I have not set
a realistic market value for myself. If there is some other
aspect of my employment at a particular position that I find
valuable and unavailable elsewhere, then perhaps it will
compensate for the substandard pay I may be offered. If it does
not compensate, then I'll pursue higher pay elsewhere.
Digital (and any employer) is a BUSINESS, not a social charity.
In business you try to acquire you materials at the lowest possible
cost. Employees at Digital are a cost of doing business. If
you are more valuable (as opposed to THINKING you are more
valuable) than the common human also capable of doing your job,
then it is up to you to prove that to your employer. If you
fail to show that you are more valuable than the next guy, then
you deserve nothing more that what the next guy is making. If
you succeed in proving your value, yet your employer fails to
act on that, then there is nothing stopping you from letting
your employer make a bad business decision in allowing you to go
to a competitor.
Joe Oppelt
|
1315.26 | Need a bit more reason among the sound bits. | TPS::BUTCHART | Machete Coder | Sun Dec 23 1990 19:26 | 61 |
| re .25:
> I don't assume that the complaint hasn't been made elsewhere.
> I just don't see any value in complaining about it here other
> than to raise the level of hysteria regarding pay imbalances.
If there are pay imbalances, it is worth airing. Why not here,
as well as elsewhere? Do you assume the readers of this conference to
be hysterics, or is this the normal reaction (which I have encountered
several times) to new and undamped information channels?
> We (in the USA anyway) work in an open and free market.
Let's see... Minimum wage law, the various EEO laws and regulations,
specific government regulations regarding sellers to the government,
state regulations in areas not superseded by the federal government,
etc. ... Where you been the last 20 years, Joe?
> If pay is better elsewhere, we are free to pursue that pay.
I am, subject to conditions considerably more complex than that rather
simplistic statement implies. And it has been a factor in negotiating
with my management at times - one which I have sometimes played to
good effect. Others are not so free, given the strange games that
occur when trying to transfer pension and health benefits when
transfering companies - think about it - if you are near (where near is
about a decade) retirement, have a pre-existing illness, a sick spouse
or children, etc.
> If a company can "get away" with "substandard" pay, more power to them!
See above. Companies can certainly use the situations above to reduce
payments to some people. The argument as to whether they SHOULD is
an interesting one, and ties into the next item.
> Digital (and any employer) is a BUSINESS, not a social charity.
Do companies have any obligations beyond profit? Think about it VERY
carefully - or you will be savaged seriously, and Digital will be in
SERIOUS trouble if you ever become a high level manager.
> In business you try to acquire you materials at the lowest possible
> cost.
Ignoring the natural resentment of being referred to as "material",
over what period of time are you talking, and what market do you expect
ot be in? If you are in a market that demands high quality and good
service, your statement is a road to quick ruin, unless you recognize
that the market will pay high price for high quality, and possibly
NOTHING for poor. Better be sure you are paying the price that will
get you materials of the necessary QUALITY to meet the market demands.
Given Digital's recent performance...
Also note that even in a given range, the lowest possible cost includes
such items as insuring reliable supply over the course of a presumably
long business relationship, improvements in the QUALITY of the product
(and presumably the "materials"), assurance of being informed of new
developments by the "material vendor" since the "vendor" considers your
interests to be congruent, etc.
/Dave
|
1315.27 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Just give me options. | Wed Dec 26 1990 17:34 | 50 |
| re .26
Dave, I think you failed to read alot of what I wrote in .25.
You mentioned in detail additional conditions beyond compensation
with respect to your job, and I thought I addressed all that. It
is up to you to weigh those factors against your offered salary.
If you find those conditions worth more than any additional salary
you can get elsewhere, then you choose to stay. If not, you are
free to choose to go.
I don't understand your statement about my being savaged seriously
or DEC being at risk if I become a manager and believe that a
company should try to pay the lowest salary POSSIBLE. Are managers
not supposed to run their organizations like a business? Please limit
your discussion to the topic at hand -- that of hiring and salary.
Sure companies have obligations other than profit. But for any
company, the goal usually is to get the best possible labor at
the lowest POSSIBLE cost. The lowest POSSIBLE cost may not
necessarily be the lowest absolute cost. It is management's job
to weigh the higher salary demand of better quality labor vs
lower salaries for lower quality. Companies have no obligation to
cater to employees' personal situations. I do not expect DEC to do
that for me, nor for you or anybody else. But if I can show that
I can provide a better quality than the rest of the workforce, I
would hope that some firm will recognize that value and offer
me more to lure me away from his competitors. Or I would hope
that my current employer would recognize that value and entice
me to stay. Personally I have been pleased with the way the
free market has worked for me so far...
You created an impressive "list" of factors that you used to
counter my claim that we are in a free market for jobs. Have
ANY of them prevented you from pursuing ANY job you might have
wanted to pursue? We (in the USA) are in the most open market
anywhere in the world. Free market reigns, and no laws stop
you from looking practically anywhere you want for your employment.
You mentioned minimum wage laws. I guess you missed my title
to .25. Also I think we'd both agree that minimum wage laws do
not come into play for anyone participating in this conference.
I lost you entirely on your last paragraph. Sorry I can't
comment on it.
And, by the way, Yes, I *DO* assume that SOME of the readers
and writers of this conference are getting hysterical, and are
fanning hysteria.
Joe Oppelt
|
1315.28 | But do you get to negotiate? | BASVAX::GREENLAW | Your ASSETS at work | Thu Dec 27 1990 09:08 | 23 |
| RE: .27
Joe, I do not know about you, but when my manager and I talk about
salaries, she has a chart that she must use that defines what % can
be output. There IS no negotiations, ie. this is not a free market.
Yes, I can go outside the company and find another job and negotiate
a new salary. But once you are an employee, you have no way to do
the same thing. FWIW, I also think that the company loses too. If
you have a bad year, does your salary go down?
Back to the subject, the rules of the game make staying with one
company for an extended period much more attractive than changing jobs
every year. Things like pension vesting and accrued vacation are all
based on length of service with a company. I also think that a company
can not afford to have huge turnover in its personnel and survive. So
the real result is that the company tries to balance salaries verses
turnover. At the present time, the company is looking to lose people
therfore, it can also offer less in the way of salary increases. The
down side is that the folks that can find new jobs the easiest are also
the ones that the company can not afford to lose. I don't have any
answers unfortunately, just many observations.
Lee G.
|
1315.29 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Just give me options. | Thu Dec 27 1990 12:31 | 45 |
| Lee, you are correct. Not too many people (if any) get to
negotiate at salary time here at DEC. But my understanding of
the salary process is that each job has a pay range that has
been set based on similar pay ranges at competitors. I'd
almost expect to be presented with the same ranges if I were to
jump ship, and I tend to take with a grain of salt reports
of huge increases if I were to move.
What I understand to happen here at DEC is that a person gets
positioned within the range for his job by his job performance.
So a 1 is positioned closer to the top of his range, and a 2
a little lower, and a 3 lower than that, etc. So I *DO* have
some control over my raise, and I have found this to be the case
in my own personal experience. And if I don't like the range for
my position, I have the option of shooting for a promotion and
the higher pay range that goes with it.
You are also correct in your observation of other factors besides
pay. I have been here 7 years, and I have accumulated some of
those intangibles. I have had opportunities to accept more
money at other companies, but I saw those other things to be
more valuable than the difference in pay I could have gained.
One other intangible I found more valuable was JOB SECURITY.
Now even in today's turmoil, with the specter of downsizing
facing us all, I still see job security as a valuable aspect
of my current job. DEC is not the only company downsizing, so
chances are I would be at equal risk of getting transitioned
elsewhere as here. One of the offers I rejected was with a
startup firm. They are still in business 2 years later, and
perhaps I could be making 25% more today if I had taken it. But
I think the stability at DEC is greater that what I might have
faced at a startup firm, and I believed that my responsibility
to my family could be better served at DEC. How much is stability
worth?
Another factor is the fact that I currently like what I am doing.
Chances are that I would not like a new job as much as I like
my current one. It would take a huge amount of money to compensate
for the loss of a job that I enjoy.
Money is not everything. And that is exactly why people who
were offered some healthy transition packages still opted to
stay here.
Joe Oppelt
|
1315.30 | I think we violently agree :-) | BASVAX::GREENLAW | Your ASSETS at work | Thu Dec 27 1990 13:28 | 26 |
| Having managers that are open and treat my group as responsible adults,
they showed us a representation (or the real thing I can't say) of the
chart that they used for salary planning. One of the things that
struck me was that if I am a 2 performer but am in the 60-100 percent
of my range, I would get the same increase as a 3 performer, ie. ZERO.
Now granted if I did become a 1 performer, I could get an increase at
least in line with the inflation rate. Also, 80% of the people were
mandated to fall into the 2's and 3's. So where is the incentive to
perform??
I posed this question to my manager, and her answer was the same as
yours - work to get promoted!
Companies in general have an advantage over the individual in that they
can and do exchange salary information between companies. (This was one
of my wife's main functions when she worked in Personnel for a large
hi-tech company.) The companies then can set their own ranges any way
they want. We as individuals do not have access to this information.
I would be less critical of the system if the industry wide figures were
made available to back up statements like Pay for Performance. Until
that day (and I am not holding my breathe waiting), the other benefits
of the job may still be able to hold me even when I know that there are
other jobs out there that pay better.
Lee G.
|
1315.31 | I also believe in a $7.50 minimum wage! | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Thu Dec 27 1990 14:50 | 7 |
| re .25.....now you did it, you made me mad!!! Employees are definitely
not "a cost of doing business". It's that kind of neanderthal-like
thinking that has got the U.S. auto business, and most other heavy
manufacturing in this country on it's knees.
Employees, and their relative happiness and morale, are overwhelmingly
the most important aspect of any business. Ignore that at your peril.
|
1315.32 | | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Dec 27 1990 17:52 | 12 |
| re: .31
Silly me, I thought that CUSTOMERS were overwhelmingly the most
important aspect of any business. I would contend that forgetting that
fact is the kind of thinking that got the complacent American auto
manufacturers and their self-serving labor unions into the trouble
they're in today.
Customers. Ignore them at your peril.
Al
|
1315.33 | | CUJO::BERNARD | Dave from Cleveland | Fri Dec 28 1990 09:24 | 5 |
|
While the employees are the most important part of a business, and
customers too are the most important part of a business, there is
another part that is the most important- namely the owners, or
shareholders, who expect to see value from their investment.
|
1315.34 | Ignore any one at your peril! | TPS::BUTCHART | Machete Coder | Tue Jan 01 1991 12:18 | 14 |
| re: employees/customers/shareholders are the most important...
Any attempt to hold up ONE of those three as "most important" tends
to obscure the fact that they are all important AND closely related.
If employees are not well trained and motivated, the customer's needs
will not be met and the customer will buy products and services from
somebody else. If the customer buys products and services from
somebody else, our revenue and growth figures will disappoint our
shareholders, who will take their money elsewhere. With less
investment money and falling revenues, the company tends to skimp on
training and various motivational factors (like pay, benefits,
security, and new development projects), leading to...
/Dave
|
1315.35 | another point of view | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Fri Jan 04 1991 19:14 | 11 |
| I know it sounds reactionary, but some of us who taught school before
coming to DEC still look at our checks and think we died and went to
heaven.
I know two wrongs don't make a right...and I too am in debt and would
love to be paid what I think I'm worth.
The difference is that at DEC I appear to be able to move towards that
goal based on my own efforts.
Holly
|
1315.36 | 2 Cents... | SUBWAY::CATANIA | Mike C. �-� | Tue Jan 22 1991 15:32 | 27 |
| Just my 2 cents worth..
First I dislike being thought of as a material, I am not a piece of sheet
metal that can be cut and bent to any specification you need. I am a person,
a HUMAN being; one that has wants, and needs. I can't be stacked in the corner
like some object to be forgotten!
Second, Low Wages and poor working conditions were the reason unions came about
in the first place. I mean if you make my cube any smaller, and my increases
smaller, eventually you'll push me over the edge.
I have a big problem coming about the end of this school year. My wife who
teaches special ed for the state of New York, just might be getting laid off.
Well maybe if I lived in Kansas where the cost of housing, food, oil, gas etc...
is cheaper, I might be able to manage, but not in New York. I might even
consider getting a side job if worse comes to worse.
Well Unfortunately, I work for EIS. A kind of Youll be working here for the
next six months situation. Sometimes these situation are close to home, and
sometimes they are far away. I'm expected to go to a customer site 70 miles
from my home, in bad (to say the least) traffic and not even get any
compensation whatever. And don't give me you took the job, you should have
known crap. I did'nt think or was I told that I'd be traveling to Upstate
New York! Where is the justice or humanity that every person deserves...
- Mike
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