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Is the heat on??
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<blockquote data-quote="UPS Lifer" data-source="post: 654734" data-attributes="member: 9789"><p>Socks - You only care about yourself. If you are such a stud supervisor - MAKE IT HAPPEN! Don't rely on the union to stand behind. </p><p></p><p>I can't help you with this one! I came from the sun belt and can't stand the cold but it seems to me there is an answer out there. I never found a problem that did not have a solution. Get your thermometer out and take readings compare it to the performance of the loaders/unloaders vs records with more temperate weather conditions in the same area. Look at total volume vs. total hours for a given belt. Maybe you can also compare areas of the building where the temps very dramatically and you can show the performance decrease. Look for local or state safety regulations that pertain to weather and the cold. Maybe you can show a cost analysis of performance gains when people are working in less harsh conditions. </p><p></p><p>But the main thing is quit whining and figure a way to fix it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="UPS Lifer, post: 654734, member: 9789"] Socks - You only care about yourself. If you are such a stud supervisor - MAKE IT HAPPEN! Don't rely on the union to stand behind. I can't help you with this one! I came from the sun belt and can't stand the cold but it seems to me there is an answer out there. I never found a problem that did not have a solution. Get your thermometer out and take readings compare it to the performance of the loaders/unloaders vs records with more temperate weather conditions in the same area. Look at total volume vs. total hours for a given belt. Maybe you can also compare areas of the building where the temps very dramatically and you can show the performance decrease. Look for local or state safety regulations that pertain to weather and the cold. Maybe you can show a cost analysis of performance gains when people are working in less harsh conditions. But the main thing is quit whining and figure a way to fix it. [/QUOTE]
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