Yes, that answers it. We had rules they gave us the right to pass and even had call blocks at one point. We have been trying no negotiate new rules for some time to no avail.
Here the feeder coverage board goes by seniority and resets @ midnight so the first few guys on the board get called in at midnight or a little afterwards, and they keep going down the list calling people as needed until they run out of work for that day or people which ever comes first. In my neck of the woods when you get called you must take the work offered even if you don't want it or its an occurrence. I hear in other areas the higher seniority person can turn down the work until a run comes available that they want to do. Also seniority goes by classification seniority meaning that if you are in feeders you have seniority over everyone who comes on after you, but some areas are different and just go by building seniority. I work at a large hub so it may be different for you if you work at a single center or small hub. Let me know if this answers your question and if you have anymore.
So you are saying that if you are in feeders, and have 10 yrs seniority, and a package drivers come into the feeder dept. with 15 years seniority, you have more than he does?
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Thank God our local never sold us out for all these make believe seniority dates. We have one FT seniority date, and it doesn't change just because we change positions.
So you are saying that if you are in feeders, and have 10 yrs senoirity, and a package drivers come into the feeder dept. with 15 years senoirity, you have more than he does?
Here I hear they let drivers pass. Suppose to be counted as infraction if you don't turn by midnight. But they don't do it from what I understand.
What sell out? If a guy doesn`t want to go feeder and I do then it sucks for him when he does decide to come in and "cake out" his last few years before retiring.
We didn`t sell out on our contract to were we get to go back and forth between feeder and package car on a whim just because the weather changes.![]()
It does suck for him because he has to compete with your fake new seniority date when he's been with the company (and a Teamster) longer.
It does suck for him because he has to compete with your fake new seniority date when he's been with the company (and a Teamster) longer.
Did I or the company or the union prevent him from bidding, having a clean driving record, or any other excuse he had? No. He had the opportunity to exercise his seniority ahead of me but for whatever reason did not. And it`s not like it was a surprise either. The bidders know far in advance when we were moving up. When it was my place in line I did. He will get to pick better vacations and has more protection from a layoff per his ft seniority. I get to pick my start time and job based on feeder seniority.
My seniority date is not fake. It`s the date that I had the seniority to advance from package to feeder just like any one else. The day before that some one with higher seniority chose not to. Is his date of making, in my opinion, a poor choice fake? You think,what, that I should put in 16 years in feeder doing the crap start times until I worked my way up the board until I can get what I want only so someone who finally makes up his mind can just walk in and be at the top of the board? Sorry, don`t think so. And we do have some that grumble at their place on the board. And we ask them, why didn`t you come in earlier? And they all look at their shoes and make up an excuse and I haven`t heard one yet that I sympathized with. As I said, sucks for him.
You just said it - "go easy". A delivery driver that busts his ass every day should have the right to "go easy" and jump in front of those who have been "going easy". A delivery driver has earned their stripes.
...and everyone has a story. People have different reasons for waiting. Some, in the end might not have a choice. How about the poor guys in the central states that have to do more years than they originally anticipated? Haven't they been penalized enough? You can't predict the future and we're all just trying to make a living. But because you chose to take the "easy way out" sooner shouldn't affect another driver's seniority. In my building, 10 drivers were hired off the street (not a day in delivery) - and they're the biggest whiners about senior drivers bumping them down. Seniority is seniority - no exceptions. One day you'll learn to appreciate it.