The clock is ticking. One of the largest strikes in US history is brewing at United Parcel Service (UPS). As the date for a new contract approach, a potential UPS strike feels closer than ever. Negotiations broke down earlier this month, prompting unionised UPS workers to take to the streets in rallies and practice pickets across the nation. With less than a week remaining before the current contract expires on Monday, 31 July, the Teamsters, representing more than half of UPS’s workforce, will resume talks with the company on today. The union has authorised a strike and Sean M O’Brien, a fiery leader elected last year to lead the union, has vowed to do so if their demands aren’t met. “We’re sending a message… all 340,000 of our members are united and ready to fight,” O’Brien told The Associated Press at a practice picket Friday in Atlanta, where UPS is based. UPS’s unionised workers still seethe about a contract they feel was forced on them in 2018, and say that the company delivers millions more packages every day than it did just five years ago. The Teamsters are calling for better pay, particularly for part-time employees, and improved working conditions. UPS has maintained that it already offers “industry-leading pay and benefits,” but says it’s prepared to increase that compensation. In a Friday update, the company said it aimed “quickly to finalise a fair deal that provides certainty for our customers, our employees and businesses across the country.” If negotiations are unsuccessful the deliveries that Americans have come to rely on, particularly since the pandemic began in 2020, could be vastly disrupted. Such an impasse hasn’t been seen since 1997, well before delivery of everyday items from dog food to prescription drugs became the norm, when a walkout by 185,000 workers crippled UPS. Here’s a closer look at the brewing storm and what’s at stake. What are the Teamsters asking for? Much on the union’s demands comes down to better pay and improved working conditions. Annual profits at UPS in the past two years are close to three times what they were before the pandemic. The company returned about $8.6 billion (Rs 70,305,860 crore) to shareholders in the form of dividends and stock buybacks in 2022, and forecast another $8.4 billion (Rs 68,644,800 crore) for shareholders this year. [caption id=“attachment_12910302” align=“alignnone” width=“640”] A UPS truck drives by as Sean M O’Brien, left, teamsters general president, UPS teamsters and workers hold a rally in Atlanta, as a national strike deadline nears. AP[/caption] The Teamsters say frontline UPS workers deserve some of that windfall. A sticking point in negotiations has been wage increases for part-time workers, who make a minimum of $16.20 (Rs 1,324) an hour. “People want their packages yesterday with the emergence of the e-commerce. So, it’s a very demanding job,” O’Brien said, pushing back on the salary statistics that UPS shares. “Everybody doesn’t realise what it takes to get these packages on the truck. And a lot of our part timers… work for poverty wages.” In addition to addressing part-time pay, the union wants to eliminate a contract provision that created two separate hierarchies of workers with different pay scales, hours and benefits. Driver safety, particularly the lack of air conditioning in delivery trucks, is also in the mix. Has UPS agreed to any demands? Before contract talks broke down on 5 July, with both sides blaming each other for walking away from the bargaining table, tentative agreements were made on several issues — including installing air conditioning in more trucks. UPS said it would add air conditioning to US small delivery vehicles purchased after 1 January, 2024. Existing vehicles wouldn’t get that upgrade, but the union said they will have other additions like fans and air vents. The union also said it has reached tentative agreements to establish Martin Luther King Jr Day as a full holiday for the first time, end unwanted overtime on drivers’ days off and get rid of the two-tier wage system for drivers who work weekends and earn less money. Could a strike be avoided? Can the government intervene? The strike can be avoided if UPS and the Teamsters agree to a new contract before the 31 July deadline. There’s also a possibility of government intervention. [caption id=“attachment_12910312” align=“alignnone” width=“640”]
UPS teamsters and workers wait before a rally in Atlanta, as a national strike deadline nears. AP[/caption] O’Brien said Sunday that he has asked the White House on numerous occasions not to intervene if workers end up going on strike. Last year, President Joe Biden intervened to avert a railroad strike to avoid disrupting the nation’s supply chain, and workers had accept an agreement that wasn’t broadly supported by union members. What impact would a strike have? The 24 million packages UPS ships on an average day amount to about a quarter of all US parcel volume, according to the global shipping and logistics firm Pitney Bowes. As UPS puts it, that’s the equivalent of about six per cent of nation’s gross domestic product. Higher prices and long wait times are all but certain if there is an impasse. A strike also threatens to extend lingering supply chain troubles. “Something’s got to give,” Thomas Goldsby, logistics chairman in the Supply Chain Management Department at the University of Tennessee, told The Associated Press. “The python can’t swallow the alligator, and that’s going to be felt by all of us.” UPS said this month that it will temporarily begin training non-union employees in the US to step in should there be a strike. Beyond shipping and supply implications, a union win at UPS could have significance for organised labour across industries. UPS’s contract talks arrive amid other prominent labour campaigns at Apple, Starbucks, Trader Joe’s and other companies — as well as the current writers and actors’ strikes seen in Hollywood. With inputs from AP
With less than a week remaining before the current contract expires on Monday, 31 July, the Teamsters, representing more than half of UPS’s workforce, will resume talks with the company today
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