Update on negotiations with the Canadian Union of Postal Workers
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Got this in an email today… oh my
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Rentlarreplied to the16bitgamer@programming.dev on last edited by
Who the heck wants a permanent part-time job? Outside of maybe a retiree?
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recursive_recursion they/themreplied to Rentlar on last edited by
I’d be willing to become a permanent part-timer if if meant I could sit around and funnel 100% of the money coming in to fund the union
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cerement@slrpnk.netreplied to the16bitgamer@programming.dev on last edited by
“We’ve tried nothing and they still won’t talk to us!”
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pixxelkick@lemmy.worldreplied to the16bitgamer@programming.dev on last edited by
Important context/rebuttal:
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Depending on your seniority and the flexibility of the hours you can bid, 20 hours a week plus benefits would be phenomenal. Of course this only works if you can balance it out with the rest of your personal life, so your mileage may vary.
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Avid Amoebareplied to pixxelkick@lemmy.world on last edited by
It’s clear that Canada Post is out of touch with the workers of this country. A Canada Post spokesperson said earlier in the strike that young people don’t want full-time work; that they all want “flexibility.”
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the16bitgamer@programming.devreplied to pixxelkick@lemmy.world last edited by
Thank you so much for this, didn’t know where to get the unions side of things.
I was getting the impression management wanted to compete with the Amazon curriers but I didn’t expect this.
The union has every right to fight this, and I hope they win. At the same time I hope that they do find a middle ground with the 7-day delivery. While I don’t want/need it, the general population does expect 7 day/week delivery like everyone else does. Even if it’s only a limited service I feel it’s something they can negotiate with. (Not that it means much based on their article)
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I could see that being enough to live off if you already paid off a mortgage or have low rent from being there a long time, or have a partner working as well.