Spyke
lemmy.world

62% over 6 years, so like 10% a year which is still not bad, but not the same 62% lump sum like the headline suggests.

51
ColeSlothreply
discuss.tchncs.de

Sure, but this puts the wage cap at like $63/hour. That's ridiculously good for a blue collar job. I've been in the same field for around 16 years and I'd be ecstatic if I were making half that amount, and my job requires a lot of certifications and ongoing training hours to stay certified.

That's over $130,000/year. Plus, they hit their cap after just 6 years. I couldn't imagine making that much after just 6 years somewhere. They did a great job. Laborers everywhere should be making money like this, instead of the people sitting in chairs with lumbar support complaining that the ac is two degrees warmer than what they'd like while standing next to the corporate keureg coffee machine.

27
Thassodarreply
lemm.ee

But knowing how shitty companies are they'll likely make some excuse to fire people before they get close to their 6 year maximum. It's similar to how fast food places avoid hiring someone full time by scheduling them for 35 hours a week instead of 40.

0
ColeSlothreply
discuss.tchncs.de

That happens at McDonald's. It never happens at strong union jobs. You fire a union worker, it has to be well documented, by the book, and for a damned good reason. There's no chance of getting fired for bullshit reasons in something like a dock workers union. You also won't be getting reduced hours.

9
Thassodarreply
lemm.ee

I know unions, my dad was a union VP for over a decade. I've seen how companies can be shitty even if you have the union backing you.

2

My wife worked at a grocery store and as i heard their union boss golfed with the CEO of the grocery chain… as i understand it that was HR masquerading as a union, by the time she left it sure was acting the part too

3

Wait so any new hires after this deal was made would not be included? Wouldn't new hires also be in the union?

That would seem like a pretty big deal if true.

1
xmunkreply
sh.itjust.works

62% right now and no increase for the six following years is actually more generous than what they got.

8
ColeSlothreply
discuss.tchncs.de

They're getting like a $5 an hour raise every year for 6 years and after six yours they hit their salary cap. Their cap is $131,000. Even 6 years from now that's still really good money.

3
lemmy.world

Depending on location, that's really good money. Where I live i would be ecstatic to make that kind of money. Unfortunately the big docks are in big cities where money doesn't go nearly as far.

2
Coreidanreply
lemmy.world

NYC and LA are probably the two areas in the US where 130k is borderline possible to live alone in a OK apartment considering the cost of living there. Below that and your quality of living takes a dive as you either need roommates or you live in a shoebox. For anywhere else 130k is fantastic.

1

The average rent in LA for a THREE bedroom apartment is $51,000 a year total. That leaves, after taxes, about $40,000 of money for everything else. Even in L.A that's still very easy to live on.

A 1 bedroom apartment in LA is about $26,000 a year, fyi.

A $131,000/year salary is not borderline anything in L.A.

1

Just a reminder that if you're too important for you to be able to legally strike, it's all the more important that you strike anyway.

47
szmer.info

amazing, can I have my car shipped now?

-10
ddplfreply
szmer.info

I'm not bringing no car to the US silly, I'm taking it to Europe

1

So long as it isn't one of your land-barge monstrosities, then OK.

Our roads here in Europe hate those things.

1

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US Dockworker Strike Wins 62% Raises | Spyke