Showing posts with label worker fatigue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label worker fatigue. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Teamsters, allies voice outrage at attempts to gut truck safety laws

Teamsters joined forces today with safety advocates, crash victims, and law enforcement allies for a press event on Capitol Hill to speak out against proposed rollbacks of major truck safety regulations.

The event was held as the Appropriations Committee considers the House Transportation, Housing and Urban Development (THUD) Appropriations Bill for 2016, which includes "riders" that will force truck drivers to work longer hours and drive larger, heavier trucks.

LaMont Byrd, Director of the Teamsters Safety and Health Department, spoke to press this morning along with highway safety advocates and the colleagues and families of those killed in truck crashes:
I join with other safety-minded groups and these brave families who have suffered such personal loss, to lend the Teamsters voice in denouncing the roll back of critical safety measures through the actions of the House Appropriations Committee and call upon the Senate to not go down this same dangerous path.
Over 600,000 of our 1.4 million members start their workday by turning a key in a vehicle; and whether they drive a school bus, a UPS van, or an 18-wheeler, our nation’s highways and local roads serve as their workplace.
Others who spoke at the D.C. event this morning included Jackie Gillan, president of the Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety; Capt. Robert Kneer, a NJ police officer whose colleague was killed in an truck accident; former NHTSA Administrator Joan Claybrook; and Lisa Shrum, whose mother and step-father lost their lives in a crash involving a FedEx double trailer truck.

As the joint-press advisory that went out before the event argues, this is no time for Congress to be loosening safety rules for trucks:
Truck crash deaths and injuries are up dramatically, yet at the same time Congress is considering major anti-truck safety changes which will make our streets and highways more dangerous and deadly. These safety assaults being pushed in Congress by special trucking interests will overturn the law in 39 states to benefit select corporations like FedEx to allow the use of double 33’ trailers throughout the country.
[The changes will] increase working and driving hours up to 82 hours per week and eliminate the “weekend” off for long haul truck drivers despite clear evidence that it results in overworked and fatigued truck drivers. The bill will make permanent the egregious safety rollback sponsored by Sen. Collins (R-ME), with the support of special trucking interests that was tucked into the major government spending bill passed by Congress last December.
Bigger trucks mean bigger safety problems, bigger damage to roads and bridges and bigger costs to taxpayers.
Last year truck safety and the dangers posed by having tired truck drivers on the highway was thrust into the limelight when comedian/actor Tracy Morgan was nearly killed on the NJ turnpike by a Walmart truck operated by a driver who hadn't slept in 24 hours. Just two day later, Sen. Collins quietly slipped an amendment into the Omnibus spending bill to eliminate the two-day rest period requirement for truckers.

With truck crash fatalities up 17 percent and injuries up 28 percent in last four years, Congress is contemplating changes to make a bad situation worse. Trucking industry profits might be served by these deadly changes, by workers and the driving public certainly are not.

Added Lamont at today's press event:
There is no justification for increasing 28 foot double trailers to 33 feet. Unless, that is, you take seriously a report written by the trucking industry that is pushing for this change. These longer configurations mean greater stopping distances. Our merging lanes aren’t designed for these longer trucks to get up to the speed they need to safely merge, and most of our off-ramps aren’t designed for longer heavier trucks. 
Including provisions in an appropriations bill that would effectively continue the suspension of the use of the once-a-week 34 hour restart and the two 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. rest periods will only worsen driver fatigue, as some employers will push their drivers to work over 80 hours per week – twice the normal workweek for most people!
As we make the necessary investments and improvements in our infrastructure to build the transportation capacity needed to compete in the global economy, we cannot afford to let highway safety be a second thought. These end-around attacks through the appropriations process are a bow to special interests at the expense of everyday people who share the roads and highways with commercial drivers.

Monday, July 14, 2014

Chicago Teamsters fight for reasonable workload for pharmacists

Remember the scene in 'It's A Wonderful Life' when a young George Bailey's pharmacist boss gives him poison to deliver rather than pills?

Pharmacists have an extremely important job, and it's important they get it right. That isn't easy when hours are cut and work is piled on.

Teamsters Local 727 represents more than  700 pharmacists in the greater Chicago area, and they're concerned about the public safety risks of inadequate staffing.

Local 727 President John Coli, Jr., sharedthose concerns and asked for assistance from the Illinois State Board of Pharmacy at the Board’s meeting on July 8 in Chicago. Said Coli:
Our pharmacists, who we all rely on, are being pulled in more directions than ever. Reduced technician hours, elimination of most full-time pharmacists’ overlap hours and increased pharmacists’ workloads could risk patient care. 
The pharmacists, he said,
...ask that you visit their stores and talk with them. They ask that you look at what other states have done to enhance the practice of pharmacy. And finally, they ask that you consider changes to regulatory legislation to further protect the profession, the pharmacists themselves and the patients they serve each and every day. 
Local 727 pharmacist steward Deepak Chande also addressed the Board, speaking passionately about his personal experience as a 34-year pharmacist.
I care about my customers. We all do. It’s why we do this job. When my workload is so overwhelming, I cannot spend a lot of time with my patients. Sometimes I’m afraid to even make eye contact with customers because I feel so guilty.  

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Today's Teamster News 03.27.14

Teamster News
Special City Council Meeting to Address Teamsters Strike Against CCTA  Burlington Free Press   ...One of the two items on the agenda of a Burlington City Council meeting that starts 5 pm Wednesday will be an update on the Teamster drivers' strike from Chittenden County Transportation Authority representatives...
Teamster Drivers Strike  at CCTA Enters Week 2  WCAX   ...It's week two of the Teamsters bus drivers' strike, and riders are still struggling to get around. With no apparent end in sight, some families that rely on public transportation say they fear the worst...
Huge Teamster turnout at pro-worker, anti-RTW4Less rally in Missouri  TeamsterNation   ...A large contingent of Teamsters joined well over 3,000 workers in Jefferson City today to rally against right-to-work and paycheck deception bills before the Missouri Legislature...
The death of an employer scam  American Prospect   ...The decisions of the NLRB and the California Labor Commissioner signal that the days of industry-wide misclassification—at least, for port truckers—may be numbered...
Trade
China loses trade dispute over rare earth exports  Reuters   …China has lost a dispute at the World Trade Organization over limits on rare earth and metals exports, handing Europe and the United States a victory over what they see as Beijing's unfair trade practices...
U.S. Steelmakers Push for Duties on Korean Rivals  Wall Street Journal   ...Struggling U.S. steelmakers want Washington to punish their South Korean competitors for selling lucrative steel products to the U.S. oil and gas industry at prices the U.S. suppliers say are unfair...
State Battles
Union groups rally against ‘right to work’ legislation at Missouri Capitol  St. Louis Post Dispatch   ...Gov. Jay Nixon told the crowd he would not hesitate to veto anti-worker legislation as he has in the past. Currently, the Missouri House is considering a measure to put right to work on the August ballot, bypassing the governor...
Pa. still facing an uphill battle to privatize liquor sales  Express-Times   ...The road to liquor privatization in Pennsylvania is defined by detour, and this year is no exception. As an election season begins to heat up, the Legislature is entertaining multiple reform efforts...
Wisconsin's personal income rebounded more slowly than U.S. average  Milwaukee Journal Sentinel   ...After American wages plunged in the darkest days of the last recession, Wisconsin's personal net earnings have rebounded — but at an average annual rate that lags that of the nation and most of its Great Lakes peers, according to the latest government estimates released Tuesday...
Iowa lawmakers consider tax credit for student debt  Quad-City Times   ...Iowa residents could receive a state tax credit for student loans if they earned a degree from a regent institution, community college or nonprofit university in Iowa under legislation considered by a three-member House panel Tuesday...
War on Workers
Northwestern players get union vote  MSNBC   ...In a potentially game-changing moment for college athletics, the Chicago district of the National Labor Relations Board ruled on Wednesday that Northwestern football players qualify as employees of the university and can unionize...
Teachers stage one-day strike in England and Wales  The Guardian   ...Thousands of schools across England and Wales will face disruption and closures today as teachers stage a one-day national walkout over pay and conditions...
Fast Food Managers Prefer 'Stature' To Overtime Pay, Wealthy CEO Says  Huffington Post   ...Fast food CEO Andy Puzder took to the op-ed pages of the Wall Street Journal Tuesday to rip into a White House proposal to raise the wages of low-paid managers who work unpaid overtime hours...
Almagamated Transit Union says overtime exemptions create 'Sweatshops on Wheels'
  Examiner   ...Union says that bus drivers have become the scapegoats for accidents caused by workers who are forced to work more than 15 hour days just to make ends meet…
Koch Brothers Invade Tiny Iron County, Wisconsin  The Daily Beast   ...A mining town of 6,000 people isn’t too small for billionaires to mess with to get their way. Inside the race bringing in big money...
Global Horizons Found Liable For Thai Worker Abuse  Associated Press   ...A federal judge has found a California-based labor contractor liable for discrimination and abuse of hundreds of Thai workers at Hawaii farms...
Miscellaneous
Housing WatchdogSlams Massive Property Inspection Industry  Huffington Post   ...The inspectors who decide whether homes have been abandoned and are ready for foreclosure are doing such a terrible job that the whole system requires a major overhaul, and maybe should be scrapped altogether, a government watchdog warned on Tuesday...