Powerless? Then Ford needs better management.
I understand unions have gone too far in many cases. But I find your comment hard to believe. Being impaired on the job, especially a job involving machinery, is simply dangerous.Unfortunately management can only do so much. A worker can come in not dressed up per company regulations, steal time, drunk, high, sexual harassment charges, assault, etc and they'll just run to their union steward when confronted by company management or the worker will get fired, only to get rehired back a day later.
I understand unions have gone too far in many cases. But I find your comment hard to believe. Being impaired on the job, especially a job involving machinery, is simply dangerous.
I understand unions have gone too far in many cases. But I find your comment hard to believe. Being impaired on the job, especially a job involving machinery, is simply dangerous.
I believe we are both saying management is responsible for ongoing success of the company. Saying Ford has no control is saying they have 1 foot in the grave.It is but you have to remember, the employees work for the UAW. Ford just happens to be the place they work at.
This is not just the UAW either. Management is hamstrung by the contracts the company signed. Upper management can be blamed for signing those contracts but the alternative may have been worse.
It’s not just a union thing - that also happens all the time at Amazon warehouses. All a “fired” Amazon warehouse employee or driver needs to do is go to a temp agency.Unfortunately management can only do so much. A worker can come in not dressed up per company regulations, steal time, drunk, high, sexual harassment charges, assault, etc and they'll just run to their union steward when confronted by company management or the worker will get fired, only to get rehired back a day later.
It’s not just a union thing - that also happens all the time at Amazon warehouses. All a “fired” Amazon warehouse employee or driver needs to do is go to a temp agency.
I know someone who works at Whole Foods as a direct Amazon retail employee, their treatment is meh. They do treat their corporate people slanging code or as marketers/designers and in admin(finance/IT/legal) decently well from that I hear.Temps/contractors are unfortunately seen as sub-humans too although I'm not sure how far off that is from Amazon's normal employee treatment.
I know someone who works at Whole Foods as a direct Amazon retail employee, their treatment is meh. They do treat their corporate people slanging code or as marketers/designers and in admin(finance/IT/legal) decently well from that I hear.
NHTSA holds all that data - and some states like CA enforce a “stop sale” if a car in a dealer’s inventory has an open recall. CA also marks completion of a recall as mandatory to renew a cars registration IIRC.Back on track, imagine if car dealerships had to post all the recalls up in a publicly visible area so potential customers can view it; much like the employee rights posters in high-traffic, visible areas. Maybe manufactures will clean up their act a little bit.
Then again, the OEMs can do what Toyota does, instead of a recall, do a “customer satisfaction service” for 10 years/150K of a car’s life. Whichever comes first. Which means they don’t need to recall cars out of warranty unless it was a serious problem.
Sometimes the 'UAW guys' are to blame....sometimes they aren't. I still remember the videos of guys drinking booze and smoking pot at lunch time at UAW plants. Would you want to buy a car screwed together by a guy who is stoned.
Would you want to buy a car screwed together by a guy who is stoned.
In those videos they were smoking weed and drinking beer....'stoned' and 'drunk'....and I'll bet none were fired because the 'union' went to bat for them...Better than being drunk.
W E. Demming will tell you, "No Empty Slogans!"So whatever did happen to "Quality is Job 1?"
They have been called the "Ford Exploder" for decades.That's disappointing to hear.