Time to send a message to Canada's postal workers

It is hard to imagine a more coddled, out-of-touch and overcompensated group than postal workers

by the editors on Friday, June 10, 2011 9:50am - 909 Comments
Time to send a message to Canada's postal workers

Sean Kilpatrick/CP

Rain or snow or sleet or hail can’t disrupt the mail. But what rhymes with seven weeks of annual paid vacation, out-of-whack pay scales or infinitely bankable sick days?

While the rotating strike by workers at Canada Post has proven to be a hardship for many Canadian businesses, it is also shining necessary light on the massive disparity between postal employees and workers in the private sector. Outside of bureaucrats in France, it is hard to imagine a more coddled, out-of-touch and overcompensated group than postal workers.

Canada Post’s efforts to bring labour costs in line with common sense, modern technology and market rates should be supported regardless of the strike’s immediate implications. A successful conclusion to this strike might even spark a broader rationalization across all Crown corporations and government operations.

By any objective measure, a job at the post office is well-rewarded, despite the weather. Research by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business in 2008 found postal workers enjoyed a 17 per cent wage premium over comparable private sector jobs. The current offer from Canada Post would raise wages by 7.4 per cent, on a cumulative basis, over the next four years. Union officials are demanding 11.55 per cent—a massive increase for workers who are already demonstrably overcompensated.

As with most sinecures, however, the real advantage to working at Canada Post is in the benefits. Postal workers currently accumulate sick days at the rate of 15 per year, with no maximum. The extent of this bottomless bank of sick days is illustrated by a recent Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) bulletin that offered up the apocryphal example of “Narinda,” who has “402 days of sick leave credit.” Canada Post is sensibly proposing to buy out this improbable inventory; Narinda would receive $3,000 cash for her hoard of sick days.

Then there is the matter of paid vacation. Current full-time Canada Post employees are eligible for up to seven weeks of holiday, a prospect far beyond imagination for most in the workaday world. And the pension plan has an unfunded liability of $3.2 billion.

The business of mail delivery has changed dramatically since the last postal strike in 1997. The advent of electronic bill payment, email and the rest of the digital revolution has led to a 17 per cent decline in letter mail volume since 2006.

Canada Post’s sensible strategy is to establish a more reasonable pay and benefits system for workers in this declining industry—but only for new hires. Other than replacing the absurd sick-day bank (which Canada Post has offered to refer to binding arbitration), full-time postal workers would keep all their existing wages and benefits, whether appropriate or not. New employees would have a lower starting wage, receive six weeks of vacation instead of seven, and subscribe to a different pension plan.

Canada Post’s offer is reminiscent of the deal given North American dockworkers when intermodal shipping containers revolutionized the stevedore business in the 1960s. Existing workers had their jobs, wages and benefits protected for the extent of their careers, but anyone hired after the deal was signed was expected to accept reality. It seemed more than fair back then. The same logic should apply today.

While disputing the decline in mail volume and continuing to make unrealistic demands on wages and benefits, the postal union is nonetheless seeking new ways to hold the Canadian economy hostage: CUPW has called on Canada Post to expand into banking and finance. The prospect of rotating bank strikes is no doubt pleasing to union organizers. Not so for the rest of the country.

Of course the current postal dispute has significance far beyond the future of letter mail or the ambitions of Canada Post and its union. The gap between private and public sector compensation has now reached crisis proportions, and must be addressed for the sake of equity, affordability and coherent labour peace.

One example of how large and untenable this gap has become can be found in Statistics Canada’s recent observation that public sector employees now constitute a majority of all pension plan participants, despite being outnumbered more than three to one in the workforce. This suggests two types of retirement in the future: one of carefree luxury for public sector employees, and one of reduced expectations for everyone else. A similar dichotomy is at work with Ontario’s practice of paying a bonus to every corrections staffer who takes fewer than 23 sick days per year.

A postal strike seems as good a time as any to start imposing a new sense of reality on the public sector.

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  • Anonymous

    nonsense. this article must have been written after talking to one of the top management official. admit it. mr. writer.
     how can u all people get misled with 1 person that writes the article. this shows how the media controls our point of view. any time there is a dispute no matter where, it makes sense to hear out both the sides, not just 1 side and write an article which influences/ misleds the whole country.
    SHAME ON U MACLEANS. see what u did, because of u ( 1 person ) that wrote this nonsense, it made me put a bad name on macleans.

     Anyway, the truth:
    1) canada post has never been a burden on taxpayer, it in fact gives millions/billions over the last 15 years in dividends to government.
    2) the 19$/hr is a new hire rate. but the company has not hired full time for a longest time. in other words tell me who can survive 15-20 hrs a week with 19$/hr.

  • Anonymous

    All I can say is, I worked at Canada Post as a letter carrier for 12 years and the grass is always greener on the other side of the fence.  When you become part of a union who’s letter head says “The Struggle Continues” you soon realize the job isn’t all that it is cracked up to be.  I hated the union and I hated the management at Canada Post.  The business relationship between the two is based more on a 1950′s management style than anything even close to the 21st century.

    When you are warned during the first couple days of training by a senior letter carrier to always make sure you get properly paid for your earned overtime as per the contract and than a few weeks later you witness your boss trying to sneak your punch card through to payroll with your overtime recorded on it at a rate less than what you are entitled too in the contract, all loyalty to the corporation goes out the window real quick.  Sad, very sad, when you start out as a young, new employee, excited about a new job, loyal to the corporation, trusting your government and within weeks the harshness of the real world turns an innocent youth into “one of them”.  12 years later I quit.  I know some of the allergies I have that I didn’t have when I was younger – among various other back problems, etc. – are more than likely caused by some sort of nerve damage from lugging mail on my back all that time.

    Based on the weather, it was a good job for 4 months/year, an ok job for 4 months/year and it sucked for 4 months/year.  Then when the union and management conflict interfered with the workers doing their jobs to satisfy the customers, the ok months and good months became much less.  All any Canada Post employee really wants is to be left alone by the union and the management, so they can satisfy the customers by getting the job done.  Worst thing that ever happened to the letter carriers was the government fored amalgamation of the LCUC & CUPW.  End of story.

    The grass isn’t as green at Canada Post as what those on the other side of the fence think.  The bottom line, I quit.  C’est la vie.

  • Kimberly Yull

    I am sooooo sick of hearing about over paid-under worked civil servants. Really, take a hard look at your friends and family members who work in the private sector. I can no longer afford to subsidize civil servants. I am working non-stop just to break even without the perks of sick days and with only 3 weeks of vacation and little to no pension. I just CAN’T support their sorry, whining, yahoos any longer.  

  • Anonymous

    I would like to correct the sentence about annual leave. A full time employee with less than 7 years of continuous service is entitled to 3 weeks paid vacation, not 7 weeks as you quote in the article. In order to enjoy 7 weeks of paid annual leave, a full time employee at Canada Post would have to have 28 or more years of continuous service.

  • Anonymous

    I would like to correct the sentence about annual leave. A full time employee with less than 7 years of continuous service is entitled to 3 weeks paid vacation, not 7 weeks as you quote in the article. In order to enjoy 7 weeks of paid annual leave, a full time employee at Canada Post would have to have 28 or more years of continuous service.

  • Anonymous

    If we could just draw back from the finger pointing and accusations for a moment, I would like to point out that Canadians have a real problem that is far less to do with how much CUPW people are paid and far more to do with whether or not we will even have a mail system. If we do, it is going to have to take a much different form than it has before.

    Mail traffic has dropped to a point where it is already inordinately expensive to deliver a piece of mail, no matter what the union member perks and pay may be. It may not be possible any more to run a profitable Canada Post, especially when you consider the cost of delivering to remote locations as Canada Post is obligated to do.

    To make things worse, the kind of mail that still has to travel by post is also the most critical to our economy. Orders going to companies, invoices going to customers, and cheques coming back again are among these essential bits of paper. Companies have already started opting for electronic ordering and invoicing but cheques are hard to eliminate because the banks charge many times more for a money transfer than it costs to mail a letter.

    I operate a business that sells primarily to US customers. Mailed orders and mailed cheques were taking up to 3 weeks to reach my door in Toronto — possibly because CUPW workers were already expressing their displeasure but that is only a rumoured reasons.

    I have since moved my business to Fort Erie and I now keep a US receiving box in Buffalo. It now takes 2 days for a cheque to reach me at the Buffalo box. I also send outbound mail from Buffalo. Cutting delivery time from 3 weeks to 2 days has been an enormous benefit to my business. The change has also reduced my use of Canadian mail services so much that I have returned my postage meter to Pitney Bowes and will not likely need one ever again.

    To sum this up, I believe the real challenge for Canada Post, CUPW and Canadians at large is to figure out some way for Canada to continue having a postal service. Solve that problem or else EVERYBODY is out of a job.

  • Anonymous

    If we could just draw back from the finger pointing and accusations for a moment, I would like to point out that Canadians have a real problem that is far less to do with how much CUPW people are paid and far more to do with whether or not we will even have a mail system. If we do, it is going to have to take a much different form than it has before.

    Mail traffic has dropped to a point where it is already inordinately expensive to deliver a piece of mail, no matter what the union member perks and pay may be. It may not be possible any more to run a profitable Canada Post, especially when you consider the cost of delivering to remote locations as Canada Post is obligated to do.

    To make things worse, the kind of mail that still has to travel by post is also the most critical to our economy. Orders going to companies, invoices going to customers, and cheques coming back again are among these essential bits of paper. Companies have already started opting for electronic ordering and invoicing but cheques are hard to eliminate because the banks charge many times more for a money transfer than it costs to mail a letter.

    I operate a business that sells primarily to US customers. Mailed orders and mailed cheques were taking up to 3 weeks to reach my door in Toronto — possibly because CUPW workers were already expressing their displeasure but that is only a rumoured reasons.

    I have since moved my business to Fort Erie and I now keep a US receiving box in Buffalo. It now takes 2 days for a cheque to reach me at the Buffalo box. I also send outbound mail from Buffalo. Cutting delivery time from 3 weeks to 2 days has been an enormous benefit to my business. The change has also reduced my use of Canadian mail services so much that I have returned my postage meter to Pitney Bowes and will not likely need one ever again.

    To sum this up, I believe the real challenge for Canada Post, CUPW and Canadians at large is to figure out some way for Canada to continue having a postal service. Solve that problem or else EVERYBODY is out of a job.

  • Michael D

    Not only is this factually inaccurate regarding contract issues, it is completely out of touch with what postal workers do. Macleans would do well to filter their opinion pieces a little better. After your article on UBB and now this, I’m not even giving you guys a 3rd chance. You just lost a reader.

  • Michael D

    Not only is this factually inaccurate regarding contract issues, it is completely out of touch with what postal workers do. Macleans would do well to filter their opinion pieces a little better. After your article on UBB and now this, I’m not even giving you guys a 3rd chance. You just lost a reader.

  • Aidan Wotherspoon

    I used to work for the post office, you don’t get a pay-out for your banked sick days. Once a Postal worker reaches retirement age, it’s use them or lose them. A woman I knew was diagnosed with cancer after a long career at the post office, luckily she had spent 15-odd years banking sick days and they came in handy.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=612915239 Cindy Husband

    I agree totally with this editorial. The letter carriers are very over-compensated for what they do. It takes no skill to put letters into a mailbox. No one in the private sector gets 7 weeks off for holidays a year. Maybe the CEO’s but no one else. When someone leaves their place of employment all vacation and sick leave benefits have to be paid out. They use a formula, but they are paid out. What the union seems to be totally missing is that times are changing and the postal service is dwindling. As a result there is less money to go around. Thus raises, like in every other industry are very minimal if at all. While the union brass sit in their very cushy offices, making three figure incomes they are going to end up costing the carriers their jobs because of thier stupidity.

    • Anonymous

      WE AREN”T JUST GIVEN 7 WEEKS TO START!!!!!!!!!! WHY CAN’T PEOPLE GET OVER IT!!!! GET THE FACTS STRAIGHT LADY! WE START WITH 3 WEEKS HOLIDAYS AFTER YOU PUT IN 28 YEARS THEN YOU GET YOUR 7 WEEKS!!
      DO YOU BELIEVE EVERYTHING YO READ? DO YOU PERSONALLY KNOW A POSTAL WORKER?

    • Anonymous

      WE AREN”T JUST GIVEN 7 WEEKS TO START!!!!!!!!!! WHY CAN’T PEOPLE GET OVER IT!!!! GET THE FACTS STRAIGHT LADY! WE START WITH 3 WEEKS HOLIDAYS AFTER YOU PUT IN 28 YEARS THEN YOU GET YOUR 7 WEEKS!!
      DO YOU BELIEVE EVERYTHING YO READ? DO YOU PERSONALLY KNOW A POSTAL WORKER?

    • Anonymous

      It takes no skill to put letters into a mailbox (Letter Carrier);
      It takes no skill to put pills into a bottle (Pharmacist);
      It takes no skill to put nails into a board (Carpenter);
      It takes no skill to put water into a burning building (Fireman);
      It takes no skill to assume there is no more to life than meets the eye (many of you);
      It takes no skill to equate simple with easy (many of you)
      It takes no skill to write “three figure income” when you probably mean six (Cindy Husband)
      It takes almost no skill to scapegoat Postal Workers:
      1) because it seems they’ve got it better than you;
      2) because you are unaware how profitable Canada Post Corp is;
      3) because you accept received wisdom of the ‘current economic reality’ as a justification; 
      4) because you don’t realize how much money is being sucked into the financial sector with no productive return;
      5) because you are either unsure of, or feel powerless to affect, the causes of global economic disparity; 
      6) because, dammit, if YOU had to swallow the pill then they should too;
      7) because it’s easy to forget – especially if you feel you don’t have one – that good jobs are a good thing, and necessary in large numbers to maintain the levels of consumption required to end the global recession.
      So… it takes how much skill to write a one-sided editorial?
      Not much… MacLeans lowered itself to using the Toronto Sun’s formula for rabble-rousing: find an easy target, scornfully ascribe a sense of entitlement, cherry-pick a few outrageous facts while eschewing context, and frame it all with received wisdom… add ignorant masses, and they’ll do the stirring themselves! The MacLeans cheapshot isn’t even signed. 

      CPC tried to provoke the union into a full walkout in hopes that public opinion would turn against the Posties. When that failed, and the union agreed to Labour Minister Lisa Raitt’s request to stop the rolling strikes, CPC would not back down from imposing service cuts. In fact, they didn’t even run their own tactic for more than the one day – by Wednesday morning, with no word of warning to the public or the workers, they locked the urban workers out… and right on cue, the government pops up to announce imminent back-to-work legislation. CPC’s objective is to forcefeed the union a gutted agreement that establishes a two tiered workforce going forward; the long term expectation is that it will render the union ineffectual.
      it takes skill – and a willing government, hardly at arm’s length from its own corporation – to undermine unionized workers. That, and a complacent populace. The situation should demand closer scrutiny, but instead of outcry it seems the public is cheering for the hand holding the knife.
      It takes no skill to remain ignorant of the implications for the middle and working class if you allow CUPW to be steamrollered. Is it too much to ask that you inform yourselves before so cavalierly kicking us to the curb? Here’s an article by the Toronto Star’s Heather Mallick: 

      http://www.thestar.com/opinion/editorialopinion/article/1004315–mallick-canada-post-workers-future-is-ours-too

      It takes no skill to click a link.
      It takes no skill to be human; it takes compassion.

    • Anonymous

      It takes no skill to put letters into a mailbox (Letter Carrier);
      It takes no skill to put pills into a bottle (Pharmacist);
      It takes no skill to put nails into a board (Carpenter);
      It takes no skill to put water into a burning building (Fireman);
      It takes no skill to assume there is no more to life than meets the eye (many of you);
      It takes no skill to equate simple with easy (many of you)
      It takes no skill to write “three figure income” when you probably mean six (Cindy Husband)
      It takes almost no skill to scapegoat Postal Workers:
      1) because it seems they’ve got it better than you;
      2) because you are unaware how profitable Canada Post Corp is;
      3) because you accept received wisdom of the ‘current economic reality’ as a justification; 
      4) because you don’t realize how much money is being sucked into the financial sector with no productive return;
      5) because you are either unsure of, or feel powerless to affect, the causes of global economic disparity; 
      6) because, dammit, if YOU had to swallow the pill then they should too;
      7) because it’s easy to forget – especially if you feel you don’t have one – that good jobs are a good thing, and necessary in large numbers to maintain the levels of consumption required to end the global recession.
      So… it takes how much skill to write a one-sided editorial?
      Not much… MacLeans lowered itself to using the Toronto Sun’s formula for rabble-rousing: find an easy target, scornfully ascribe a sense of entitlement, cherry-pick a few outrageous facts while eschewing context, and frame it all with received wisdom… add ignorant masses, and they’ll do the stirring themselves! The MacLeans cheapshot isn’t even signed. 

      CPC tried to provoke the union into a full walkout in hopes that public opinion would turn against the Posties. When that failed, and the union agreed to Labour Minister Lisa Raitt’s request to stop the rolling strikes, CPC would not back down from imposing service cuts. In fact, they didn’t even run their own tactic for more than the one day – by Wednesday morning, with no word of warning to the public or the workers, they locked the urban workers out… and right on cue, the government pops up to announce imminent back-to-work legislation. CPC’s objective is to forcefeed the union a gutted agreement that establishes a two tiered workforce going forward; the long term expectation is that it will render the union ineffectual.
      it takes skill – and a willing government, hardly at arm’s length from its own corporation – to undermine unionized workers. That, and a complacent populace. The situation should demand closer scrutiny, but instead of outcry it seems the public is cheering for the hand holding the knife.
      It takes no skill to remain ignorant of the implications for the middle and working class if you allow CUPW to be steamrollered. Is it too much to ask that you inform yourselves before so cavalierly kicking us to the curb? Here’s an article by the Toronto Star’s Heather Mallick: 

      http://www.thestar.com/opinion/editorialopinion/article/1004315–mallick-canada-post-workers-future-is-ours-too

      It takes no skill to click a link.
      It takes no skill to be human; it takes compassion.

    • Anonymous

      It takes no skill to put letters into a mailbox (Letter Carrier);
      It takes no skill to put pills into a bottle (Pharmacist);
      It takes no skill to put nails into a board (Carpenter);
      It takes no skill to put water into a burning building (Fireman);
      It takes no skill to assume there is no more to life than meets the eye (many of you);
      It takes no skill to equate simple with easy (many of you)
      It takes no skill to write “three figure income” when you probably mean six (Cindy Husband)
      It takes almost no skill to scapegoat Postal Workers:
      1) because it seems they’ve got it better than you;
      2) because you are unaware how profitable Canada Post Corp is;
      3) because you accept received wisdom of the ‘current economic reality’ as a justification; 
      4) because you don’t realize how much money is being sucked into the financial sector with no productive return;
      5) because you are either unsure of, or feel powerless to affect, the causes of global economic disparity; 
      6) because, dammit, if YOU had to swallow the pill then they should too;
      7) because it’s easy to forget – especially if you feel you don’t have one – that good jobs are a good thing, and necessary in large numbers to maintain the levels of consumption required to end the global recession.
      So… it takes how much skill to write a one-sided editorial?
      Not much… MacLeans lowered itself to using the Toronto Sun’s formula for rabble-rousing: find an easy target, scornfully ascribe a sense of entitlement, cherry-pick a few outrageous facts while eschewing context, and frame it all with received wisdom… add ignorant masses, and they’ll do the stirring themselves! The MacLeans cheapshot isn’t even signed. 

      CPC tried to provoke the union into a full walkout in hopes that public opinion would turn against the Posties. When that failed, and the union agreed to Labour Minister Lisa Raitt’s request to stop the rolling strikes, CPC would not back down from imposing service cuts. In fact, they didn’t even run their own tactic for more than the one day – by Wednesday morning, with no word of warning to the public or the workers, they locked the urban workers out… and right on cue, the government pops up to announce imminent back-to-work legislation. CPC’s objective is to forcefeed the union a gutted agreement that establishes a two tiered workforce going forward; the long term expectation is that it will render the union ineffectual.
      it takes skill – and a willing government, hardly at arm’s length from its own corporation – to undermine unionized workers. That, and a complacent populace. The situation should demand closer scrutiny, but instead of outcry it seems the public is cheering for the hand holding the knife.
      It takes no skill to remain ignorant of the implications for the middle and working class if you allow CUPW to be steamrollered. Is it too much to ask that you inform yourselves before so cavalierly kicking us to the curb? Here’s an article by the Toronto Star’s Heather Mallick: 

      http://www.thestar.com/opinion/editorialopinion/article/1004315–mallick-canada-post-workers-future-is-ours-too

      It takes no skill to click a link.
      It takes no skill to be human; it takes compassion.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_U22RY3S23TRQEIJIK7FGRALCDU jeff

    The part it appears everybody,including CPC, is missing is the incredible physical demands of the job.The injuries that a letter carrier suffer are most often for life. That is why CUPW members need the benefits that we are fighting for. Carriers are quite often walking wounded.  Many retire with a permanent injury. Hips,knees,ankles,shoulders and backs.Some people have multiple injuries. Letter Carriers throw a bag of heavy mail over their shoulder. Walk 15km up and down stairs and hills, for most 1/2 the year in winter weather, everyday for 35 years. All for a company that has for 16 years made a profit. Paid hundreds of millions to the government in taxes and dividends. All on a letter carriers back. Literally! The facts are that alot of this dispute is about Health and Safety, and instead of rollbacks, investing some of the giant profits back into the corporation and it’s employees. And for the record…as an employee…I can tell you mail volumes ARE NOT DOWN! Not in the past few weeks…or even in the past 20 years I have worked there. Don’t believe everything you hear.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_U22RY3S23TRQEIJIK7FGRALCDU jeff

    The part it appears everybody,including CPC, is missing is the incredible physical demands of the job.The injuries that a letter carrier suffer are most often for life. That is why CUPW members need the benefits that we are fighting for. Carriers are quite often walking wounded.  Many retire with a permanent injury. Hips,knees,ankles,shoulders and backs.Some people have multiple injuries. Letter Carriers throw a bag of heavy mail over their shoulder. Walk 15km up and down stairs and hills, for most 1/2 the year in winter weather, everyday for 35 years. All for a company that has for 16 years made a profit. Paid hundreds of millions to the government in taxes and dividends. All on a letter carriers back. Literally! The facts are that alot of this dispute is about Health and Safety, and instead of rollbacks, investing some of the giant profits back into the corporation and it’s employees. And for the record…as an employee…I can tell you mail volumes ARE NOT DOWN! Not in the past few weeks…or even in the past 20 years I have worked there. Don’t believe everything you hear.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_U22RY3S23TRQEIJIK7FGRALCDU jeff

    The part it appears everybody,including CPC, is missing is the incredible physical demands of the job.The injuries that a letter carrier suffer are most often for life. That is why CUPW members need the benefits that we are fighting for. Carriers are quite often walking wounded.  Many retire with a permanent injury. Hips,knees,ankles,shoulders and backs.Some people have multiple injuries. Letter Carriers throw a bag of heavy mail over their shoulder. Walk 15km up and down stairs and hills, for most 1/2 the year in winter weather, everyday for 35 years. All for a company that has for 16 years made a profit. Paid hundreds of millions to the government in taxes and dividends. All on a letter carriers back. Literally! The facts are that alot of this dispute is about Health and Safety, and instead of rollbacks, investing some of the giant profits back into the corporation and it’s employees. And for the record…as an employee…I can tell you mail volumes ARE NOT DOWN! Not in the past few weeks…or even in the past 20 years I have worked there. Don’t believe everything you hear.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_U22RY3S23TRQEIJIK7FGRALCDU jeff

    The part it appears everybody,including CPC, is missing is the incredible physical demands of the job.The injuries that a letter carrier suffer are most often for life. That is why CUPW members need the benefits that we are fighting for. Carriers are quite often walking wounded.  Many retire with a permanent injury. Hips,knees,ankles,shoulders and backs.Some people have multiple injuries. Letter Carriers throw a bag of heavy mail over their shoulder. Walk 15km up and down stairs and hills, for most 1/2 the year in winter weather, everyday for 35 years. All for a company that has for 16 years made a profit. Paid hundreds of millions to the government in taxes and dividends. All on a letter carriers back. Literally! The facts are that alot of this dispute is about Health and Safety, and instead of rollbacks, investing some of the giant profits back into the corporation and it’s employees. And for the record…as an employee…I can tell you mail volumes ARE NOT DOWN! Not in the past few weeks…or even in the past 20 years I have worked there. Don’t believe everything you hear.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Wayne-L-McGee/534252290 Wayne L. McGee

    I am old enough to remember the demise of the ice man, the bread man and the milk man. I hope to live long enough to happily witness the demise of Canada Post and its workers. Take time during this strike to go electronic with those who provide your services.

    • Paul Ester

      Right on! The fewer public sector jobs with good pay and benefits for Canadians, the better!!!  There are plenty of fast-food restaurants out there looking to hire people for minimum wage, but are forced to compete with these cushy jobs.

    • Paul Ester

      Right on! The fewer public sector jobs with good pay and benefits for Canadians, the better!!!  There are plenty of fast-food restaurants out there looking to hire people for minimum wage, but are forced to compete with these cushy jobs.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Wayne-L-McGee/534252290 Wayne L. McGee

    I am old enough to remember the demise of the ice man, the bread man and the milk man. I hope to live long enough to happily witness the demise of Canada Post and its workers. Take time during this strike to go electronic with those who provide your services.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Wayne-L-McGee/534252290 Wayne L. McGee

    I am old enough to remember the demise of the ice man, the bread man and the milk man. I hope to live long enough to happily witness the demise of Canada Post and its workers. Take time during this strike to go electronic with those who provide your services.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Wayne-L-McGee/534252290 Wayne L. McGee

    I am old enough to remember the demise of the ice man, the bread man and the milk man. I hope to live long enough to happily witness the demise of Canada Post and its workers. Take time during this strike to go electronic with those who provide your services.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Wayne-L-McGee/534252290 Wayne L. McGee

    I am old enough to remember the demise of the ice man, the bread man and the milk man. I hope to live long enough to happily witness the demise of Canada Post and its workers. Take time during this strike to go electronic with those who provide your services.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Wayne-L-McGee/534252290 Wayne L. McGee

    I am old enough to remember the demise of the ice man, the bread man and the milk man. I hope to live long enough to happily witness the demise of Canada Post and its workers. Take time during this strike to go electronic with those who provide your services.

  • Anonymous

    I am a chiropractor, and I treat many private sector, public sector and unionized patients of both categories.  Without question, the laziest of the bunch are the unionized.  They are “always” sick and never seem to get better.  I just can’t imagine why…Don’t get me wrong, I am not saying all unionized employees are lazy, but without question I believe unionization breeds laziness and a sense of entitlement that as an employer and self employed individual I find truly appalling.  The time and need for unions has long since past.  All they do now is hold employers and consumers hostage for unreasonable and unaffordable benefits and wage demands.  Wake up unions…the rest of us hate you and don’t support you!

  • Anonymous

    I am a chiropractor, and I treat many private sector, public sector and unionized patients of both categories.  Without question, the laziest of the bunch are the unionized.  They are “always” sick and never seem to get better.  I just can’t imagine why…Don’t get me wrong, I am not saying all unionized employees are lazy, but without question I believe unionization breeds laziness and a sense of entitlement that as an employer and self employed individual I find truly appalling.  The time and need for unions has long since past.  All they do now is hold employers and consumers hostage for unreasonable and unaffordable benefits and wage demands.  Wake up unions…the rest of us hate you and don’t support you!

  • Paul Ester

    The only workers who deserve good pay and decent benefits are corporate CEOs. They are the true backbone of any company and are the least expendable. I believe Canadians further down the corporate ladder should only be paid minimum wage (which is currently too high) and be content with that. If they don’t like it, send their jobs overseas where people are willing to work for pennies an hour, and are grateful because they know that’s the most they can make in the job market. In fact, most Canadians should only be paid pennies an hour. While this may seem like an impossible goal in the public sector, I do think this is achievable in the private sector. Canadians need to learn to be grateful to their corporate employers and realize that they are completely replaceable. If you’re upset because you feel your wages and benefits are insufficient, there are people who will be happy to have your job. And for pennies less an hour.

  • Anonymous

    I agree with this editorial. I am sure Lester Pearson never thought it would come to this when he provided for the unionization of the public service. Regardless of the nitty gritty , this is a job for grade eights but compensation as if they really had talents to offer.   It’s one thing to be protected, another to ask the taxpayers to lavish sick days, excessive holidays, not to mention wages more than equivalents in the private sector who pay the postal workers’ .

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