Why does mail going via road and rail have to mean it arrives later? As far as I know it always used to travel by rail and road and posties started at 5am?richietns wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 12:51Even if you vote no you will be working later as the mail and parcels are going by road and rail regardless.Jen1 wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 09:52Why not make it a 3 tier workforce? It’s going to become a 2 tier workplace already with the conditions for new starters
Put the yes voters on the later shift with the new terms and pay rise, they could mop up whatever gets left from the earlier shift or do the dedicated parcel routesLeave the no voters as they are that way everyone is happy
I don’t begrudge anyone getting a pay rise if they’re willing to work the later shifts and it would give incentive for some to do the designated parcel routes (nobody has expressed interest in that at our office)
It could be an option depending on the amount of work and the percentage of yes to no votes
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Have to vote No
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pieoftheday
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Re: Have to vote No
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Woody Guthrie
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Re: Have to vote No
This is the flaw in the thinking of a lot of no voters.Leave the no voters as they are that way everyone is happy
That there is an option that leaves anyone as they are.
What the true fair position would be..
Let the Yes voters accept the terms on offer now.
Let the No voters accept whatever terms are left on the table after the strikes or negotiatons or dispute you intend to have in order to secure a "better agreement".
If you're going to be brave enough to vote No you have to accept the consequences.... good or bad.
Only dead fish follow the current
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Woody Guthrie
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Re: Have to vote No
TPO mate..pieoftheday wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 14:49Why does mail going via road and rail have to mean it arrives later? As far as I know it always used to travel by rail and road and posties started at 5am?
During the latter part of the twentieth century, rail mail was subject to various changes. In Britain, Rail Express Systems (RES) was formed during the 1980s to rejuvenate the market, streamlining and centralising rail mail services, resulting in TPO coverage decreasing over the following years. During the 1990s, the Royal Mail, Britain's main customer for TPOs, ordered 16 four-car British Rail Class 325 electric multiple units to replace locomotive-hauled counterparts in handling parcels. However, wider economic factors, including increasingly effective mechanical sorting methods in comparison to the TPO's manned sorting, along with operational safety concerns, made it increasingly unattractive to continue operating such services. Accordingly, the final regular TPO service in Great Britain was performed on 9 January 2004, with the carriages themselves used sold for scrap or to preservation societies. Since then, the Royal Mail has occasionally transferred some mail by rail, but has preferred using aircraft or road vehicles for doing so.
Only dead fish follow the current
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enskied
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Re: Have to vote No
No it didn't take an hour, it was an aside.LouBarlow wrote: ↑30 Jun 2023, 09:33It took you an hour to come up with that? I mean, you could have edited it into your previous post, but I guess you were proud of it and felt it deserved its own.
Our office is a few weeks into our revision, and despite being short-staffed we are still completing every day. Sounds like a more pleasant office to work in than some on here, which I guess is why I am more keen to vote for a deal that safeguards my job.
The more you speak the more unbelievable you sound. However in happy-Land
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pieoftheday
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Re: Have to vote No
Is that an answer to my question Woody or just a bit of history? I'm not being funny by the wayWoody Guthrie wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 15:05TPO mate..pieoftheday wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 14:49Why does mail going via road and rail have to mean it arrives later? As far as I know it always used to travel by rail and road and posties started at 5am?
During the latter part of the twentieth century, rail mail was subject to various changes. In Britain, Rail Express Systems (RES) was formed during the 1980s to rejuvenate the market, streamlining and centralising rail mail services, resulting in TPO coverage decreasing over the following years. During the 1990s, the Royal Mail, Britain's main customer for TPOs, ordered 16 four-car British Rail Class 325 electric multiple units to replace locomotive-hauled counterparts in handling parcels. However, wider economic factors, including increasingly effective mechanical sorting methods in comparison to the TPO's manned sorting, along with operational safety concerns, made it increasingly unattractive to continue operating such services. Accordingly, the final regular TPO service in Great Britain was performed on 9 January 2004, with the carriages themselves used sold for scrap or to preservation societies. Since then, the Royal Mail has occasionally transferred some mail by rail, but has preferred using aircraft or road vehicles for doing so.
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pieoftheday
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Re: Have to vote No
That's a bit shortsighted dont you think Lou? If your next revision fxxks things up like it did at ours and many other DOs do you think you might think differently? Also your comments seem a bit 'I'm alright Jack' ? Not that that's always a bad thing,depends on your experience I guessenskied wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 17:19No it didn't take an hour, it was an aside.LouBarlow wrote: ↑30 Jun 2023, 09:33It took you an hour to come up with that? I mean, you could have edited it into your previous post, but I guess you were proud of it and felt it deserved its own.
Our office is a few weeks into our revision, and despite being short-staffed we are still completing every day. Sounds like a more pleasant office to work in than some on here, which I guess is why I am more keen to vote for a deal that safeguards my job.
The more you speak the more unbelievable you sound. However in happy-Land
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postslippete
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Re: Have to vote No
guardianangel wrote: ↑30 Jun 2023, 19:48
People were doing 9 hour days on the 9 day fortnight,rurals could stay the same ,they should have lots of different shift patterns to have a work life balance.they could still all start the same time,there are guys in our office who would be happy to job share part time,i don't see what the problem would be,why can't a company accommodate different working patterns,keep your work force happy and it would be surprising how efficient they become.
Yeah, so 9 hours on delivery with the unavoidable later start times could be something like starting deliveries at 8am and finishing at 5pm 4 days a week could be a bit more palatable. At least we would get 3 days off.
On the face of it, shareholder value is the dumbest idea in the world.
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pieoftheday
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Re: Have to vote No
Do you mean a 9hr shift delivering? Or a 9 hr shift?postslippete wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 17:42guardianangel wrote: ↑30 Jun 2023, 19:48
People were doing 9 hour days on the 9 day fortnight,rurals could stay the same ,they should have lots of different shift patterns to have a work life balance.they could still all start the same time,there are guys in our office who would be happy to job share part time,i don't see what the problem would be,why can't a company accommodate different working patterns,keep your work force happy and it would be surprising how efficient they become.
Yeah, so 9 hours on delivery with the unavoidable later start times could be something like starting deliveries at 8am and finishing at 5pm 4 days a week could be a bit more palatable. At least we would get 3 days off.
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postslippete
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Re: Have to vote No
Woody Guthrie wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 15:00This is the flaw in the thinking of a lot of no voters.Leave the no voters as they are that way everyone is happy
That there is an option that leaves anyone as they are.
What the true fair position would be..
Let the Yes voters accept the terms on offer now.
Let the No voters accept whatever terms are left on the table after the strikes or negotiatons or dispute you intend to have in order to secure a "better agreement".
If you're going to be brave enough to vote No you have to accept the consequences.... good or bad.
If this site was representative of how everyone is feeling in the UK and if the deal gets voted in then there might be some unofficial strikes *if the Union decide to do nothing and RM still push ahead with their changes*. I'm afraid for me that's a no-no.
*edited*
Last edited by postslippete on 01 Jul 2023, 18:06, edited 1 time in total.
On the face of it, shareholder value is the dumbest idea in the world.
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postslippete
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Re: Have to vote No
pieoftheday wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 17:48Do you mean a 9hr shift delivering? Or a 9 hr shift?postslippete wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 17:42guardianangel wrote: ↑30 Jun 2023, 19:48
People were doing 9 hour days on the 9 day fortnight,rurals could stay the same ,they should have lots of different shift patterns to have a work life balance.they could still all start the same time,there are guys in our office who would be happy to job share part time,i don't see what the problem would be,why can't a company accommodate different working patterns,keep your work force happy and it would be surprising how efficient they become.
Yeah, so 9 hours on delivery with the unavoidable later start times could be something like starting deliveries at 8am and finishing at 5pm 4 days a week could be a bit more palatable. At least we would get 3 days off.
A 9 hour shift obviously. But considering the company have proposed getting rid of frames and bench merging so that there is less indoor work available, all that will mean is more time spent on deliveries. 9 hours x 4 days is 36 hours, so on the winter variation we are still 3 hours short.
I did say on here that we could start instead start earlier and deliver the mail and some of the packets and then come back to the delivery office and deliver the rest of the parcels/mail that will come in later and finish at 3pm?? But I don't think RM want that because it means putting on more lorries and it's not cost effective for the business to run this way. That was why they got rid of 2nd deliveries years ago.
On the face of it, shareholder value is the dumbest idea in the world.
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Woody Guthrie
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Re: Have to vote No
It's a genuine answer to how they used to achieve 1st class quality with trains and why they stopped it.pieoftheday wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 17:31Is that an answer to my question Woody or just a bit of history? I'm not being funny by the wayWoody Guthrie wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 15:05TPO mate..pieoftheday wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 14:49Why does mail going via road and rail have to mean it arrives later? As far as I know it always used to travel by rail and road and posties started at 5am?
During the latter part of the twentieth century, rail mail was subject to various changes. In Britain, Rail Express Systems (RES) was formed during the 1980s to rejuvenate the market, streamlining and centralising rail mail services, resulting in TPO coverage decreasing over the following years. During the 1990s, the Royal Mail, Britain's main customer for TPOs, ordered 16 four-car British Rail Class 325 electric multiple units to replace locomotive-hauled counterparts in handling parcels. However, wider economic factors, including increasingly effective mechanical sorting methods in comparison to the TPO's manned sorting, along with operational safety concerns, made it increasingly unattractive to continue operating such services. Accordingly, the final regular TPO service in Great Britain was performed on 9 January 2004, with the carriages themselves used sold for scrap or to preservation societies. Since then, the Royal Mail has occasionally transferred some mail by rail, but has preferred using aircraft or road vehicles for doing so.![]()
It was called the Travelling Post Office, basically a mail centre on wheels, that's what Ronnie Biggs and Co robbed
Only dead fish follow the current
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pieoftheday
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Re: Have to vote No
Oh yes I know what they were, I used to load them in the early 90sWoody Guthrie wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 18:08It's a genuine answer to how they used to achieve 1st class quality with trains and why they stopped it.pieoftheday wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 17:31Is that an answer to my question Woody or just a bit of history? I'm not being funny by the wayWoody Guthrie wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 15:05TPO mate..pieoftheday wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 14:49Why does mail going via road and rail have to mean it arrives later? As far as I know it always used to travel by rail and road and posties started at 5am?
During the latter part of the twentieth century, rail mail was subject to various changes. In Britain, Rail Express Systems (RES) was formed during the 1980s to rejuvenate the market, streamlining and centralising rail mail services, resulting in TPO coverage decreasing over the following years. During the 1990s, the Royal Mail, Britain's main customer for TPOs, ordered 16 four-car British Rail Class 325 electric multiple units to replace locomotive-hauled counterparts in handling parcels. However, wider economic factors, including increasingly effective mechanical sorting methods in comparison to the TPO's manned sorting, along with operational safety concerns, made it increasingly unattractive to continue operating such services. Accordingly, the final regular TPO service in Great Britain was performed on 9 January 2004, with the carriages themselves used sold for scrap or to preservation societies. Since then, the Royal Mail has occasionally transferred some mail by rail, but has preferred using aircraft or road vehicles for doing so.![]()
It was called the Travelling Post Office, basically a mail centre on wheels, that's what Ronnie Biggs and Co robbed![]()
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clashcityrocker
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Re: Have to vote No
Tens of thousands of employees on nights.
The societies of consumption and squandering of material resources are incompatible with the idea of economic growth and a clean planet.
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pieoftheday
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Re: Have to vote No
Aah the 2nd delivery, 20 letters tops and home we wentpostslippete wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 18:04pieoftheday wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 17:48Do you mean a 9hr shift delivering? Or a 9 hr shift?postslippete wrote: ↑01 Jul 2023, 17:42guardianangel wrote: ↑30 Jun 2023, 19:48
People were doing 9 hour days on the 9 day fortnight,rurals could stay the same ,they should have lots of different shift patterns to have a work life balance.they could still all start the same time,there are guys in our office who would be happy to job share part time,i don't see what the problem would be,why can't a company accommodate different working patterns,keep your work force happy and it would be surprising how efficient they become.
Yeah, so 9 hours on delivery with the unavoidable later start times could be something like starting deliveries at 8am and finishing at 5pm 4 days a week could be a bit more palatable. At least we would get 3 days off.
A 9 hour shift obviously. But considering the company have proposed getting rid of frames and bench merging so that there is less indoor work available, all that will mean is more time spent on deliveries. 9 hours x 4 days is 36 hours, so on the winter variation we are still 3 hours short.
I did say on here that we could start instead start earlier and deliver the mail and some of the packets and then come back to the delivery office and deliver the rest of the parcels/mail that will come in later and finish at 3pm?? But I don't think RM want that because it means putting on more lorries and it's not cost effective for the business to run this way. That was why they got rid of 2nd deliveries years ago.
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pieoftheday
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Re: Have to vote No
Sorting manually? Not the case now because of automation, so I'm still wondering why? Oh jeez am I really asking this on a Saturday night