Pidleypoo wrote: ↑14 May 2022, 22:00My point is that if they’ve learned anything from these latest revisions that must have cost them lots of money if my office is anything to go by , then I can’t see it happening.toonshola wrote: ↑14 May 2022, 17:42Oh there is no doubt they are incapable and it would be an absolute clusterf*ck, but don’t think for one minute that would stop them. If there is money to be saved for the shareholders it will be attempted. And when it all goes wrong it will be us who gets the blame for it failing.Pidleypoo wrote: ↑14 May 2022, 17:13Absolutely every single word of thisWoody Guthrie wrote: ↑14 May 2022, 17:06It's alright saying something Martin, it's another thing coming up with a feasible plan to make it work.Martin Walsh wrote: ↑14 May 2022, 15:10Woody the words Royal Mail have put in writing is to advance their greener operation they would want to withdraw mainland air network and transfer it to rail and road. They also state that they would require later start times and longer delivery spans.
You can spin it all you like but that is from Royal Mail to the CWU in way of a pay offer with strings.
Removing the mainland air network is not something the CWU can stop.
This later starts and longer deliveries is a favourite go to place of yours but can you explain exactly what you mean by that, exactly what Royal Mail means by that or how it would be possible to move the core delivery network crashing into the LAT deliveries who rely on the same vans, how collection on delivery could be maintained if the delivery isn't finished by 4/5pm, the impact of running delivery into peak traffic, how you're suddenly going to accommodate our (mostly female) primary child carers if they're now going to still be out delivering after the school finishes, how health and safety would be addressed if we're walking the streets at night in the dark.
Removing the mainland air network is eventually inevitable but it will require a complete redesign and rebuild of the entire network from collection right through to delivery. It's a massive undertaking that would probably require changes in the USO to build the changes in properly.
You can jump every time Royal Mail says boo and pass on that fear to the members to achieve your own goals but the reality is it's not something you can introduce overnight.
This is a company that can’t even get revisions correct in offices of less than 30 deliveries and people on these pages think they can completely change how the job has been done over night.
Also to answer the later starts nonsense, there’ll be lots of people leaving the job if anything like 9-5 or 10-6 comes in and I’ll be the first one.
Absolutely zero work life balance in deliveries for those types of hours.
This would be the tipping point for many many people working in deliveries, including myself. I personally think this is no longer a job for life. The way company is heading. Longer deliveries in order to maximise productivity, new products to deal with. Walking longer with heavier parcels, it all adds up to the physicality of the job. At the same time people at the top seems to ignore the fact, that a person's body can only take damage up to a point. What's going to happen? They will go off sick, no wonder they will do their best to attack this benefit. This company is raking in huge profits but doesn't want to spend on its biggest asset- workforce. If they are not somehow stopped I can see Royal Mail in not that distant future in serious struggle. Huge staff turnover, poor quality of service., unbearable workloads, poor pay. Customers will realise that we are no longer worth paying premium price and will go elsewhere. I can definitely see quality declining gradually. It is already quite below where it was 5-6 years ago.