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Reassigned postal workers facing big financial hardships

Reassigned postal workers facing big financial hardships
By Wiley Henry | Published  05/14/2009 | News | Rating:
Reassigned postal workers facing big financial hardships
The United States Postal Service – historically a dependable ladder into the middle class for African Americans – is experiencing an unprecedented decline in mail volume and revenue. As a result, thousands of postal workers nationwide are being laid off, reassigned to jobs that can be several hundred miles away or given the option to retire early.

 African Americans locally are feeling the economic pain as many face possible reassignments and the prospects of having to uproot their families and sell their homes in a down market.

At the Memphis Processing and Distribution Center on Third Street and the Memphis Bulk Mail Center on Elvis Presley, many postal workers are on edge as workers are being let go or moved. Reassigned workers may be given relocation expenses but they are only reimbursed after they have paid the moving costs, which is an economic hardship for many families.

In an effort to streamline operations and increase revenue, the U.S. Postal Service has begun to retool, outsource, restructure and reposition its career craft and supervisory employees. Thousands of jobs also will be eliminated through attrition.

 
Postal worker Barbara Andrade, who has 23 years on the job, finished her route Tuesday evening before returning to the Bartlett Post Office. She said the hardships her fellow postal workers are experiencing at the Memphis Processing and Distribution Center on Third Street and the Memphis Bulk Mail Center on Elvis Presley are unfortunate. (Photo by Wiley Henry)
Some African-American postal workers in Memphis fear that skin color will be used as a factor as the reductions are made. “We need to be assured that the reduction in workforce will be a fair and equitable process across the state of Tennessee and without racial bias,” said Deborah Becton, a mail handler at the Memphis P&DC.

Becton, who is not being reassigned, says it appears more African Americans in Memphis are affected by the workforce reduction than those at facilities in Knoxville and Nashville, where the workforces have larger numbers of whites.

Beth Barnett, USPS communications manager for the Tennessee district, said, however, that is not the case. There are changes in those areas as well, she said. “I’m pretty sure Memphis is significantly less than others,” she said.

“The positions are what’s being looked at. We don’t do a profile. It might be a reflection of the general population (at those facilities),” said Barnett, who spent 20 years at the Memphis P&DC before taking her current position in Nashville.

“The economic recession has been really tough on business – especially in the mail industry,” said Barnett. “We’re facing financial issues like anyone else.”

The numbers and revenues tell the story, said Barnett. In the Tennessee district, the USPS handled a total of 154,806,789 pieces of mail in 2008 compared to 138,800.677 for this year.

Despite a second quarter loss of $1.9 billion and a year-to-date loss of $2.3 billion, Barnett said the USPS is trying to make the necessary changes to improve productivity without cutting jobs.

“We’re aggressively trying to realign costs to match mail volume,” she said. “In the first half of 2009, there was a decline of 58 million hours – about 33,000 full-time employees – despite the number of delivery points by 1.1 million from the same period last year.”

The goal is to reduce work hours by more than 100 million by year’s end, which is about 57,000 full-time employees, Barnett said.
    
Moving presents economic hardships

Becton, a self-appointed spokesperson for her reassigned co-workers, said an independent investigation is needed before irreversible economic damage is done to the community. She also said postal workers shouldn’t be forced to relocate several hundred miles.

In a letter-writing campaign to U.S. senators Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker, and U.S. representatives Marsha Blackburn, John Tanner and Steve Cohen, Becton bemoaned the hardships her coworkers are experiencing.

Charlotte Kimble, for example, has been working at the BMC for 11 years. She and co-worker Tamara Pounder are being reassigned to a postal facility in Tulsa, Okla. Another coworker, Xavier Dotson, is going to Nashville.

Kimble got a reassignment letter from her manager last year in December. A second letter arrived in February. She was supposed to report for duty on March 9, but is still on the job in Memphis.

“We’ve been on standby since March 2, sitting in a conference room with the Internet and TV on each day from 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.,” Kimble explained. “There are about seven of us waiting on management and the union to decide our fate.”

According to Kimble, about 55 mail handlers and clerks at the BMC have been assigned to various facilities outside of Memphis. “I’ll have to leave on May 17 and report to work May 23,” said Kimble.

So far she hasn’t been able to secure housing in Tulsa. “They’ve given us time, but it’s not enough time to get everything set up,” said Kimble, who is married and has a daughter in school.

A mail handler for eight years, Pounder has two children ages nine and 13. “My daughter is graduating from eighth-grade. I will miss graduation, because I have to report to work on May 23. I asked them (management) to push the date back. They said no.”

Dotson, also a mail handler, has been employed with the Postal Service for more than 11 years. She is married and has a daughter at Tennessee State University and a son in the 10th-grade.

“I made preparation, but not enough,” said Dotson. “I went to Nashville this weekend and saw an apartment that won’t be ready until the first of the month.”

Relocating to Nashville, she explained, will be a burden on her children and husband, whose employer, Pacific Rail, doesn’t have an office in the city. “I discussed this with management, but they said I have to be there on May 23.”

According to the USPS, reassigned employees may be entitled to relocation benefits. Those benefits, however, won’t relieve the stress for Pounder, who used her savings just a few weeks to pay off bills. She is not sure now how to pay for a move.

“I didn’t know if I would go, so I spent the money on bills. Now they tell me I’m going,” she said. “Now I have to borrow the money. I need my job. If I don’t take the job, I’ll be terminated.”

Kimble, Dotson and Pounder are at a crossroads. They have no choice but to sell their homes and move their families to their respective places of employment.

“The majority of us were born in Memphis with family. And they are sending us to places where we don’t know anybody. It’s hard to express this to your children,” Pounder said.

Rep. Cohen has intervened at the behest of Becton. She first made her concerns known at an April 4 town hall meeting that the 9th District congressman conducted with John Conyers, the congressman from Michigan.  

Randy Wade, district director for Cohen’s Memphis office, said the congressman is working hard on behalf of the local postal workers. “We’re trying to make certain that there’s not a disparity in the postal workers in West Tennessee who are being reassigned verses those in Middle and East Tennessee,” Wade said.

He also pointed out that Postmaster General John E. Potter has been apprised of the postal workers’ plight in Memphis.

‘People don’t like change’

In Article 6 of the 2006-2011 national agreement between the National Association of Letter Carriers and the USPS, postal workers “shall be protected henceforth against any involuntary layoffs or force reduction.”
“We’re working closely with the Postal Service on grievances and arbitration process,” said Drew Von Bergen of the NALC. “The postal Service has been the cash cow for the government. It’s put an onerous demand on them that they shouldn’t have to face.”

Charles Hill, a candidate for local president of the National Postal Mail Handlers Union, said he does not think that mail volume has declined enough to warrant employee reassignments.

“We have a contract that we are supposed to enforce. Sometimes it’s enforced, sometimes it’s not,” said Hill, a mail handler and equipment operator for 21 years.  He said the contract allows workers to be moved within 500 miles – but it must be justified.

Another BMC employee, Leo Stann, said many postal workers are stressed over worksite conditions and their future as civil servants. “For people to go 650 miles to work is racist,” he said. “I’m aware of only one white lady who is affected by what’s going on.”

The American Postal Workers Union is fighting battles on several fronts with the Postal Service. The union filed a joint lawsuit in 2008 with NALC against the Postal Service and the Office of Inspector General to stop OIG from obtaining confidential medical information on employees.

Becton said impacted employees are bypassing the union and filing grievances with the EEO (Equal Employment Opportunity), just like the one she filed in April, charging discrimination. Becton is on limited duty because she was injured on the job.

Trying to find a solution that works for all sides is a tremendous challenge, Barnett said.
“We’ve got to make some adjustments to try to right side our organization and try to deliver for the customer,” she said.

“Any time you talk about change, people don’t like it.”  
   
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Comments
  • Comment #1 (Posted by pete countryman)
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    I read with interest your article on employee excessing at the Memphis postal facility. 61% of the population is black , hence the alleged profiling , one can liken the charge to someone in Alaska being excessed then claiming it was based on them being white. With an average of 600,000 fellow americans losing thier jobs each month , 14 per minute , I am confident many would welcome the opportunity to relocate to a job that pays a base salary of $51,895 as Deborah Becton's position , $48,151 as Tamara Pounder and Xavier Dotson at $49,672 , all a matter of public record.
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by Steve Grant)
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    It's a shame that these people are complaining about moving, they get to keep their jobs. The Post Office does have clause in its Union agreement no layoffs. They pay the move storage and many other things listed in their excessing hand book. I know many people that would jump at the chance to have a Job let alone one that make over 50,000 a year with benefits which the Post Office.
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by Allie)
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    This is awful!!! These are trying times in the Postal Service across the nation. Hopefully, this economy will turn around soon. Best of luck to those Postal Workers who are displaced.
     
  • Comment #4 (Posted by leon)
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    LOTS OF GOOD INFO. I DID NOT KNOW HOW EXCESSING REALLY EFFECTS PEOPLE. WHEN ACTUALLY READ DETAIL INFORMATION SUCH AS THIS IT BECOMES REAL. MEMPHIS IS ABOUT 200 HUNDRED MILES FROM ME. HERE IN CLARKSVILLE WE WILL BE EXPERIENCING ALITTLE EXCESSING ALSO. HPOEFULLY THOUGH IT WILL ONLY BE ON PAPER.
     
  • Comment #5 (Posted by Darrell)
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    Have your congressman reintroduce the bill HR 2177 by Rep. Bart Stupak (D-MI) from 5/3/2007
     
  • Comment #6 (Posted by Lisa Gladney)
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    I dont think that this is fair but at least they are able to keep a job. I would move if i had the chances change is good. Some people are losing their jobs with no others options consider yourselves BLESSED.. The only problem that i have is that they should give them start up money for their moves so moving want be so stessful on them.
     
  • Comment #7 (Posted by usmail41)
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    Why does it have to be racial? It is always about skin color, is that their every problem, they are african? Poor poor selection of words and a disgrace to the Postal Service.
     
  • Comment #8 (Posted by Rick)
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    I wish they would not use race as a dominate factor in this article. Plus, this is not true, as layoffs have not started yet and cannot start till all TE's nationwide are gone, and this has not happened yet. Wish articles on here were facts and we could go by them. And I hope race would not be a factor in these decisions.
     
  • Comment #9 (Posted by Glenn Stankiewicz)
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    God forbid if the Postal Servce thougt ouside the box and stopped reassigning people. This certainly isn;t a way to generate Business, after all isn't that our goal! President Obama should realign the relocaters since they don't wait on the public!
     
  • Comment #10 (Posted by Undermyrock)
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    There is no racism involved in excessing employees, it is seniority based. Last hired into the craft are that first to be excessed. It may not seem fair, but there is a definite process here which does not take race into account. It's pretty pathetic to see this article trying to play up to racism instead of dealing with the real issues involved.
     
  • Comment #11 (Posted by Paul)
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    Where did yoy get your information? No one has been laid-off, there are strict rules as spelled out in our national agreements as to who and how people are excessed. To report anything else is a great disservice to all Postal workers. Race has nothing to do with how a person is let-go, to report otherwise is an insult and just hateful, get your facts stright before you put words to print.
     
  • Comment #12 (Posted by Mike)
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    Its not racism, its happening everywhere. I was part of 125 excessed, your not that special... It affects all avenues of life, and doesn't go by race, creed, color!!! Just accept it, i had to move.
     
  • Comment #13 (Posted by j maffei)
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    this is not a black+white issue the po dosent care they wont xcess they will close the entire bld.as they have where i am in ma.xcessing can only be done by level then senority if all the black emp.were L-5 jitney drivers and the po says we dont need jitney drivers they go first no matter what the senority but nobody would be able to use a jitney sounds stupid but the po falls into that catagory. thats all they have to do is lobby congress for a money buyout and there problems would be over. in boston there are at least 400 emp.who are 65+ who wont retire because they collect 800-1000 mo. in social securitywhy retire when you only get around 300 a mo.when you retire one guy here is 80.you can figure how much money they get by not leaving.senority is the only thing we have i always laughed at the no layoff clause in our contract but its no joke now.can you emagine the damage the po would have done already if we didnt have it. tell your friends dont worry the po cant draw a straight line.besides where can they send them where there is a shortage of help?????good luck joe
     
  • Comment #14 (Posted by an unknown user)
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    There are lots of innovations for increasing revenues for the P.O. that are forthcoming.Online shoppind like Ebay, Netflix, and www.sendoutcards.com/70972 are the new wave
     
  • Comment #15 (Posted by The Truth)
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    I find it funny that, when we as Afro-Americans'; face change, some-how find a way to blame everything on race. In response to this article, it appears they ommitted to report some of the offers made by the Postal Service. For instance, for those employees; that did not want to leave Memphis were provided with the opportunity to revert back to PTF's or PTR's, and many in response to that stated that they couldn't afford to live off of that. In addition, they were given a couple of days admin leave, to go to their gaining units to look for housing. Lastly, the affected employees had ample time to input their paperwork, so that paying to move would not be an issue. However, they chose to listen to the their non-excessed co-workers and the union. In brief, people need to stand-up and take responsibility for ourselves and families, instead of blaming some-one else. As someone once said, "If you fail to plan, then you plan to fail."

    -The Truth
     
  • Comment #16 (Posted by Tammy)
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    APWU workers have a Union with a negotiated contract. Race is not an issue. However...seniority is. 8 and 11 years are not that many years. People are affected with over 20 years in the Northeast.
     
  • Comment #17 (Posted by newssa)
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    Saying that the excessing situation in Memphis is racially based is ridiculous.

    I am a white employee of the USPS (14.5 yrs), and I was excessed from the Chattanooga, TN, Remote Encoding Center. I am working 3 hours away from my home, living in a friend's house who lives an hour from my new job. Not only did I get excessed, but I had to learn a new job because my previous position as a Data Conversion Operator only exists in 5 other states. To continue being a DCO, I would have had to move to Salt Lake City or Wichita at my expensive as a voluntary transfer because the USPS refused to expand our excessing radius to include those facilities.

    Many of my coworkers (black and white) took custodial positions in Georgia and Florida. Many of my full-time regular coworkers did NOT even get jobs. Our facility didn't go into withholding until a MONTH after our closure was announced the week before Thanksgiving. We were told we wouldn't get any real info untl December because the people who handled that had their Thanksgiving holiday coming up.

    So quit your b*tching about this being racially motivated. It's a crappy situation for all involved, and the way the APWU is able to proclaim "no layoffs" is that management is allowed to violate the CBA (Collective Bargaining Agreement) by offering jobs that require relocation to people who really can't relocate due to family situations--and by offering jobs to employees in TN jobs in GA and FL--and offering jobs in TN to employees in FL and IN, etc.
     
  • Comment #18 (Posted by clem)
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    why does it have to be a race issue? i am a letter carrier with less than 6yrs in service and my job is at risk too. the layoff and relocation is all seniority based. the longer you have the less chance you have of being affected. get the facts right before you try using prejudice as reasoning why.
     
  • Comment #19 (Posted by an unknown user)
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    Re-assignments are done by seniority not by race.It is a great misfortune for those workers to go through so many hard life changing decisions to stay employed in this economy. But contractually re-assignments are done by seniority.
     
  • Comment #20 (Posted by an unknown user)
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    this is really sad for the postal workers and the memphis community. this issue should be raised to president obama.
     
  • Comment #21 (Posted by zack)
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    Here we go again with the racism BS. If everyone being moved was white, than that would be OK.
     
  • Comment #22 (Posted by Juanita)
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    Why does everyone scream discrimination? Can't you see the post office is going under, it is not a black thing or white thing...it is a business not a day care
     
  • Comment #23 (Posted by an unknown user)
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    again let's not make this a racial issue. this is the 21st century we are not in the 50 or sixties anymore. playing the race card is getting old.
     
  • Comment #24 (Posted by Marsha Coyle)
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    I would like to welcome Charlotte Kimble and Tamara Pounder to Tulsa. I'm not sure which facility they will be assigned to, but I want them to know the people of Tulsa are very warm & friendly and they will be accepted here. I am surprised they are being reassigned to Tulsa since 32 of our employees recently received notices that they were being excessed. But I hope that won't discourage them from feeling "at home" in Tulsa. I look forward to meeting them and hope we make contact when they arrive.
     
  • Comment #25 (Posted by Monty)
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    As always why does everything have to come down to color? We have enough equal opportunity organizations within the government to handle any type of discrimination that is the least of our worries. As we can all see the economy is in bad shape that only comes down to one thing Cuts!!! Cuts in employee's and benefits & healthcare coverage a degrading of our great society, everyone will be the same. Watch out socialism is coming.
     
  • Comment #26 (Posted by unknown)
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    I have read some of the comments and many of you say that race is not an issue.Try walking in those people shoes.What have you been living under.If race is not an issue why is there so much controversery with a african president get real.
     
  • Comment #27 (Posted by california)
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    Stop pulling the racism card.Simple last one in first one out
     
  • Comment #28 (Posted by lene 391)
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    Adjust,change is good, look at what you put in to it; because it will be the same thing you will get out of it. Change is a blessing in disguise.
     
  • Comment #29 (Posted by SE AREA)
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    With over 25 years with the USPS, I was involuntarily demoted back to craft and lost all seniority. Therefore, I was excessed out of the facility. Race is not an issue with excessing which is proven by the fact that two other employees and myself were at the top of the list for excessing due to this scenario and we are all caucasion.
     
  • Comment #30 (Posted by chanabelle)
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    I have also been excessed. I was a level 7 at the stations and branches. Before I could even leave my present position, it was placed back up for bid with the days off changed, so the bid could look like a newly established bid. I am very upset with the postal service.
     
  • Comment #31 (Posted by Tawana)
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    I am a postal worker and I feel the should eliminate some of the Managers and Supervisors first and foremost. There is too much micro-managing going on. That would free up a lot of monies. As well as stop with any and all bonuses that Management gets from the employees doing a good job. The same problem big corporations have with giving Salaried personnel big bonues for doing the job they are hired to do in the first place.
     
  • Comment #32 (Posted by dustiesusu@yahoo.com)
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    i think the post office needs help for one they need to look in to how the contractors in madison ala
    theat there driver some of the driver done have any bneifits no taxs takein out of there check or nothing like vac or anything very very bad contractors out of that po and getting away with it thats what is wrong with the po. driver treaded done like dirt
     
  • Comment #33 (Posted by uw)
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    this is not racial, as a black postal employee i have seen reassignments in the dallas area, and its all about seniority!!!!!!. We as black employees have to realize that as unpleasant as it may be to be reassigned, There is no way that the postal service can get around seniority to excess someone because they are black. lets keep the race card on the bottom of the deck and accept the reality of the situation.
     
  • Comment #34 (Posted by dbmc)
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    When is the goverment going 2 get there act together. It's time to force 62+ aged people to retire,they can retire and not lose a dime. If you dont have it by now your not going to get it. Obama says he wants people to have a job well there holding up a slot. And no one wants to here that poor me Im black &*%$ . This is happening everywhere to everyone. Im a Iraq veteran and in my opinion I dont care what color you are, us veterans have earned more rights than somebody who just took a test or knew somebody we have done enough moving without any say.
     
  • Comment #35 (Posted by walt235)
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    Why is it that n!ggers whine about EVERYTHING?!? Affirmative Action should be abolished along with any kind of racial quota! There are too many n!ggers that work for the government, why do you think the government is so F*ucked up!?!? N!ggers turn everything into a ghetto. Fire all the n!ggers in government!
     
  • Comment #36 (Posted by DOROTHY)
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    i am going through changes myself they are taking permanent employee replacing them with temps to save on money. so what a change.
     
  • Comment #37 (Posted by John)
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    To: #35-Walt235 Your comments are totally ignorant.You are beyond redemption because you are unteachable.
     
  • Comment #38 (Posted by caggro59)
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    I'm white and I had to move over 650 miles for my job. The Postal Service did not help pay for my move and I lost all seniority. This article is trying to imply that there is racisim involved in excessing, and that is just absurd. Let them file all the EEOC complaints they want; once you accuse the Postal Service of discrimination, you have to prove it. Can they prove their accusations to an admin judge? I doubt it, since people of all ethnic backgrounds have gone through the same thing. No one likes change, but racism has nothing to do with it.
     
  • Comment #39 (Posted by patty)
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    I personally dont think veterans should get any preference unless you were actually drafted. We didn't put a gun to your head and make you join the military you did it on your own. It was your choice and it was a chance that you knew you were taking when you joined that a war could happen. You already get a 5 to 10 point advantage on your score when you take the test and an extra week vacation when your hired. What more do you want?
     
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