Location: Blinding You With Library Science! Gender:
Posted:
Oct 11, 2024 - 10:21am
islander wrote:
We got a shingles too and something else. I got two in one arm and one in the other, made for a sore shoulder weekend. Life with the immunocompromised, still waiting for my superpowers to develop.
I sleep with my 5G phone strapped to the injection sites to hurry the process along.
We got a shingles too and something else. I got two in one arm and one in the other, made for a sore shoulder weekend. Life with the immunocompromised, still waiting for my superpowers to develop.
Location: On the edge of tomorrow looking back at yesterday. Gender:
Posted:
Oct 4, 2024 - 8:30am
black321 wrote:
Well shipping companies profits quadrupled during the pandemic, so... (and the FTC is worried about the extra $1 or $2 grocery stores temporarily captured during the pandemic).
The latest offer would raise the base hourly rate for ILA port workers to $63 from $39 over six years, the people familiar with the matter said. One of the people said the offer is being made on the condition that dockworkers go back to work and agree to efficiency gains.
The offer is less than the union demand for an increase of 77% over the term of the contract but a far larger increase than most major labor contracts, including a contract reached last year covering the separate union representing West Coast longshore workers. Many U.S. dockworkers currently earn more than a $100,000 a year, with baseline hourly wages boosted by work rules and overtime requirements.
Well Iâd love to see a 10% increase every year for the next 6 years. Just plain greed by holding the nation for their extreme gains.
I got my TP, a bananana and a case of IPAâs today. Iâm good.
Aholes were offered a 50% increase but they want 70%. Bunch of uckers!
Well shipping companies profits quadrupled during the pandemic, so... (and the FTC is worried about the extra $1 or $2 grocery stores temporarily captured during the pandemic).
The latest offer would raise the base hourly rate for ILA port workers to $63 from $39 over six years, the people familiar with the matter said. One of the people said the offer is being made on the condition that dockworkers go back to work and agree to efficiency gains.
The offer is less than the union demand for an increase of 77% over the term of the contract but a far larger increase than most major labor contracts, including a contract reached last year covering the separate union representing West Coast longshore workers. Many U.S. dockworkers currently earn more than a $100,000 a year, with baseline hourly wages boosted by work rules and overtime requirements.