would take about 18 daca 5's,,, which is quite commonTable 1 step 12. 48k. 91k per year. Work a couple of daca 5 and your there.
As an RCA, mostly working one year close to 90 hours a week I was pushing 100K. THAT'S how much you have to work to reach that!!! I frequently had to have paper checks authorized as anyone working that many hours sets off a trigger in Eagan for fraud, so the PM has to validate the hours and they issue paper instead of direct deposit. I lived to tell about it, and never, ever want to do anything that stupid again. I was new, and said yes to everything, thought I had to.Yep..
They need to be educated on the difference between city carriers and rural carriers...city in our area easily make 80,90,+k a year and a few went into the 100k during covid..but definitely NOT rurals.
And only like you said....table 1,step 12,overburdened and working relief days.......
Even if you say no you still have to do it. Unless of course it would put you past 12 hrs worked. Then and only then they may flinch pending on how much penalty for making you do it. Mine is up to 2050$ each time they mandate I work over 12 hrs currently. Hasn’t happened in a little bit next day after holiday it will, paper check will be needed againAs an RCA, mostly working one year close to 90 hours a week I was pushing 100K. THAT'S how much you have to work to reach that!!! I frequently had to have paper checks authorized as anyone working that many hours sets off a trigger in Eagan for fraud, so the PM has to validate the hours and they issue paper instead of direct deposit. I lived to tell about it, and never, ever want to do anything that stupid again. I was new, and said yes to everything, thought I had to.
I didn't have EMA. I did work 14 to 16 hour days often though.Even if you say no you still have to do it. Unless of course it would put you past 12 hrs worked. Then and only then they may flinch pending on how much penalty for making you do it. Mine is up to 2050$ each time they mandate I work over 12 hrs currently. Hasn’t happened in a little bit next day after holiday it will, paper check will be needed again.
edit: side note you can make over 100k without EMA as an rca. The hours and grievances with penalty needed Are ridiculous tho. Another reason I don’t understand why more don’t file on any/all breaks of contract. Just need decent union rep. Or be pig headed enough to take it all the way up the chain. If no remedy file on union not representing you equally/fairly.
From the story, it seemed like the PO was trying to spin a line like "Hey, we pay people up to $100k", insinuating that low pay is not the reason for the problem. In reality, low pay is the problem NOW.I mean you can. Carriers on K routes in my office are on step 3 or 4 on Table 1 Make 85-90k because they work so many K days and 70 hours a week during Christmas Overtime. If they were maxed out on steps they would easily be making 100k.
Where do all the fast food workers, grocery store, and any other lower income level live. I no the wage isn't enough for the work that you do but others are doing it. It just can't be usps. FedEx or ups how do they handle the situation?I actually emailed the reporter that did the story and explained the typical hiring via the step 2 RCA. Wonder if they'd bother to chase that down? It would certainly help explain the story, and why the crisis is so bad. No way someone can afford to work for the PO in that area, and commuting is equally impossible.
Entry level wages aren't meant to provide for a worker to be self sufficient in most cases. One study had 78% of fast food workers as part time high school, college or home supplement (second income) workers. For those who work into shift or management positions, the compensation is better. Some have second incomes as well. Dual incomes is a must in most households, and those who can't afford to live where they work commute, just like post office workers.Where do all the fast food workers, grocery store, and any other lower income level live. I no the wage isn't enough for the work that you do but others are doing it. It just can't be usps. FedEx or ups how do they handle the situation?
It should be pretty simple to explain to people. At $19.54 an hour, you would need to work nearly 80 hours a week, 52 weeks a years to GROSS $100K.From the story, it seemed like the PO was trying to spin a line like "Hey, we pay people up to $100k", insinuating that low pay is not the reason for the problem. In reality, low pay is the problem NOW.
No one can start at the PO now and hope to make $100k in a year. Not at $19.54/hour. That is strictly a gone deal.