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#1
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If they're smart, they'll leave. The company has already shown what its
word is worth. Would you work for someone that broke promises to pay you? My dad worked there for 24 years. They laid him off before he could retire, but he was promised his pension when he reached retirement age. Too late for to "leave." Are you saying my father isn't "smart"? Are you saying that company loyalty and hard work isn't smart? -c |
#2
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Are you saying my father isn't "smart"? Are you saying that company
loyalty and hard work isn't smart? No, your father was crapped on. "Company loyalty" is a myth. In my years in the corporate world, I saw no loyalty, either from the company, or from the workers. Which is just one reason I choose to be in business for myself, despite the risks. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#3
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On Thu, 12 May 2005 20:41:06 GMT, "Jay Honeck"
wrote: Are you saying my father isn't "smart"? Are you saying that company loyalty and hard work isn't smart? No, your father was crapped on. "Company loyalty" is a myth. In my years in the corporate world, I saw no loyalty, either from the company, or from the workers. Which is just one reason I choose to be in business for myself, despite the risks. I've been working for a Fortune 500 company for a little over five years. 2 years ago, the pension benefits in place when I was hired were reduced by 80%. Employees with 15 years service were "grandfathered" and kept the old plan, the rest of us took it in the shorts. At the same time, the company 401k "matching" contribution was cut in half. Good friend of mine was employed by another local Fortune 500 company for 20 1/2 years. He was "downsized", still does the exact same job, works in the same office, but is now employed by the "contract" company hired to replace his department. Of course his salary was reduced drastically, and the benefits are poor. I guess I'm not sure what point Mr. gatt is trying to make. **** like this happens every day. TC |
#4
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![]() gatt wrote: Are you saying my father isn't "smart"? Are you saying that company loyalty and hard work isn't smart? I'm really sorry to hear about your father's financial predicament, but to answer your question, hard work is very smart, company loyalty is an anachronism from a bygone era. It hasn't been a relevant concept for decades. Pledging your future to a faceless corporation is great for the corporation, but as your father found out, it's a one-way street. Tactics like getting rid of an employee on the eve of retirement (to save a few bucks) are fairly commonplace. On top of that, banking your retirement on the fact that a corporation will not only be in business, but be profitable enough to support all of the former employees is quite a gamble. Even large corporations fold on a fairly regular basis. I've only been in the workforce for about 26 yrs and have never understood pensions. It requires a huge leap of faith in a corporation. I equate it to keeping all of your retirement savings in one stock. Not a financially sound move by any measure. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
#5
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![]() "John Galban" wrote in message oups.com... gatt wrote: Are you saying my father isn't "smart"? Are you saying that company loyalty and hard work isn't smart? I'm really sorry to hear about your father's financial predicament, but to answer your question, hard work is very smart, company loyalty is an anachronism from a bygone era. It hasn't been a relevant concept for decades. Pledging your future to a faceless corporation is great for the corporation, but as your father found out, it's a one-way street. Tactics like getting rid of an employee on the eve of retirement (to save a few bucks) are fairly commonplace. On top of that, banking your retirement on the fact that a corporation will not only be in business, but be profitable enough to support all of the former employees is quite a gamble. Even large corporations fold on a fairly regular basis. I've only been in the workforce for about 26 yrs and have never understood pensions. It requires a huge leap of faith in a corporation. I equate it to keeping all of your retirement savings in one stock. Not a financially sound move by any measure. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) It isn't supposed to require either a leap of faith or the company remaining in business. The Company is suppose to deposit money to fund the pension plan which is a trust with an independent board. The funds are professionally managed and, barring catastrophe, there should be enough to pay the promised benefits. Mike MU-2 |
#6
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![]() "gatt" wrote in message ... If they're smart, they'll leave. The company has already shown what its word is worth. Would you work for someone that broke promises to pay you? My dad worked there for 24 years. They laid him off before he could retire, but he was promised his pension when he reached retirement age. Too late for to "leave." Are you saying my father isn't "smart"? Are you saying that company loyalty and hard work isn't smart? -c Well the infomation that UAL was not funding the pension obligation was/is readily availible in Uniteds SEC filings. Personally if I was depending on someone/something to send me money for decades, I would verify that the money was there. The reality is that this might be too much to expect from individual employees, but there is no excuse for the unions not demanding that the pension plans be funded. Mike MU-2 |
#7
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![]() "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message k.net... "gatt" wrote in message ... If they're smart, they'll leave. The company has already shown what its word is worth. Would you work for someone that broke promises to pay you? My dad worked there for 24 years. They laid him off before he could retire, but he was promised his pension when he reached retirement age. Too late for to "leave." Are you saying my father isn't "smart"? Are you saying that company loyalty and hard work isn't smart? -c Well the infomation that UAL was not funding the pension obligation was/is readily availible in Uniteds SEC filings. Personally if I was depending on someone/something to send me money for decades, I would verify that the money was there. The reality is that this might be too much to expect from individual employees, but there is no excuse for the unions not demanding that the pension plans be funded. Mike MU-2 The unions only care you pay them. Only a fool believes a union is their to take care of them. |
#8
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gatt ) wrote:
: : Are you saying my father isn't "smart"? Are you saying that company : loyalty and hard work isn't smart? : Company loyalty died years ago, with a few rare exceptions, like Malden Mills. The following article contrasts Malden Mills' Aaron Feuerstein with Enron's Ken Lay: http://sitesearch.washingtonpost.com...2001Dec19.html A CEO Who Lives by What's Right (washingtonpost.com) "By Mary McGrory Thursday, December 20, 2001; Page A03 In this anxious hour of pink-slip dread, it is restoring to think of Aaron Feuerstein, a Massachusetts manufacturer who prizes his employees and risks profits on their behalf. The CEO of Malden Mills, located in Lawrence, the 23rd poorest community in the country, stepped clear of the greedy stereotype of his kind in 1995 when, just before Christmas, his factory burned down. Rather than taking the insurance money and retiring or moving the plant to some Third World country, he promptly announced that he would rebuild. He gave bonuses to the help and paid them while they waited for the factory reopening..." --Jerry Leslie Note: is invalid for email |
#9
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No, but, in the scenario that United were to fold, do you think the
present job market could absorb all of those workers? And the ones lucky enough to find a job...who says the next company wouldn't default on promises. Seems to be the rage these days. At least they have a salary that feeds the family as long as United exists or they might be fortunate enough to find another job. Andrew Gideon wrote: If they're smart, they'll leave. The company has already shown what its word is worth. Would you work for someone that broke promises to pay you? - Andrew |
#10
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RomeoMike wrote:
No, but, in the scenario that United were to fold,Â*Â*doÂ*youÂ*thinkÂ*the present job market could absorb all of those workers? Well, it wouldn't quite be "the present job market". United folding would leave an opportunity. I'd hope that at least some of the routes/flights would be picked up by someone else (hopefully an upstart like JetBlue that might actually make them work). If not...well, then there was apparently no market for it (at least at current pricing). That's unfortunate, but reality. And the ones lucky enough to find a job...who says the next company wouldn't default on promises. Seems to be the rage these days. Perhaps so. But I'd rather put my faith in someone that's not [yet] proven untrustworthy as opposed to someone that already has. - Andrew |
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