| International Union Of Elevator Constructors | ||
| Local
One - New York & New Jersey |
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card number 820 Comments: Great day at Otis today. Tomorrow will be three weeks. If it goes four weeks I think we should ask E.N.E.M.Y. for 8,8 and 8 and sign with everyone else at 7,7 and 7. Stay strong and stay together.
card number 2065 Comments: AA CREW AT JFK PLEASE BE ADVISED THAT WE ARE BACK ON THE LINE AT 6AM ON WEDNESDAY THE 6TH, WHERE ALL YOUR QUESTIONS SHOULD BE ANSWERED???? IF YOU WANT TO YOU HAD BETTER SHOW!!!!! ON A SAD NOTE JOHN VAN GORDAN'S MOM PASSED MORE INFO ON THE SERVICES TOMORROW
card number 2178 Comments: I am sorry to inform you that brother John Van Gordon's mother passed away. Arrangements are as follows, Thursday 2-4 at Moloney Funeral Home at 840 Wheeler Rd (rte. 111) In Hauppauge. The phone number to the funeral parlor is (631) 361-7500.
card number 25 Comments: ELEVATOR SAFTEY IS ON THE RISE OF FALLING
card number 25 Comments: This was off of NY1 news This how good the scabs are doing .HEY GUYS YOU SUCK!!!!!
Missing Deliveryman Found In Stuck Elevator
card number 1709 Comments: HELLO BROTHER'S AND SISTER'S
TUES MORNING THERE IS GOING TO BE LOT'S OF WORK COMING UP IN 2006 SO LET'S FIGHT THE FIGHT NOW. AND LET'S NOT FORGET IT./////////////////////////////////
STAY STRONG
card number 554 Comments: Dear Brothers and Sisters, Just one more request of our IUEC members throughout the country. Please let us know how well you are doing WITHOUT the supervisors sent to the NY/NJ area. THEY WOULD LIKE TO KNOW HOW SECURE THEIR JOBS ARE BACK HOME. Regards, Brother Brian #554
card number 554 Comments: Dear Brothers and Sisters, Just a quick thought. Less workers = less supervisors. Throughout the country supervisors have been sent to work in the New York/New Jersey area from Otis, Kone, Schindler. So,how many supers did they cut back? 500 maybe more. Supers that think they have a job when they go back to there old job. Looks to me like there cutting back at the top before they try to cut back here. Some advice to the supervisors,you have seen these company's in action first hand and the results. What do you think they would do to YOU? All I'm saying is, think about it, just think really hard about all the scenarios that can, and probably will, involve YOU. Think about this, DO YOU REALLY HAVE A JOB,IF THEY LET YOU GO BACK? Regards to all IUEC memebers and families, Brother Brian, LOCAL ONE #554
card number Local 1IUEC card # 1347 Comments: Hello Brothers and sisters I wanted to say Its only a matter of time seems by the letters posted here units are really starting to fall apart .I Was apalled last night when I went to 3 major hopitals On Long Island all 3 being locked out by the little 3 companies . And only 1 of them had any idea they were not getting their routine maintainence done?Why should they pay for something they are not getting? How many of us are asked by your super? I know you have been doing repair or billable items ! $$$$$$$ But did you get to such and such JOB???The customer expects you every Friday? The customer is paying for it ! As easy as It was for me to hand out a few flyers talk to someone in security , talk to someone in building maintainence , they were very receptive as I explained our major concern first and foremost was their safety . I then did some homework, got some Emails for some CEO 's and sent a simple copy of the latest flyer with my concern for the safty of not only the public but patients and employees > I will continue to educate the public of the true facts . Who cares whether its at 6a.m. or 8p.m. . Having worked for 3 of the little 3 over the past 23 years, they never seemed to mind paging me text messaging me calling me at my house 24 hours anytime !!!!! So we need to do our share whether it is early, late as long as we do our share . If you choose to not be involved at all ! You are part of the problem not the solution. Cant believe when i go out and about how little the public REALLY KNOWS ! Why arent all of us informing them? After all when i called in at 7a.m. March 17th Schindler told me ............Im sorry Brian we have no work for YOU? Well I cant wait to get back to work . Local 1 is here to stay . God Bless . Keep the faith ! And just wanted to thank all the brothers who call me all the time ask me what can I do? I will remember all of you, when we go back brothers I will never forget! To the rest of you that refuse to be involved AT ALL, I will never forget U either. WOULD LOVE TO EXTEND THE INVITE TO ALL LOCAL 1 IUEC members locked out or working to tommorrows rally. Pick up the phone call a few signatory members.........dont know how ? they are all listed on this webpage ..... call the companies directly , ITS OUR UNION , ITS OUR CITY >>>>>>>>>>WHOS CITY ? OUR CITY .......34th Street off corner of 10th Avenue Otis Office %16 34th Street , HAs been reNamed CORPORATE GREED CENTRAL EMANY GET BACK to the table
card number 2065 Comments: AA CREW AT JFK TO START, I MUST THANK ALL THE BROTHERS WHO BRAVED THOSE BRUTAL WINDS AT CITICORP THIS MORNING ,IT WAS NICE TO SEE SOME NEW AND DIFFERENT FACES. THE GOOD NEWS IS WE GOT OUR PERMITS BACK FOR JFK AND WE WILL BE BACK ON WEDNESDAY THE 6TH TO HOLD THAT LINE, I LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING EVERYONE BACK IN ACTION,JUST A QUICK REMINDER WE WILL BE RALLYING AT THE OTIS OFFICE AT 2PM( 34TH &10TH )BRING A WHISTLE ,BRING A FRIEND ,BRING SOMEONE THAT BEEN ON THE SIDELINES FOR THREE WEEKS
card number 1709 Comments: HELLO BROTHER'S AND SISTER'S
MONDAY 4\4
RALLY OF ALL RALLIES OTIS OFFICE ON TUES HEY- EMANY YOU CAN NOT BREAK THIS UNION UNITED WE STAND DIVIDED WE BEG. STAY STRONG SEE YOU TUES.
card number 86455 Comments: I had an opportunity today to go by some of my previous jobs again to hand out more information regarding the LOCK OUT to the riding public. And what did I see ? 140 Broadway had there only freight car shut down all of Friday and still having door problems today. Mike Novack salemans for Schindler is the so called skilled personnel they have on the job to make the repair. Now for the funny part this Mike Novack has to call the shop to get two SCABS and ARMED ESCORT to come to the building to help him try and fix the problem. After waiting three and one half hours the freight car was still not fixed properly.
Now keep in mind this job normally has one individual from Local One to handle all problems and this property has to have the equipment running at all times. Never were we allowed to leave without the freight car running. This time the freight car elevator operator had been stuck in the elevator for two and one half hours before anyone could even get him out. (RESIDENT JOB).
These people are not skilled or professional and I hope that all building managers in Manhattan start to see just what they are getting for their money, while we get nothing.
STAY STRONG, STAY UNITED, STAY SAFE
Mario
card number 14 Comments: RALLY, RALLY, RALLY, RALLY, RALLY, RALLY, RALLY,
JUST A REMINDER!!!
WHERE: 34TH AND 10TH (516 WEST 34TH)
WHEN: TUESDAY APRIL 5TH, 2005
TIME: 2PM UNTIL 6PM
BRING FAMILY AND FRIENDS!!!
65 AND SUNNY, NO EXCUSES!!!
card number 537 Comments: I, WAS AT THE QUEENS MALL TODAY ONE ELEVATOR WAS WORKING AND ALARMS WERE RINGING ALL OVER THE PLACE ,GOOD WORK SCABS
card number 1735 Comments: There will be a picket line tomorrow morning Tuesday April 5th @ 7:00am outside of the Westchester County Courthouse located at 111 Dr Martin Luther King Blvd White Plains, NY
There is no parking outside of or around the courthouse however there is parking at the City Center Municipal Lot at the corner of Main Street and Mamaroneck Ave two bocks away.
Brothers and Sisters show your support! Come up to Westchester and man the line.
For directions to the courthouse click the link below:
card number 1613 Comments: Brothers & Sisters, I am sorry to inform you of the passing of retired Brother Richard Kernan. The arrangements are as follows: John F. Pfleger Funeral Home Funeral Services will be held on Wednesday 1 Shore Acres Avenue
card number 1899 Comments: Make sure all you Otis brothers and sisters remember to bring your Service Excellence pins Tuesday and give them back.
card number 2848 Comments: It was a nice turn out at the Citi Corp building in long island city.we had about 25 brothers out there help support BROTHER Dave bloomand the guys from Citi Bank.We handed flyers to the workers in the building,most were responsive,stating there concern of the safety issue involving the untrained scabs in the building and wished us luck and want us to return to work,stating they dont have any escalator service to the train station,basically it is just a staircase,and its pissing them off.We told them to contact there building management and issist on getting the qualified mechanics back to work.The building engineers Local 94 came down to see how we are progressing in our contract dispute and we explained to them that EMANY is stalling the talks and are very firm in the wanting to basically take a third of our work from us involved in the hoisting and rigging aspect of the job,they like to show our salaries,but not explain the loss of work for our brothers and sisters,What good is the raise when we will be out of work.WAKE UP EMANY, NOT GONNA HAPPEN.Also taking a trip to the Metro Mall this weekend there down escalator was down and people were really pissed,because it is the longest staircase they had to ever walk in there lifes.........i believe it was 130 steps or so....WAKE UP SCHINDLER YOU WILL LOSE THAT AND PLENTY MORE IF YOU KEEP YOUR QUALIFIED WORKFORCE OUT ANY LONGER.....Well in closing keep the faith,fight the fight,never surrender......your brother Jerry Wody card # 2848
card number 1735 Comments: As previously posted, if you are denied your unemployment benefit claim you need to immediately provide the following information for the appeal process to begin: - a copy of your denial - state you are a IUEC Local One Member - daytime contact information - place of employment, ie. company name; office location - where you reported for work on Thursday March 17, 2005, ie. job site or office location Fax all your information ASAP to James M. Mets, 732-636-5705
card number 1169 Comments: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/03/business/yourmoney/03pensions.html?pagewanted=print&position=April 3, 2005The New Executive Bonanza: Retirement
Those perks, however, are pocket change compared with the pension that Lockheed, the military contractor, bestowed upon Mr. Coffman a few weeks ago: a $31.5 million lump-sum payment. Everyone knows that chief executives are paid huge amounts of money while they are working. Less known is just how much they make in retirement. At many of America's biggest corporations, it is not uncommon for retired executives who were paid tens or even hundreds of millions of dollars during their tenures to receive $1 million or more in pension benefits every year - for as long as they live. Some will take home much more. Henry A. McKinnell Jr., the chairman and chief executive of Pfizer, will be paid about $6.5 million a year after he retires, according to the company's annual proxy statement filed last month. Lee R. Raymond, Exxon Mobil's chief executive, can expect $5.9 million a year. At a time when millions of American workers have seen their pension plans pared back or shut down, and millions more are being asked to bear the risk of managing their own retirement savings, departing chief executives are making out better than ever. A total of 113 chief executives can anticipate retirement benefits worth more than $1 million a year; at least 31 may get twice that amount, or more. Those findings are based on a review of the 2004 proxy statements of 500 large companies done for Sunday Business by the Corporate Library, an independent corporate-governance research firm. More than two-thirds of those companies - 339 - have separate retirement plans for executives only. These special plans, called supplemental executive retirement plans, or SERP's, usually offer better benefits than traditional pension plans and are sometimes guaranteed regardless of the fate of the company itself. And these executive pension plans are often in addition to the subsidized 401(k) and defined-benefit plans available to other employees. Unlike a chief executive's salary or stock options, the cost of these executive pension plans is rarely laid out for shareholders. Instead, the information is usually so deep in a company's regulatory filings that it is difficult to find, let alone calculate. Critics call it "stealth wealth" or "camouflage compensation." Many ordinary investors don't have a clue about its cost. "The fact is, we don't have good economic reasons for channeling dollars for this form," said Lucian A. Bebchuk, a Harvard Law School professor and co-author with Jesse Fried of a recent book, "Pay Without Performance." "There is a clear benefit in terms of making the amount of pay less transparent." As Michael Kenser, an executive compensation consultant at Deloitte & Touche, put it: "If you wanted to deliver extra compensation and you wanted to do it below the radar screen, you did it through the SERP." WHETHER or not the goal is to hide extra compensation, though, the amounts can be large. Consider Mr. McKinnell, 62, the chief executive of Pfizer and the chairman of the Business Roundtable, an organization of chief executives from prominent companies. If he steps down from Pfizer in three years, as expected, his supplementary pension benefits have an estimated lump-sum value of $80 million, Professor Bebchuk said. The typical executive retirement plan is based on average salary and bonus, as well as years of service; Pfizer's plan is based on certain long-term incentive awards and grants of restricted stock, too. Of course, it's hard to decipher that from information in the proxy. But when those performance payouts and one-time awards of restricted stock are treated as annual pay, they greatly inflate the value of the pension. Without them, Mr. McKinnell would be entitled to only about $37 million in retirement. "It goes against the logic of why a retirement plan is there at all," said Shekhar Purohit, an executive compensation consultant at the Delves Group in Chicago. "A retirement plan helps replace income. It's not wealth-creation replacement." Pfizer's compensation committee discontinued the practice of counting long-term incentives and restricted stock at the end of 2000; the company no longer found it appropriate, a company spokesman said. Nonetheless, veteran Pfizer employees, including Mr. McKinnell, still fall under the company's old rules. Certainly, compensation consultants say, chief executives are entitled to maintain their standard of living in retirement. In most cases, Social Security benefits and regular retirement plans would cover only a small fraction of their pay. That is one reason that supplementary retirement benefits have become such an important tool for recruiting a new executive in midcareer. But many of the companies that offer supplementary plans are the same ones that pay executives so handsomely. William W. McGuire of the UnitedHealth Group took home more than $210 million in salary, bonus and stock-options gains in five years; Edward E. Whitacre Jr. of SBC Communications made nearly $104 million in the last decade. Each can expect retirement benefits worth more than $5 million a year. "Given their compensation during their working life, it would seem that they, even more than the rest of us, would be able to provide for their retirement by deferring their income into savings," said Paul Hodgson, an executive compensation analyst at the Corporate Library, in Portland, Me. UnitedHealth declined to comment. An SBC spokeswoman said Mr. Whitacre's pension reflects his long service and accomplishments. The Corporate Library's analysis of executives' retirement benefits assumes that an executive's recent earnings remain the same. Because pay generally increases later in one's career, as do the years of service, it is likely that those benefits could be worth more. Based on the latest available proxy information, at least eight executives are eligible to retire with annual benefits worth $3 million or more. They include Reuben Mark of Colgate-Palmolive, Robert L. Nardelli of Home Depot, Samuel J. Palmisano of I.B.M. and Kenneth D. Lewis of Bank of America. I.B.M. and Bank of America have recently been sued by workers over changes to their employee pension plans. Not every chief executive can expect a pension quite that large. Of the 339 who will receive most of their retirement income from a supplementary employee retirement plan, roughly a quarter will become eligible for an annual pension worth $367,000 or less. About a third of the 500 surveyed companies said senior managers were eligible to participate only in a defined-contribution plan like a 401(k), the same as any other employee. Those include many companies in the technology sector, like Cisco Systems, Microsoft and eBay, that have generously compensated top executives with stock options; those three offer no special executive retirement plans at all. "We are by nature a very egalitarian company," said Hani Durzy, an eBay spokesman. "By and large, the benefits available to executives, while not the same amounts, are the same type available to everyone else." Forty years ago, most corporate pension plans worked that way. Upon retirement, everybody from the lowest-paid worker to the highest-paid manager was covered by a pension that would provide guaranteed benefits. Typically, those were half the employee's final average salary for the rest of his or her life. But in 1974, Congress passed legislation that required companies to adequately fund pensions they promised their employees, and to keep executive pensions roughly proportional to what the rank and file received, if they wanted a tax deduction for the plan. Congress had hoped to discourage companies from giving executives exorbitant retirement amounts. Instead, the new rules encouraged companies to set up separate plans for their workers and their top executives, letting the employee plan keep its tax deduction - but opening the way for executives to ask for more in their supplemental plans, which did not qualify for the deduction. And because these nonqualified benefits did not have to be granted to all employees, it was easy for boards to allow bonuses and sometimes stock options and other incentives to creep into pension calculations. As executive compensation soared in the 1980's and 1990's, so did such payouts. More companies started offering them, and because disclosure was so poor, the amounts went largely unchecked. Only recently, amid fallout from the $139.5 million retirement package of Richard A. Grasso, the former New York Stock Exchange chairman, have boards started tallying all elements of a pay package. "Compensation committees want to look at SERP's now because of the Grasso effect," said Ira T. Kay, an executive compensation consultant at Watson Wyatt in New York. "It used to be nonexistent. Now I have roughly half my companies doing it." The results are often so startling, other compensation advisers say, that they have invented a term - the "holy cow" moment - to describe the look on directors' faces when they discover the payouts. "Things pile up and it creeps up on you, and boom, there it goes: holy cow!" said Michael S. Melbinger, a compensation lawyer at Winston & Strawn in Chicago who advises many boards. "You don't realize when so many things, when added up, produce an outrageous total. "There have been a lot of holy cow moments during this year's proxy season from compensation committees," he added. "Sometimes, they even use more colorful language." Some of the surprises come from tweaks that may not initially appear to have significant costs. The employment contract of Franklin D. Raines, the Fannie Mae chief executive who was ousted last year, stipulated that his entire $1.4 million annual pension could be passed down to his wife, if she survives him. That provision alone accounts for $5 million of the pension's estimated value of about $25 million, Professor Bebchuk said. At some companies, executives are allowed to retire at 60 rather than 65, or they are credited with more time at the company than they actually serve. Each of these tweaks can add considerably to an executive's lifelong retirement benefit. E. Linn Draper Jr., the chief executive of the American Electric Power Company, was awarded 36 years pension credit when he stepped down in February 2004, which was enough time to almost triple the value of his annual pension, to about $850,000. Problem is, Mr. Draper had been a company employee for only 12 years. A company spokesman said that awarding extra credit for years served is consistent with industry practice and necessary for recruitment and retention. STILL, changes are afoot. United Airlines, which has said it must terminate its defined-benefit plan for regular employees if it is to emerge from bankruptcy, recently ended its special plan for executives. Nonetheless, the $4.5 million worth of retirement benefits for Glenn F. Tilton, UAL's chairman and chief executive, who was ineligible for the main executive plan, has remained safe in a special, fully funded trust. And Bank of America has stopped contributing to its supplementary plan for most executives, though Mr. Lewis, its chief executive, will still receive at least a $3.5 million pension. Since at least last fall, the Securities and Exchange Commission has been reviewing its disclosure policies related to SERP's, though it has set no timetable for deciding whether to rewrite the rules. Some shareholder rights advocates, like the A.F.L.-C.I.O. and the Council of Institutional Investors, are not waiting; they have placed the issue high on their corporate governance agendas. In anticipation, several companies, like the credit card giant MBNA, have added tables to their proxies that make identifying the cost of an executive's retirement benefits as easy as finding his salary or bonus. But for now, the retirement years for many of today's executives look like they will be as green as they are golden. Consider Mr. Coffman, the Lockheed Martin chief executive. Should his $31.5 million nest egg become depleted, he has another source of income to fall back on: Under the company's ordinary retirement plan, he is eligible to receive $87,187 a year. |
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