Back

Opinions by Guest Voices

Ainsworth

Albanese

Caldwell

Ganino

Goins

Jacobs

Kuralt

McGill

Petit

Richardson

Sullivan

 


Home| Postal News | Your Rights | PostalMall | Commentary |  Resources |  Links About  |  What's New   Sitemap | Search| Letters to Editor 

 
 

Winter Mourning

By James E. Varner

 December. The time of year I start questioning why I’m still living in Northeast Ohio. Sunset arriving earlier every day until it seems you can hear the rooster start into a snore immediately after his cock-a-doodle-do. Ahead, five months of endangered sunshine and crouching to avoid bumping our heads on the low, leaden clouds that threaten with each passing day to deliver onto us their white powdery crime. I rise at 1:50 am in a semi-conscious state that will plague me at least until “lunchtime” – at 8:30am. Just another Postal Zombie starting his day.  I know from the sound of vehicles crawling cautiously down the highway outside that Mother Nature has blessed us with our first real snow. “Thank God for the man that put the white line on the highway”, Mr. Stanley sings on the radio. This morning, it’s a 12 foot by 25 mile white line stretching from my driveway all the way to Youngstown.

 

I lie in bed a few more moments. Several thunderously silent clicks ring out in my head. That damnable 100th/minute time clock our anal employer uses deafens me as it counts the passing moments. Although it makes no sound, each fraction of a minute is counted and marked off in demonic blood-red digits, accompanied by an imagined tortuous sound of “CLICK”! Even at home, I can hear it in my head. I no longer have free will, it has me trained. I am subservient to its electronic prodding. CLICK…CLICK.  I linger long enough to know that I’ll have to make a hasty journey out into the white battlefield and forge on towards the dreaded place. Georgia O’Keeffe landscapes fill my mind. Wonderful thoughts of permanent migration to a desert climate; of vocational training flipping burgers at an Arizona Sonic or Jack in the Box, begin to give me hope. Seven bucks an hour and never worrying again about frostbite, wet tongues stuck onto door handles (evil, evil childhood friends) or bathroom attacks delayed by the horror of forgotten layers of long johns. Maniacal fantasies of a pagan fire ritual, sacrificing all the necessary accoutrements and gear needed to survive in the Land of the Wind-chill Factor. Into the flame I toss the gloves, the ice scrapers, the battery powered socks my mother warned would incinerate me into a gooey crisp with their deadly 9 volt surge if I got them too wet. I banish Carhearts, duck boots, rock salt and starting fluid into the cleansing hell. Burn! Burn! Burn, I chant! I cry out to providence, imploring to be taken to the warmth of the Tucson sun. Silhouettes of cacti shapes in desert sunset invade my dreams. Saguaro, ocotillo, and prickly pear – I’m qualified to live there, I know the difference! Let me go! I’ll even learn how to make a Six Dollar Burger at Carl’s Jr. and I promise I won’t question why they sell it for $3.95. CLICK.

 

I am startled by the reply which bellows forth from the heavens. “NO!” comes the answer to my pleading. “NO! You cannot go,” thunders the reply of Credit Card Gods. “You are banished in this white tundra hell for eternity – or at least until your minimum monthly payment falls below that of your mortgage. You must pay for the sin of your daily visits to Home Depot and for all those cd’s you have carelessly strewn about your house.” CLICK.

 

Stricken with resignation at my fate, I awake from my reverie and cast a hesitant glance at the wicked alarm clock across the arctic abyss of my room. 2:12 am. “Ugh.” I quickly try to calculate how many minutes I have left until I must leave, and then in traitorous desperation, guiltily find myself converting that number into 100ths of a minute to make the number of units available until my forced departure seems at least within reason. I only have 10 minutes – but I’ve got sixteen clicks! Rushing across the frigid expanse of my house, I seek the shelter of the bathroom and its relative warmth. I turn on the shower to expedite the hot water’s long journey from bowels of my basement, and then turn quickly to the mirror assessing which hygienic ritual can be omitted that will be the least likely to offend my coworkers. Deciding that I’m not likely to be nuzzled this morning by my fellow drivers, I skip the act of shaving. Hastily rushing through the various chemicals in my medicine cabinet, I’m careful to avoid gargling the cologne and wearing my Listerine. It’s happened. Rushing into the shower I’m instantly disinfected by the boiling cauldron of steam that has built up within its walls. I narrowly avoid 2nd degree burns thanks to a temperamental and anemic hot water heater. Rinsing my hair out in icy glacial waters, I’m reminded that it’s time to avoid this hassle and get the barber to shave it all off again. CLICK!  

 

I bolt out of the shower, only to remember that I didn’t bring a towel in with me. Running down the stairs towards the linen closet, I’m hopeful that I closed the blind on the large picture window in my living room. Sure, it’s late, but nobody out there driving around has had enough to drink to endure that sight. I dress quickly into the heap of garments carefully chosen the previous evening according to the weather forecast. I struggle to fasten the already straining clasp of my regulation uniform pants which are all the more burdened by all the extra undergarments. Finally with boots on, I head out into the frigid night air. My wet hair turns instantly into lumpy, frosted dreadlocks. I start the car and carefully scan the landscape about my house. Lying hidden in ambush could be a SWAT team of law enforcement officers who, if one believes the word of postal safety department officials, are waiting to catch somebody daring to commit the heinous crime of warming up their car while out scraping the windows. Seeing no one lurking in the bushes, I cautiously exit the vehicle armed with my ice scraper. After completing the task of clawing out a 5x8 porthole through the icy windshield armor and being exceedingly grateful that my little red wagon didn’t decide to leave for work without me, I hop in and check the clock: 2:31 am. CLICK! CLICK!

 

With a heavy foot and a few orange red lights, I delude myself into thinking that I can still make it. Just as I’m about to put the car in drive, I notice the insidious little light on the dashboard come on, reminding me that I passed up the gas station on my way home the previous night. It sits there, taunting me with its amber colored cycloptic eye.   “I told you to stop last night, didn’t I?” I hear it say as it silently mocks me. For a moment, I entertain the idea that it might just be amusing itself by exaggerating my lack of fuel, but paranoid conspiracy theory is dashed when I remember that it had come on before I left for work yesterday. No way around it. I was going to have to chisel the fuel door open and get some gas before I got to work. CLICK!!!

 

I rush out of my drive and on down the slippery path at speeds that would frighten even Santa’s reindeer. Rudolph be damned. I find an all night gas station and pull in for a pit stop so brief it would make a NASCAR driver proud.  I’m off again in a flash, determined to win this race. I pull in the employee parking lot at 2:58 am. Record breaker. I pounce out of the car and hurdle the steps leading up to the employee entrance. After a brief introduction, the electronic sentry decides that it recognizes my ID badge, and grants it – and me, permission to enter the facility. Through the window of the last door before I get to the time clock, I can see the backs of the other drivers as they walk unenthusiastically away and out to the dock to pick up their keys. Its 3:00 – but I still can make it! I rush over and pluck my yellow time card out from a rack populated with fifty other identical ones. I hastily swipe the card through the scanner only to be reproached by a glowing “REJECT” light accompanied by an obnoxiously rude buzzer. “Too fast!! Too fast!!” my mind screams. An eternity passes. The machine quiets down and resets itself to give me another shot. In a panic, I quickly swipe again. This time no buzzer, but no confirming double-beep either. Nothing. Just terrible silence. 

 

Whimpering, I try one last time. Steadily, carefully, I prepare to slide the card through the scanner. Not too fast, not too slow. Nice and easy. I hold my breath and begin sliding the card…

 

CLICK! 3:01. Beep-beep.

 

I stare at the cursed instrument a moment, contemplating smashing it to bits with a nearby fire extinguisher. Instead, I just walk off dejectedly towards the dock.

 

Seven bucks an hour? Sounds pretty good to me.

 

  

 Jim Varner

 


posted 9/12/03

William Burrus is mad as hell and he's not going to take it anymore.

 

In the fight to save our jobs and preserve the future of the national postal service, the illustrious president of our national union has finally decided to come out swinging. Unfortunately, his first blows seem to be aimed directly at his own membership.

You guys refuse to send him any extra money, so he's taken the bold initiative to just take it from you.  The APWU National Executive Board has decided that since you won't volunteer to give to their pet political action committee, COPA, they're just going to steal the money from your paycheck to put toward our "mutual" cause.      

Brother Bill implores us to join the fight. "This is war," he says. His first retaliatory strike in the battle appears in the form of a ten minute video designed to frighten and convince the rank and file that the only way to save
ourselves is to open up our wallets so we might buy our economic salvation.

Like a late night TV preacher fleecing his flock, he never actually comes out and says he wants more money. Rather, he implores euphemistically that "your help is needed." That argument hasn't worked well in the past, but if one thing can be said of our current national leadership, at least they're persistent
when trying to get more of your money.

So favorable to USPS managerial wishes to intimidate and demoralize the workforce into doing whatever is asked of them, our local management chose to curtail processing on all tours in order to show the union produced video. Think about that  one would be justified to start questioning just whose interest
the National is serving.

Citing the threat from President Bush's Postal Commission, the union fails to mention that this partisan group was formed with every intention of threatening the livelihood of postal service workers. Their recommendations shouldn't have come as a surprise to anyone.  The group, made up mostly of right-wing
practitioners of trickle-down economics and free-traders, has recommended changing the mission of the USPS from being a service of and for The People, into a profit generating business. Being very careful to say that they don't want to privatize the postal service completely, they just want to eliminate the troublesome aspects of the USPS (i.e.  decent paying jobs and universal service for all Americans) while keeping those aspects that they like. That is, a governmental sponsored, profit-protected welfare system for the mass mailing industry.   

APWU's leadership is presenting the Postal Commission's findings as if they were already the law of the land, when in fact there are very few of their recommendations that can be implemented without getting congress to act in their favor.

The political reality of the situation is that very few of our congressional representatives would be willing to sponsor or support any legislation which threatens the livelihood of many of their constituents.  Nor are they likely to support changes which would cause the public at large to be inconvenienced by these proposed changes.

There's no question that the economic livelihood of postal workers is being threatened nationally. However, I don't believe that any substantial changes in the laws governing the operation of the USPS are likely given the current economic and political realities. More likely, USPS management at the behest of
the direct mailing lobby, will continue to keep their "transformation plan" on track within the current legislative guidelines. Consolidation of postal processing facilities, curtailing of business hours, outsourcing of APWU represented positions and opening of more contracted retail units will continue
to erode our job security and ultimately threaten the continuation of universal service for all Americans.

A proactive, aggressive response from the union is long overdue in taking the steps necessary to make our voice heard. We need to begin a mass publicity campaign to inform the public of the changes which are being proposed. Paramount in waging a successful campaign to defeat the wishes of the Postal Commission is gaining public support for our position.  The public should be made aware of the changes which could affect the daily delivery of mail to their homes or the convenience and security of having a community post office staffed by real postal employees. Contrary to the guidance of our national union 
leadership who would like it much better if we sit down, write them a check and then shut up. I believe that APWU locals must coordinate with the other postal union organizations in their community. We must come together to form a grass-roots campaign to educate the public about cuts to staffing levels at their local
postal facilities and make them aware of those postal installations likely to be threatened with closure.

All of this will take a good amount of sweat, sacrifice and money on the part of the membership, but I believe that it is ultimately up to the membership to decide just what resources we are willing to put forth to save our own jobs. The National, in acting so timidly on other issues, has lost credibility with their membership. The pervasive attitude is that there is very little accountability of the Union's funds. Many feel that more money given to the National will just be squandered on $200 lunch dates and opulent travel accommodations
for the union brass.

Mr. Burrus needs to convince his membership that he's in the fight with us, rather than resorting to borrowing management's intimidation tactics. He cannot be an effective leader if the rank and file feel that he's trying to distract your attention with one hand, while his other reaches around to grab your
wallet.


Jim Varner is a Part-Time Flexible Motor Vehicle Service driver for USPS P & DC in Youngstown, Ohio.

Jumping to Conclusion
By James E. Varner

1/09/03

This is a true story.

Mostly

It was another lousy day on my new job as a truck driver for the U.S. Postal Service. Six months had passed, but I still felt as awkward as I had on my first day. I trudged through the open spaces of the processing plant towards the small, dim dungeon that served as the office of the Motor Vehicle Service. I hadn’t yet grown accustomed to the blank stares and grimaces made by many of the jaded elders when I committed the faux pas of saying “good morning.” This was not a happy place.

A sign on the wall proclaimed “The beatings will continue until morale improves.” It was obviously a failed policy, or yet another example of malfeasance or incompetence on the part of supervision. I was sure, however, that management would in short order create and then memorize a form number for the procedure, so as to document the number of times the beatings occurred. Of course, this extra burden would require the need for yet more management personnel, but one can never have too much paperwork or too many supervisors. They would anxiously await reports to see if the beatings were being administered according to plan and on schedule. Supervision would consult graph charts to see how the number and intensity of the their thrashings compared with other postal facilities in our region.

Mandatory would be the setting of an unattainable goal for the greatest number of beating victims, so as to motivate the workforce into competing against those other, enemy installations. Volunteers would be sought and coerced into being the first in line to be given their beating here locally. Better that than risk being sent off 50 miles or more to some unknown postal gulag, where we were told, the beatings were much more severe.

I was stuck in a job I hated, in a place I loathed, and I was looking for some inspiration to carry me through that trying time. Before the day was through, I would discover someone who would inspire me to action and give me hope of standing tall in the face of adversity – someone, however, who would ultimately betray me and my dreams like a modern day Judas.

I was loading cages into the truck when some printing on the side of a box caught my eye. The text read: Live crickets – handle with care. Fascinated that people actually mailed living things, I took the box out for closer inspection. It was a rectangular cardboard box with a cutout in the middle that was covered by a black screen. This allowed one to inspect the contents and presumably let the crickets see out. Sure enough, there they were, busily going about their business in their cubic-foot cardboard mansion, doing just whatever it is that crickets do.

A graphic was printed on the side of the cutout, showing an upright, smiling cricket. Text next to the picture introduced the fellow as Snookums. Dressed in a tuxedo, appearing well fed and comfortable, he was the personification of happiness and contentment.

Memories of Chester in A Cricket in Times Square played through my head. It made me feel good that I had a hand in helping deliver joy and happiness to smiling, laughing kids, who would be waiting anxiously by the door every time the mailman arrived. They’d gather round to see if today was the day they’d have the chance to become foster parents to their pet cricket. They’d play with and care for their new “children,” giving food and shelter while getting companionship and love in return.

The feeling that something was terribly wrong broke this pleasant reverie. Something wasn’t as innocuous as I had supposed. Some horrible secret was being hidden and was to be found within the confines of this small cardboard community. I turned the box over and read the inscription.

Live Bait

I took a moment for my mind to comprehend the implication of those words. Then as my conscience grappled with their true meaning, the horror that I now had a hand in perpetuating began to sink in. These were not happy little creatures, looking forward to a new life in the arms of a child. Rather, they were sacrificial insects who’s only purpose was to be used as bait. They were prisoners to be impaled on fishhooks or eaten alive by caged iguanas. This wasn’t the happy little cricket cruise. It was Auschwitz in miniature.

I had given up all hope for humanity. My thoughts of benevolent enterprise vanished, replaced with guilt and sorrow. Instead of elated, I was now feeling guilty and terribly depressed. I had almost set the box back in the APC when I caught movement at the edge of the container. It came not from behind the tiny prison bars but from outside the box.

Snookums had escaped!

I glanced quickly around hoping against all odds that no Postal Inspectors were rushing to apprehend Snookums, the perpetrator of what I was sure must be some breach of Postal regulation. Luckily, none were in sight, probably off somewhere on the catwalk listening in on the conversation of sparrows. No doubt they were seeking evidence of conspiracy on the part of the birds, whom they reasoned must be making plans to steal crackers out of the vending machines.

Inspired, I began to devise a plan, one that would not only free Snookums and his charges from their journey of death, but would also release me from the bondage of this dreadful employer. I would first gather up all the cases of crickets I could find on the dock and load them in the truck. Quickly, I would find a secluded location - say, downtown Youngstown - and release all of the captives into the air. There, their fearless leader Snookums would guide them to freedom. I imagined multitudes of crickets flying out of the truck, filling the air in such numbers they eclipsed the sun and made day turn to night.

People would gather and point into the air, staring with mouths agape. They would see the liberated insects and cheer in awe at the sight of such inspiring courage. “Hurry! Fly away! Fly away to your freedom,” they would yell, not wanting to see the dark forces of the Postal Inspection Service descend upon the revolutionaries and repel this display of democracy.

“Fly away!” I would shout, standing on the back of the emptying truck. “Fly away to find happiness in the arms of all the children that will love and care for you as pets. Fly away to loving families or green fields where you will find happiness and freedom.”
I hoped that Snookums would be rewarded in the end. A caring young girl who would make him a matchbox bed where he could rest comfortably would take him in, a place he could grow old happily. His nocturnal melody still bringing joy to her years later, when he played his song for her at night.

Hours later, the Postal Inspectors would arrive after rushing to the scene of the crime—two blocks away. The delay was apparently caused by their inability to use handcuffs on the sparrows. Seems the saltine snatching birds did not adhere to the memo management posted earlier requiring employees to grow extra hands while on U.S. Postal property. The purpose of that edict was to eliminate any excuses that employees might use for not doing three jobs at once.

The Inspectors would find me, still on the back of the truck, tearing away the dreaded blue bird that clutched at my breast and fed at my soul. Constantly eating, consuming, it depleted one of motivation, creativity and common sense. The patch, which distorted both the image and meaning of our national symbol, stood not for freedom and independence, but rather mismanagement, incompetence and annual postage increases.

I would tear it away and, once emancipated from its oppressive grasp, toss it at the feet of the postal police. Distracted by the blasphemous act of destroying a shirt bought with my U.S.P.S. clothing allowance, my pursuers, never allowed to make any decisions on their own, would have to call a superior. A tele- conference would be held, a study sanctioned and a memo issued. Supervisors would notify their supervisors. Precious minutes would be wasted while MVS administrators frantically searched the ELM for all the policy transgressions I had committed while engaging in this unprecedented infraction of The Rules. Only then, when there was enough management involved that none of them could be accused of actually making a decision, when no possibility existed that anyone would have to take blame in case something went wrong, could they proceed with my capture.

Meanwhile, I would make my escape to a warmer climate, never again to return to the site of the insurrection. Through pleasant thoughts of minimum wage jobs with weekends off, and the feel hot desert sand beneath my feet, a terrible thought began to thread its way into the muddled pathway of my consciousness.

The dreaded dark epiphany came, of course, like any other sudden realization that the bases of one’s own beliefs are meaningless. Like finding out there is no Santa Claus, that Peter Pan was really a girl, or that your mother was lying when she told you as a child that you were smart and handsome. The truth finally emerges and presents itself. It stands there coldly, eyeing you with disgust. It challenges you to confess, to admit what you knew all along, that you were so blinded by your hopeful delusion that you managed to ignore the conspicuous, obvious truth. It was simple, really. A small detail that dispelled all my dreams of freedom and a Walter Mitty ending to my less than illustrious six-month stint as a mailman.

Crickets can’t fly

With that sudden dreadful revelation, the daydream ended. I was back in the truck at the closed dock. I realized that a crowd of mailhandlers had begun to gather and stare at me while I was off liberating crickets in my mind. Embarrassed, I quickly tossed the box back inside the cage. Taking one last look at it while strapping down the load, I realized that Snookums had crawled back inside his prison.

Was he trying to tell me something? Was it just a foolish notion to attempt to fight against this oppressive bureaucracy? Snookums had inspired in me the hope that even those without wings could still take flight, but in the end even he chose to crawl back inside the box. He’d go back to the inviting comfort of familiar boundaries rather than risking the chance of the unknown. So conditioned to follow policy and procedure, he was unable to question that which even he thought absurd. He’d delude himself into thinking that everything would work out as long as he never fought the system, never tried anything new. So dispirited by the futility of trying to make change, he now believed that the stigma of mediocrity was preferable to the risks of leadership.

Disgusting damn bugs, I spat. Pathetic…leaping pests. Noisy cockroaches. Jumping around the room, jumping here, jumping there… always just…jumping! I was revolted that I would ever place my hope in such vile common creatures. My vicarious dreams of freedom broken, I slammed the cargo door shut. I dropped Snookums and his crawling, pathetic brood off at their destination, untroubled further of their fate.

That evening, it was finally time to clock out and go home. Heading out the door, toward a few hours of unsupervised sanity, a smiling young carrier held the door open for me to exit. “Goodnight,” he said brightly. I stopped and stared blankly at the neophyte who dared to be so cheery within the confines of this dreary place.

The grimace was already forming on my face as I thought about everything that had happened that day. Would I allow this place to change me into another of those pitiful zombies that used to be men? Employees that exchanged their dignity and compassion, their humor and happiness, for something so mundane as a paycheck? Six months, I thought. Six months is all it takes for this place to win. All the time it needs to completely demoralize and rob a person of their enthusiasm and dedication. Would I give in to the inevitable, or was there the slightest hope I could fight against the system and emerge victorious, defeating that which had wronged so many for so long?

The carrier, still standing there, looked back at me. He was uncomfortable now, but still expectant, waiting for a response.

I closed my eyes and held my breath a moment. Slowly, the decision made, the catharsis complete, a smile - a huge smile, appeared on my face.

“Goodnight,” I said, savoring the emotion as I walked past him and out the door.

Jim Varner is a PTF- MVS driver for the P & DC in Youngstown, Ohio. Two years have passed without any success of escape.

 


Back