Ups Strike

UPS Strike
    In early August of 1997 the United Parcel Service (UPS) had a predicament on its hands, a teamsters strike.  UPS, the world's largest package distribution company was coming off a year [1996] in which they reported sales of $22.4 billion.  UPS Employed 75,000 management and non-union employees compared with 185,000 teamsters who are part of the AFL-CIO that were going on strike.  The teamsters rejected a contract extension offer from the company leaving the fate of millions of packages carrying everything from lobsters to laser printers up in the air (Johnson).
Tensions between union supporters and management began mounting in the years preceding the strike.  In April of 1994, the International Union led a three-week strike against major tracking companies in the freight hauling industry in attempts to stop management from creating $9 per hour part-time positions.  This would only foreshadow battles to come between management and union.  Later, in 1995, teamsters mounted an unprecedented national union campaign in attempts to defeat the labor-management "cooperation" scheme that UPS management tried to establish in order to weaken the union before contract talks (Witt, Wilson).  This strike was distinguished from other strikes of recent years in that it was an offensive strike, not a defensive one. It was a struggle in which the union was prepared, fought over issues which it defined, and one which relied overwhelmingly on the efforts of the members themselves (http://www.igc.org/dbacon/Strikes/07ups.htm).
The teamsters campaign at UPS was unique in that there were many special circumstances surrounding it.  UPS controlled 80% of the ground package delivery business, which ensured them that a ...
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