Posted on 04/09/2009 5:10:42 PM PDT by Cindy
Heh.
Or like the "student pilot" in the Cessna who flew down from Canada a few days ago.
You're scaring me.
H1B staff are employed on a project/outsource basis, usually for back office projects.
Outside plant staff, the ones maintain the physical infrastructure and who know where the fiber runs, are all represented by Communications Workers of America District 9 locals.
The CWA contract with AT&T expired at 11:59 p.m. Saturday.
Nuff said! So much for "Benevolent Brotherhood"
It took out Verizon Services also. Verizon leases space on some of the cables.
Verizon technicians were on site working with AT&T technicians to get service restored.
It sounds like good old boys at the local had to many beers and went out doing some contract negotiations of their own.
Circa 1972 we had a slowdown before a strike. An installer named McDonald climbed up into the racks in the biggest Central Office on Long Island and chopped a six inch section out of the biggest cable he could find. It contained over a thousand twisted pairs (each pair was somebody's home line).
It took three days to find and repair.
He did it two more times before he was caught. He was fired but not proscecuted (for PR reasons).
The stories I'm reading this morning says it was not all fiber this time. There were some copper cables cut also, among four different sites. Well thought out by someone driving around in his truck the past few weeks. It's to bad he didn't think of the prison time he will do.
It will be so easy to identify and apprehend this guy. The FBI will even use forensics to match the groves of the cutters used with the knotches on the cables tying the act directly to the owner of the gear. Neither AT&T nor the CWA will cover it up in these times we live. The poor fool is toast.
The shop steward and the level three boss put me in a vise. They assigned me (the college kid) to work on a rack in plain sight of the boss' office. If he came out and I wasn't working I got reamed. If the shop steward came by and I was working I got reamed.
After a week of that I started coming in early. I'd climb up and cut the pair to the boss' office phone. He'd come in, find out he had no coms and bellow for me to find the effin cut and get it effin fixed.
The only way to "find" the cut was to crawl along the racks from floor to floor (there were ten floors)tracing the pair by hand....could take hours. I'd disappear into the racks and read my Shakespeare. After a few hours I'd go to the cut and splice it again.
After a week or so of that they had me figured but knew they couldn't stop me so they stopped using me for a pawn.
The whole deal told me all I ever needed to know about unions.
Multi-level ironwork in a giant C.O. must have been really fun! I bet some places even the rats were afraid to crawl.
They busted my chops non-stop but once I figured out the rules of the game I gave as good as I got. It gave me the chance to know guys who fought on Guadalcanal, Iwo Jima, Italy and Chosin as friends. That alone was worth the bulls***.
I was a IP Sr. Maintenance tech for about twenty years at Verizon Business, MCI, or Wcom. The largest places I’ve worked only had two floors. That is really all you need for Long Distance work.
I had a feeling you were down when we didn’t see you much here yesterday. For some strange reason, my little burg wasn’t affected much. I have no idea why.
I’m still saying inside job. The union connection to this is just a little too smelly.
Thank you.
You’re welcome Vel.
A blessed Good Friday to you and your family.
Note: The following post is a quote:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2226893/posts
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$250,000 reward in phone cable vandalism (Union denies involvement)
San Francisco Chronicle ^ | 4-11-09 | John Coté,Michael Taylor, Chronicle Staff Writers
Posted on April 11, 2009 3:52:50 AM PDT by Anti-Bubba182
Authorities hope a quarter-million-dollar reward will shake loose a tipster to lead them to the vandals who severed underground fiber-optic cables, cutting off phone service for tens of thousands of people and disrupting life throughout southern Santa Clara, Santa Cruz and San Benito counties.
Investigators said Friday they are tracking down at least 10 leads and reviewing traffic-camera footage taken near one of four sites where the cables were cut Thursday in hopes of a breakthrough.[snip]
Contract talks
The sabotage in the South Bay came as AT&T was negotiating with the Communications Workers of America for a contract covering more than 80,000 employees, who have been working under their old pact since it expired Sunday.
“We are working under an expired contract and are prepared to strike at any time, which makes the timing of this vandalism difficult for us,” said Libby Sayre, a regional director for the union.
“Neither the union nor its members are involved in this in any way,” she said. “Our members spend their lives keeping up the equipment. We’re confident they didn’t do this.”................”
(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...
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