My dad worked swing shifts for years. Don’t know how he did it!
The lazy engineers who will tell you that it is not their job to fix an HMI, then when you do it for them, turn around and grieve you for doing their job(that they said was not their job). The lazy UAW who even after 3 trainings, and printed directions, can't seem to turn on the computer for a test bench. In reality they just feel that hitting the power button is not their job. Perhaps it is the electricians for dragging their feet to do simple network cables runs that they will not allow anyone else to do. Even though the job would only take me by myself an hour, they demand 4 people at 4 hours each to do the same job. Then they will wait, delay, misschedule until there is a holiday weekend so they can get double overtime. And finally the teamsters who love stacking things in front of network closets so that you can't get to them, even though there are signs telling them not to put anything there.Damn @sadclownwp what union butthurt you so bad?
My gripe with unions was holding down the appropriate pay level for high performing people while propping up pay for lazy, irresponsible or incompetent people. Why should I get paid as little as someone with less skill?The lazy engineers who will tell you that it is not their job to fix an HMI, then when you do it for them, turn around and grieve you for doing their job(that they said was not their job). The lazy UAW who even after 3 trainings, and printed directions, can't seem to turn on the computer for a test bench. In reality they just feel that hitting the power button is not their job. Perhaps it is the electricians for dragging their feet to do simple network cables runs that they will not allow anyone else to do. Even though the job would only take me by myself an hour, they demand 4 people at 4 hours each to do the same job. Then they will wait, delay, misschedule until there is a holiday weekend so they can get double overtime. And finally the teamsters who love stacking things in front of network closets so that you can't get to them, even though there are signs telling them not to put anything there.
Then when you try to hold them any of them accountable, they can never find the failure point, because no one was responsible. At some point you see union corruption so much, you realize there is a systemic problem with unions in general.
Was this specific to certain facilities? I've encountered that, but I don't feel it's the rule, rather the exception. McCormick place for example, the unions there were all so lazy and greedy they drove out most of the conventions years ago. I still don't think it's recovered. I've worked many other venues/locations in chicago where the unions were responsible and adequately efficient.The lazy engineers who will tell you that it is not their job to fix an HMI, then when you do it for them, turn around and grieve you for doing their job(that they said was not their job). The lazy UAW who even after 3 trainings, and printed directions, can't seem to turn on the computer for a test bench. In reality they just feel that hitting the power button is not their job. Perhaps it is the electricians for dragging their feet to do simple network cables runs that they will not allow anyone else to do. Even though the job would only take me by myself an hour, they demand 4 people at 4 hours each to do the same job. Then they will wait, delay, misschedule until there is a holiday weekend so they can get double overtime. And finally the teamsters who love stacking things in front of network closets so that you can't get to them, even though there are signs telling them not to put anything there.
Then when you try to hold them any of them accountable, they can never find the failure point, because no one was responsible. At some point you see union corruption so much, you realize there is a systemic problem with unions in general.
There was a report on the local news yesterday talking about the abandoned office spaces in downtown Chicago. Combination of covid, the cost of office space, and the number of folks working remotely. They were optimistic it will rebound. Riiiight, the number of folks working remotely is just going to increase. And expecting the cost to rent/buy office space to go down. Not gonna happen.Was this specific to certain facilities? I've encountered that, but I don't feel it's the rule, rather the exception. McCormick place for example, the unions there were all so lazy and greedy they drove out most of the conventions years ago. I still don't think it's recovered. I've worked many other venues/locations in chicago where the unions were responsible and adequately efficient.
Pretty sure we are on the leading edge of a commercial real estate collapse. It’s already started with commercial buildings in foreclosure, defaulting on payments, unable to refinance their balloon payments. CRE loans are not like 30 year home mortgages, they are typically 5-7 years with a balloon and the banks effectively make CRE building owners refinance or pay off the entire balloon. But CRE loans are now toxic. Most banks are not making those loans at all. The market is about to collapse.There was a report on the local news yesterday talking about the abandoned office spaces in downtown Chicago. Combination of covid, the cost of office space, and the number of folks working remotely. They were optimistic it will rebound. Riiiight, the number of folks working remotely is just going to increase. And expecting the cost to rent/buy office space to go down. Not gonna happen.
I believe Chicago has re-zoned and approved 4 buildings north of the river to be used as residential towers.I agree. Real estate is not looking good right now in Chicago. The building I work in has multiple floors of offices that are empty. It used to be filled but I imagine the cost of renting the space out is not worth it. After Covid the companies never returned
Keep working I like my Social Security check every month.4 day weekend coming to an end
They will start squatting there soon.Fill Willis Twer with illegals!
I had a conversation about this subject recently with someone. Their take was that for many/most of those buildings it was cost prohibitive to try to convert them to residential.I believe Chicago has re-zoned and approved 4 buildings north of the river to be used as residential towers.
But they need to drive along State Street, Wabash, Clark, etc just south of the river, probably add another half dozen or more buildings to their list that can be converted. It's not cheap to rezone a building, but the city is in trouble. If it gets behind the effort, it can cut some of the red tape and move the process along.
I'm sure the construction unions would back the plan, it will give their workers jobs. I know for fact that banks ARE lending on residential rental real estate ventures, so it would make them happy. I know the building owners, who own commercial buildings and facing inevitable default would be happy to see some commercial property converted to residential. More people there = more customers for the handful of restaurants and retail spaces that are still open, which would save those jobs too.