NALC’S Young: Good Cop/Bad Cop - Right Here In The USPS
MESSAGE from National Association Of Letter Carriers’ President WILLIAM H. YOUNG
You can’t pick up a newspaper these days or turn on the news without finding another report of law enforcement abuse. Unauthorized surveillance, illegal searches, suspension of civil liberties, beatings—all the way from wiretaps to water-boarding. Call that the Bad Cop side.
Of course, in today’s world, our personal security is on the line and we need effective law enforcement. Whether it’s the neighborhood cop or a super-spook, we need that “Thin Blue Line” to protect us from the worst that human nature can deliver. That’s the Good Cop side.
What has this got to do with the Postal Service, and letter carriers, and the NALC? Plenty. We have our own Good Cop/Bad Cop syndrome—and increasingly the Bad Cop is in the driver’s seat. And NALC is not going to sit still for it.
Now, we are not stupid. With 800,000 USPS employees, there are bound to be some bad apples. Even among our own 225,000 city letter carriers there will be some who do not deserve to wear the uniform.
Because of those rare bad apples, all postal employees have been subjected to surveillance throughout the history of the Postal Service—peepholes and catwalks, cameras hidden in bathrooms and supervisors hiding behind trees. You name it, we’ve seen it. Sometimes professional; all too often, Keystone Kops-like; occasionally outrageous and completely unacceptable.
In that last category we have entered a new era, the era of the “Office of Inspector General,” which has taken over from the Postal Inspectors—and from the Postal Service itself—key elements of employee monitoring, investigations and law enforcement.
How is the OIG doing?
In the past year, in just three cities—Houston, Texas, and Battle Creek and Grand Rapids, Michigan—OIG agents brought charges that resulted in more than 100 removals. In virtually every case, the improperly suspended carriers were returned to work with full back pay, including lost overtime.The total cost to the rate-payers was well over $1 million, plus hundreds of thousands of dollars for replacement labor during the wrongful suspensions and the high cost of litigating the removals through the grievance-arbitration process.
In Houston, a 35-year carrier, less than a year from retirement, was placed on emergency suspension, and then removed, in a case that the arbitrator ultimately stated was “so lacking in substance that it bordered on an unconscionable act.” The arbitrator not only reinstated the employee with full back pay, but also awarded an extra half-day’s pay for each day he was off the clock for a four-month period, noting “there is not a remedy that can give back to the grievant what he lost.” (He “lost his home, alienated his family due to the mental strain he endured, had
his phone cut off….”)
In addition to bungling “investigations” of letter carriers, the OIG also has appointed itself a “health oversight agency” and is going after personal, legally protected health information without the consent or authorization of carriers. The OIG secretly contacts doctors for the information and tells them to keep their letter carrier patients in the dark about the loss of privacy. Outrageous!
I have directed NALC’s attorneys to pursue this matter relentlessly through litigation. But trashing letter carriers, trampling on their rights, snooping into their medical records, and generally acting like an out-of-control Bad Cop isn’t enough for the Inspector General. He thinks he’s a management guru, too, testifying before Congress in favor of contracting out, an “incentive-based letter carrier performance system” (read: “if we like you, we pay you”), and “a slow, de facto privatization of the Postal Service.”
Who knows what’s next: The color of our uniforms? The design—or price—of stamps? But remember, Inspectors General come and they go. The NALC stays because its job is to make sure that the Bad Cops do not get away with their excesses—that they stay within their proper jurisdiction, and when they step out of bounds, that the USPS pays for it. Every nickel. Every dime. Every million dollars.
source: NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF LETTER CARRIERS Postal Record - December 2007
Related links:
NALC Young: It’s time to stop the ‘run amok’ Postal OIG
APWU Questions Postal Inspection Service Transition to OIG



December 19th, 2007 at 1:03 pm
I despise the INCOMPETENT OIG!
December 19th, 2007 at 3:11 pm
Whats new? My question is what is the union done for all of its dues paying brothers and sisters. Yeah these people got their jobs back but still are subject to abuse daily and its always the same union motto “Dont get mad get paid”. Maybe its time that the union contact agencies or investigators to bring the abusive tactics of management to the public eye.
December 19th, 2007 at 4:16 pm
Hire your own investigators to tail the OIG’s at work, home, vacation, bars and go through their trash, too. Make like paparazzi
December 19th, 2007 at 11:38 pm
Disgruntle, You have no clue. Get involved in your union and see for yourself. All unions are about people and is what is best for the whole. There is a U (you) in the union. The question is what have you done? You are the union.
December 20th, 2007 at 10:39 am
I think the union needs its own version of an OIG so it can get rid of INCOMPETENT UNION MANAGERS
December 22nd, 2007 at 10:14 pm
More OIG agents is the answer. Train them better so the nalc slugs that are fired stay fired. 40% fewer carriers and there would be no change exceot they would actually work more than 3 out of 8 hours.
January 3rd, 2008 at 10:16 am
Her we go with Young’s B.S. They should be
watching him.
May 10th, 2008 at 7:52 am
The NALC leadership should be investigated by the OIG. I’m sure that there would be a large number of negative things they would find. The NAL leadership is full of thugs and bumbs. It is sad that most of the high level managment in the Postal Service have been helped in their upward mobility in managment by the union. THe OIG mostly investigates carriers that are suspected of fraud. This issue mirrors the rediculous thinking of the union leadership. The NALC leadership should take the stance that any union memeber participating in illegal activities should get nailed by the OIG. The NALC is once again full of crap and is the main reason why the Postal Service is going down the tubes.