Date: Fri 15-Aug-1997
Date: Fri 15-Aug-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: BILLB
Quick Words:
business-UPS-strike-
Full Text:
UPS Teamsters' Strike Delivers A Blow To Local Businesses
(with photo)
BY BILL BRASSARD, JR
The United Brotherhood of Teamsters' strike against United Parcel Service is
having an effect on local businesses and the post office.
Consider the following:
Roy H. Scheunemann, owner of Auros Paper & Supply Company, has been loading
50-pound packages of blueprint and drafting paper into his Jeep Cherokee and
hauling them to the Botsford Post Office. There he meets other small business
owners doing the same thing.
At Mail Boxes Etc, a UPS authorized shipping outlet, business is down 60
percent, according to owner Robert Ostro.
At Pitney Bowes on Edmund Road, the company is sending parcels by every
alternate carrier it can think of. "We're using trucking companies, Airborne
Express, and the post office, but all combined they're not big enough and our
entire process is delayed and moving at a snail's pace," said Larry Scharbach,
manager of transportation.
On Monday, Newtown Manufacturing tried to send some packages only to find that
Federal Express was at capacity by 9:30 am.
Newtown Post Office, swamped with incoming parcels, had carriers on the road
last Sunday making residential deliveries.
Like Christmas
The post office appears to be keeping its head above the sea of packages. "Our
volumes are just like Christmas," said postmaster Richard McGuire on Monday
afternoon, "but we're holding our own. It's the large parcels that are causing
the delays. It takes longer for the carriers to deliver them."
Postal workers used to dealing with parcels of a few pounds are handling 40-
to 50-pound boxes. "We have a lot of parcels, huge parcels that in theory we
can handle but we don't see them that often," said Peggy Shab, customer
service supervisor. Postal regulations permit maximum size parcels of 70
pounds and 108 inches.
From Mr McGuire's standpoint, things could be worse. He said the Norwalk Post
Office had an unexpected 10,000 pieces of Express mail dropped on its loading
dock one night last week.
Federal Express is another alternate shipping choice but it too is near
capacity. A call to Fed Ex on Tuesday morning generated a message that said
due to high call volumes the company has been forced to limit the number of
packages it will accept and that it has suspended its money-back guarantees.
A Federal Express driver, who asked not to be identified, said, "We're doing
our best. It's hard to say no to people, but we can only take so much."
Trucking companies are absorbing some of the overflow business. Last Thursday,
a Sweeny Transportation box truck out of Chicopee, Mass., made a delivery to
The Bee. Driver Bob Song, a Danbury area resident, said the company
specializes in delivering heavy loads but is accepting packages that weigh as
little as two pounds. Sweeny operates 1,000 trucks on the East Coast, said Mr
Song.
In general, business owners and managers say the alternate carriers are doing
the job, but they're uncomfortable being out of their routine and they miss
UPS's sophisticated system of tracking parcels. "Normal carriers can't trace
as well as UPS," said Mr Scharbach.
Holding Their Breath
As the strike moved into its tenth day on Wednesday, small businesses were
holding their breath. Since delivery of products is usually efficient, it's
common practice for small operations to carry less inventory, but that makes
them vulnerable to shipping delays. Retailers report receiving occasional
shipments from UPS trucks being driven by company management, but orders are
behind schedule.
Carl Russo of Tunes, a music store in Sand Hill Plaza, said he's had shipments
of his product delayed. "It hasn't gotten out of hand at this point," he said
on Tuesday, "but there's the potential it could." Mr Russo placed a next-day
order last Thursday and received it by UPS on Tuesday. He said the driver was
from the company's research and development department. "We have a small
inventory," said Mr Russo. "You don't want to become a warehouse. We order as
required."
At The Book Review, boxes of books to be returned to publishers are piled up
in the storage room. "We've had three [UPS] deliveries in seven days but no
pick-ups," manager Bill Sullivan said. "Fortunately it's August and it's not
horrendously busy like during the holidays."
Mr Scheunemann, who last month moved his Auros Paper & Supply Company to
Newtown in the Simm Lane Business Park, has been scrambling to get his orders
out. When the strike came, he did not have an account with Federal Express.
"They're not opening new accounts now, so if I have to use them I bring it to
their center in Danbury," said Mr Scheunemann.
Actually, Mr Scheunemann prefers the post office to deliver his 30- to
50-pound packages of specialty paper used by architects and draftsmen. He
brings some to the Botsford branch, which is less busy than the Newtown Post
Office, he said. Other orders he puts into his own vehicle and drives them to
area customers. "I put the back seat down and away we go," said Mr
Scheunemann.
Larger Businesses
Mr Scharbach said that the Pitney Bowes corporation ships about 7,000 packages
a day. He was unable to estimate how many parcels the Newtown plant alone
sends out, but it's a large number. The local facility ships replacement parts
for photocopiers and mailing machines throughout the United States.
After a two-week vacation shutdown, Newtown Manufacturing reopened to learn of
the strike. Bill Watts, a vice president, said the company sends out about 30
packages a week with UPS. The packages contain custom machine parts for
customers across the country. "Some of the pieces are very small," said Mr
Watts. "You could hold 2,000 of them in the palm of your hand."
Mr Watts said the company has been calling customers to find out what type of
alternate shipping they prefer. They've been using Federal Express, Roadway
Package Service (RPS), and the post office. "I'm glad to learn about some of
these other services like RPS," said Mr Watts. "My guess is that people will
go back to UPS after the strike, but not entirely. They'll continue to use
some of the others."
Taunton Press uses UPS for about ten percent of its shipping of magazines,
books, and videos, and as of Tuesday had not been seriously impacted at its
Newtown headquarters, said Paul Seipold, manager of distribution services.
"I'm more concerned about the effect on our [magazine] distributors, some of
whom use UPS," he said. "People are scrambling. Our concern is that all the
[shipping] networks can get jammed."
Taunton Press publishes several magazines, and their flagship publications
Fine Woodworking and Fine Homebuilding each have a circulation of 350,000.
The strike has had little effect on The Bee Publishing Company, which mails
The Newtown Bee and Antiques and the Arts Weekly through the post office. Some
subscribers who have their antiques paper shipped by UPS are receiving it by
Priority mail. Bulk shipments of the Antiques and the Arts Weekly to antiques
shows, usually sent by UPS, are on hold.
Limiting Packages
The post office has limited customers to four packages at a time, although a
person may make unlimited trips to the counter. "If they want to wait in line
that many times, that's fine," said Mr McGuire.
The volume, which was highest late last week, appears to be leveling off, said
Mr McGuire. He believes many people waited to see if the strike would be
settled quickly. When it wasn't, they went ahead and posted their packages.
At Mail Boxes Etc in Sand Hill Plaza, August is normally one of the busiest
months for Mr Ostro. There are a lot of back-to-college parcels shipped at
this time, he said. "Half our business is packaging and shipping," he said.
"Most of the people who come in here to ship things use UPS, which is the
least expensive ground service for most large packages, either by weight or
size."
One of Mr Ostro's customers who was sending birthday presents to Albuquerque,
N.M., chose Federal Express and paid more than she would have if UPS had been
available.
Mr Ostro believes people are not shipping unless it's important. "I think
there's a lot of waiting going on," he said.
Given the lack of traffic in the store, Mr Ostro has seen a fall-off in sales
of accessories, as well as the use of his new color copier machine.
"Obviously, we're hoping for a quick settlement," he said.
