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  • September 3, 2010

FactCheck exposes FedEx’s phony UPS ‘bailout’ attack ads as union-​​busting propaganda

July 23, 2010
Posted by Jules Siegel

By DAn­gelo Gore

(FactCheck) Last month, FedEx launched a multimillion-​​dollar online cam­paign against long­time rival United Par­cel Ser­vice over a Fed­eral Avi­a­tion Admin­is­tra­tion reau­tho­riza­tion bill mak­ing its way through Con­gress. FedEx says a pro­vi­sion of the bill, as passed in the House, amounts to a “bailout” for UPS. But that’s an abuse of the term.

The mea­sure would bring dri­vers and other non-​​airline-​​based employ­ees of FedEx’s Express divi­sion, which han­dles “time-​​sensitive ship­ments,” under the cov­er­age of the National Labor Rela­tions Act, instead of the Rail­way Labor Act. Under the NLRA, the FedEx work­ers would be able to union­ize locally, on a site-​​by-​​site basis, instead of nation­ally as required by the RLA. Union­iz­ing, in other words, is some­what eas­ier under the NLRA.

UPS work­ers, specif­i­cally its dri­vers, fall under the NLRA and are mem­bers of the Inter­na­tional Broth­er­hood of Team­sters. UPS argues that FedEx Express work­ers who per­form the same duties should fall under the same reg­u­la­tions. But FedEx, which founded its Express divi­sion in 1971 as an air­line com­pany, says it should remain under the RLA, which cov­ers air­lines and railroads.

UPS argues that the pro­posed amend­ment “will appro­pri­ately pro­vide equal treat­ment under labor law to employ­ees per­form­ing the same func­tions at dif­fer­ent com­pa­nies, and will elim­i­nate the spe­cial treat­ment cur­rently given to FedEx Express.” FedEx says that “[r]emoving FedEx Express from RLA juris­dic­tion could expose our cus­tomers at any time to local work stop­pages that inter­rupt the flow of their time-​​sensitive, high-​​value ship­ments through our global network.”

FedEx has taken its case to the Web, mis­ap­pro­pri­at­ing a term with which the pub­lic has largely neg­a­tive asso­ci­a­tions and apply­ing it to what UPS is try­ing to con­vince Con­gress to do. FedEx’s new Web site, brown​bailout​.com, attacks UPS for pan­der­ing to Con­gress and says UPS wants “a bailout, plain and sim­ple, and the Amer­i­can peo­ple won’t stand for it.” A run­ning tab on UPS’ rev­enue called the “Bailout-​​O-​​Meter” asks: “Why does a com­pany that brings in this much money need a bailout from Con­gress?” And videos on the FedEx–sponsored site lam­poon UPS com­mer­cials that fea­ture a man explain­ing the ben­e­fits of using UPS through illus­tra­tions on a white board. The FedEx videos fea­ture a man called the “Brown Bailout Guy,” who resem­bles the actor from UPS’ own com­mer­cials. In one video, he’s walk­ing near the U.S. Capi­tol, ask­ing, “Where’s my bailout?”

But does the leg­isla­tive change that UPS wants amount to a bailout? Not in the tra­di­tional sense and cer­tainly not in the way the Amer­i­can pub­lic has heard the term used in recent months. UPS isn’t seek­ing any money from the fed­eral gov­ern­ment because of finan­cial losses. Even Wash­ing­ton Post syn­di­cated colum­nist George Will, who is tak­ing FedEx’s side in the dis­pute, says that what UPS is advo­cat­ing doesn’t amount to a tra­di­tional bailout.

Will: “Bailout” is now both a noun and a verb, and FedEx char­ac­ter­izes what Con­gress might do for UPS as the “Brown Bailout.” But prop­erly used, “bailout” denotes a res­cue of an eco­nomic entity from finan­cial distress.

Although UPS is suf­fer­ing from the reces­sion, so is FedEx. Fur­ther­more, UPS, whose rev­enue is 36 per­cent more than FedEx’s, began advo­cat­ing this injury to FedEx long before this recession.

The issue now moves to the Sen­ate, where that body of Con­gress will take up leg­is­la­tion that does not include lan­guage that would autho­rize the reg­u­la­tory switch. But this will almost cer­tainly come up dur­ing a House and Sen­ate rec­on­cil­i­a­tion of their respec­tive ver­sions of the bill.

We are not tak­ing sides in the mat­ter one way or the other. Whether FedEx Express work­ers should be gov­erned by the RLA or the NLRA is not an issue for us to decide. But FedEx is wrong in this regard: What UPS is ask­ing for is no bailout.

via “Brown Bailout?” Hardly | FactCheck​.org.

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