Friday, June 19, 2015

T-Mobile Workers Rack Up A Small Win, With German Backing

In partnership with the German union representing staff at Deutsche Telekom, T-Mobile’s parent company, call center workers are getting results.

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

T-Mobile has changed a disciplinary policy that could punish call center staff for requesting time off when sick or caring for family members, after pressure from workers and labor activists.

A T-Mobile Vice President announced the policy changes via an internal email last week, saying the company was "resolving another employee pain-point."

The change comes after months of pressure from workers and union activists in America and Germany to improve conditions at T-Mobile. Their united front is the result of a rare partnership between the Communications Workers of America and ver.di, a powerful German union representing workers at Deutsche Telekom, T-Mobile's parent company.

"We've had several small victories like this now" said Hae-lin Choi, an organizer with CWA who previously lived in Germany and worked at ver.di. "We've put together a calendar with the Germans to compare work conditions: wages, monitoring, all that kind of stuff."

A company spokesperson declined to go into specifics about the policy change. "We're proud to have an active dialogue directly with our employees," T-Mobile said in a statement, "just as we do with our customers. We are recognized year after year as a 'Best Place to Work' by industry experts, and provide generous pay and benefits."

Sean Gallup / Getty Images

Under the former scheduling policy, workers could receive demerits known as "today" codes for requesting time off at the last minute, according to T-Mobile workers. Such requests are often made by staff who are sick, or need to look after a child or family member who is.

The company allotted a maximum number of pre-approved time-off hours per day (known as PRETO hours), which were allocated on a first-come first-serve basis. If you were the second or third person to call in requesting time off that day, you might receive a 'today' code because the hours were already taken, workers said.

"The hard thing about these policies is that there aren't clear consequences to how they work," said Ashley Charzuk, a T-Mobile worker and member of TU, the CWA-affiliated union there. "You could have someone with one or two 'today' codes who would be written up. Others would have ten."

The codes triggered a three-step penalty process, according to Charzuk. First, a worker would have a "documented meeting" with a manager. More "today" codes would lead to a "decision day," where the worker would be given a day off, with their company badge deactivated, to write a letter to T-Mobile explaining what they'd done wrong and why they want to work there.

"They tell you you need to take the day off to think about whether or not you want your job," said Charzuk. "If you do want your job, they call you to come in, and you have to write a letter explaining whatever it is you'll do to keep it."

Charzuk wrote just such a letter, explaining that the next time her young daughter got sick she would find a family member to take care of her instead of asking for time off.

More than a few "today" codes could also affect monthly schedules, workers said. A low rank meant you would be more likely to receive worse hours, which in turn could lead to more difficulty arranging childcare.


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