Report: Well-trained union workforce made a difference in Hurricane Michael recovery
Well-trained union members make a difference in a crisis. After Hurricane Michael hit Florida and Georgia last year, Verizon Wireless struggled to restore service, leaving customers and first responders without a way to communicate and hampering recovery efforts. Meanwhile, Florida Governor Rick Scott praised AT&T, whose workforce is unionized, for its quick response.
To figure out why Verizon Wireless's response to Hurricane Michael was considered poor in comparison to AT&T's response, CWA conducted a survey of its AT&T wireline technicians who worked on the recovery in Panama City. The findings, which CWA included in an FCC filing this week, show that Verizon failed Floridians and Georgians affected by the hurricane by relying on non-union contractors to respond to the damage. In contrast, AT&T used union-represented employees, allowing the company to immediately deploy a well-trained workforce large enough for the critical task at hand.
A piece in Ars Technica examined how Verizon's non-union contractors struggled to handle the big task of rebuilding after the hurricane. Many lacked the proper credentials to access Verizon's equipment and didn’t showing up fast enough to restore critical services. The piece also highlights how the FCC's reliance on weak, voluntary commitments from carriers, instead of instituting strong regulations for disaster recovery, made tens of thousands wireless customers wait days, unnecessarily, for their mobile phone service to be restored.
Links:
CWA Comments in the Matter of Improving the Wireless Resiliency Cooperative Framework (CWA, May 20, 2019)
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