Verizon And US Postal Strike Of 1970

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Verizon 2000 Strike and Postal Strike of 1970
The two strikes I chose were completely different situations. The first strike I chose was the U.S Postal Strike of 1970. The United States Postal Strike of 1970 lasted two weeks. It began in New York City and spread to other cities within the following two weeks. The strike was illegal, against the federal government, and the largest wildcat strike in the United States history.
At that time, postal workers were not permitted by law to engage in collective bargaining. The postal workers that went to strike felt the wages were very low, the benefits were poor, and the working conditions were unhealthy and not safe. Congress decided to raise the postal workers pay by 4%, yet at the same time raise their pay by 41%. That triggered …show more content…

Managers and workers reported bottles, rocks and eggs were thrown if they crossed the picket lines. The strikers cut some cables and wire and that disrupted service. It had little effects on Verizon because phone companies do not rely on manual labor as much as they used to. However it did have negative impact on competitors.
The Verizon strike hurt Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (CLEC’s) that relied on Verizon to help with the connection to the network, without help from union works on strike, CLEC’s suffered. The strike lasted 18 days, and Verizon came to an agreement. They cut some of the mandatory overtime requirements from workers.
There are many differences between the two strikes that I chose. The first strike is a business that has to be ran under any circumstances. It is very important that the mail runs every day, which is why the president of the United States and the military had to get involved. The second strike is a phone company which is very important also, but not as important as strike one. The first strike didn’t get violent, while the second strike