Reality for Dummies
Saturday, November 12, 2005
"
My Civic Duty...
"

As I believe that it's my civic duty to do my best to share high quality, educational films with all of those that read my blog, I would like to submit to you that everyone should go here and educate yourselves.

Have fun,
Spencemo


Friday, October 28, 2005
"
WOO HOO!!! Part Deux...
"



Posted at 12:12 pm by spencemo
C'mon...Bring it!!!  

Monday, October 24, 2005
"
Open Letter To Delphi's CEO...
"

OK, I put pen to paper (really, fingers to keyboard), and fired off a letter to Steve Miller, CEO of Delphi Corporation.  As well as sending it to the NY Times, Washington Post, LA Times, Detroit Free Press, and a couple of other people.  It won't make a damn bit of difference, but it did make me feel better...


Dear Mr. Miller,

 

 

As you have been straightforward with your employees to this point, please allow me to be straightforward with you as well.  I took the time the other day to read the opening day presentation that was presented to the bankruptcy court outlining the reasons Delphi was forced to file for Chapter 11.  I didn’t find any references to the accounting scandal that cost this company in excess of $4.7 billion.  I was more than slightly disheartened to find that the majority of Delphi’s financial ills are being blamed on our uncompetitive labor agreements.  I find this, in some ways, to be very deceptive.  Let me explain.

 

It’s been said that when you know better, you do better.  I believe a very good argument could be made that if our unions had a true financial picture of Delphi when our last contracts were negotiated, we could have taken steps to prevent this current debacle.  It would have been irresponsible to negotiate for today, if we truly had a picture of what jeopardy tomorrow was in. 

 

Many locals, in fact, have competitive hiring agreements in place.  I, myself, was hired under such an agreement.  The unions have, in many cases, readily cooperated with management to reduce costs and keep our business viable.  So to portray the cancer that is eating away at Delphi’s viability to be the unionized work force, is a sham.  We were never given the opportunity to truly bargain in good faith, and with good information.

 

If the unions are to be held accountable for accepting generous labor contracts, then management should bear responsibility of offering them when they knew they could ill afford them.  Someone had to know what kind of financial shape Delphi was in long before this year.

 

These beliefs that I hold, however, do not change our current situation.  This bus has truly been driven off into the ditch, and your first key to righting the ship is to impoverish the hourly workforce whose sacrifices built this company to the giant that it is today.  That is, sir, just a bit of a slap in the face.    

 

To suggest slashing someone’s pay in excess of 60%, eliminating benefits and thousands of jobs in the process, is, well, more than “fairly dramatic”, as you put it.  Perhaps such monumental proposals would be easier to bear if there were hope of bringing new business to these areas with the savings created by the cuts, but that doesn’t seem to be the case. 

 

To the objective observer, one might think that the ultimate plan would be to eliminate all domestic production and reap the whirlwind overseas.  I’m not too sure myself, but it seems more likely than not.  It was the profits made here that allowed Delphi to create its vast global empire. 

 

I read somewhere that have said that you are aware of the stress these kinds of developments can create, and want to try to “soften the blow” to the affected employees.  How, exactly, does one soften the blow of devastating the standard of living that it has taken a lifetime to create?  To be brutally honest, once you leave Delphi, you can return to your semi-retirement in Oregon, a wealthy man.  Should we successfully emerge from Chapter 11, what’s left of the United States work force will be leaner, more productive, but much poorer. 

 

It is heartbreaking to me that tens of thousands of my fellow hourly employees are in the same state of mind that I find myself in.  We are scared.  We find ourselves hanging on to the empty shells of what our dreams for the future used to be.  The atmosphere that is created by this uncertainty in our workplace is nothing short of toxic.  You urge us to keep our customers first in our thoughts and continue to produce world-class quality products.  We’re doing it, but it is becoming increasingly difficult. 

 

If the reality that “life is going to be different” isn’t already too much for many of us to bear, we must also bear your insults in the media.  You speak of us as though we were ignorant, robotic human assets that aren’t worth the wage we’re being paid.  I take great offense to that.  Many hourly employees have taken advantage of countless hours of training made available to us.  I am personally certified as a Six Sigma Green Belt (manufacturing), as well as one of our location’s hourly trainers for the IUE-Delphi Quality Network Problem Solving.  All of these programs are intended to make our employees more efficient.

 

In closing, Mr. Miller, I would like to thank you for taking the time to read my letter.  I doubt anything I have said will change the course of what is to come, but at least I will know that I have had the chance to speak my mind.  You cannot realistically say that we are the bane of Delphi’s financial existence.  Nor can you say that bankrupting tens of thousands of union employees is the cure.

 

Thank you for your time,

 

Spencemo

Delphi Packard Plant 15

 

 

 

 

   



Monday, October 17, 2005
"
On a Happier Note...WOO HOO!!!
"




Saturday, October 15, 2005
"
Fuckity, Fuck, Fuck Fuck...
"

OK, let's get everyone caught up, shall we?  Delphi did indeed file for Bankruptcy last Saturday.  Ruh-roh, Shaggy.  I don't have a flippin' clue what's going to happen to my job, my dad's job, or the jobs of the other 5,000 people that work for Delphi in my town.  The only thing that works in our favor in this area is that our particular part of Delphi makes money.  Not that that's going to keep them from asking us for a buttload of our pay and benefits back, but it should, at least, keep the doors open and the lights on in our plants. 

Now, let me talk about our new CEO Steve Miller.  What a smug bastard this guy is.  I watched as much of the press conference as our local TV channel saw fit to broadcast, and all I wanted to do is smack the guy upside the head.  Now, I do understand that we, as hourly employees, are going to have to give concessions to make our company viable, but don't stand there and belittle us in defense of your bonus program for the same executives that ran this ship right into the ground.  I'm not buying it.

Now, let's talk about the dumbasses up in Lockport.  This particular plant is sending out flyers telling their people to be prepared to strike the company.  This really isn't a good idea.  If they walk out, all they are going to do is ensure that their plant gets closed.  It already isn't a profitable location, and all of this talk of a work stoppage not only endangers their plant, but others as well.  Mr. Gettlefinger from the UAW needs to sit on these guys and get them to shut up.  Soon.

It's going to be a long process.  I better get some more beer.


Posted at 03:00 pm by spencemo
C'mon...Bring it!!!  

Wednesday, October 05, 2005
"
It's Not Just Us...
"

OK people...in the relentless reporting about Delphi's financial situation, everything is focused on how much we union people are making in wages and benefits, and by golly, if we fix that, we'll be just fine.  Well bullshit.  We're not the only problem...take a look at this...

Delphi Executives Named in Suit Over Sales Practices
The Wall Street Journal

By Jeffrey McCracken

Oct. 5, 2005

A detailed lawsuit filed against Delphi Corp. by two state pension funds and one of Europe's biggest employee-pension funds alleges the auto-supplier's senior executives encouraged inventory deals with a bank and two other companies that artificially boosted profits from 1999 to 2002.

The accounting moves, which involved selling inventory at the end of a quarter and booking the proceeds as income and cash flow from operations, are being examined in a securities-fraud investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission and a related criminal probe by the Department of Justice.

Delphi has previously acknowledged it overstated earnings in past years, in part through deals involving third parties. But it is unclear whether senior executives were aware of the improper accounting, and details have been scant.

The suit alleges that Alan S. Dawes, Delphi's chief financial officer at the time, and other senior executives arranged approximately $440 million in deals in which Delphi sold scrap and unusable equipment to improve earnings during difficult quarters after Delphi was spun out from General Motors Corp. in 1999.

These deals helped Delphi meet or exceed quarterly earnings expectations for its first 19 quarters, according to the suit. After a quarter closed, Delphi reacquired the inventory, the suit alleges.

Delphi's senior management was so pleased with the inventory practices that a vice president of logistics once distributed a companywide memo praising the program and telling others to copy it, the suit alleges. Managers were also told to visit the plants where the inventory had been sold to "learn from their methods," according to the 290-page lawsuit.

The lawsuit was filed last Friday in federal court in New York. The $7 billion public pension fund for Oklahoma school teachers is named as the lead plaintiff. Others suing include the $16 billion Mississippi public-employees pension fund, which provides benefits to about 310,000 current and future state employees; Stichting Pensioenfonds ABP, the $178 billion pension fund for 2.2 million government and university workers in the Netherlands; and Raiffeisen Kapitalanlage-Gesellschaft, a mutual-fund firm based in Vienna with $40 billion in assets.

The lawsuit is being handled by the New York law firm of Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossman, which had a key role in the class-action suit in the WorldCom Inc. securities litigation that resulted in a $6.13 billion recovery.

Delphi spokesman Lindsey Williams declined to comment on the lawsuit. He said current Delphi executives or board members mentioned in the suit would not be made available to comment. Attempts to reach Mr. Dawes and Delphi's former chairman and chief executive, J.T. Battenberg III, were unsuccessful. Mr. Battenberg, who was also named as a defendant, announced his retirement in February, just a week before the SEC investigation was revealed. He stepped down this summer.

The suit cites deals in 1999 and 2000 involving a Tennessee purchasing-management firm called Setech. The suit alleges these deals, valued at about $145 million and involving inventory from Delphi sites such as plants in Kokomo, Indiana, and Reynosa, Mexico, artificially inflated Delphi's pretax income by $60 million in 1999 and $16 million in 2000, a period when Delphi traded near its $20-a-share peak. Delphi has previously acknowledged the amount by which pretax income had been inflated, but not details of the transaction or any involvement by Setech.

Setech's chief financial officer, Richard Eddinger, declined to comment on the lawsuit, but confirmed his company has been contacted by the SEC as part of its year-long Delphi investigation. The lawsuit adds to the mountain of problems at Delphi, which is trying to avoid filing for bankruptcy-court protection and is seeking help from GM and the United Auto Workers union.

Delphi, which has acknowledged that it is under federal investigation, completed an internal investigation in June, resulting in the restatement of earnings for 2001-2003. Mr. Dawes and several senior treasury executives were also forced out earlier this year as a result of the investigation.

Delphi has never given the names of the third parties it sold the inventory to. The suit cites several "confidential sources," such as former GM employees, Delphi managers, Setech officials and others as the source of its information.

The suit says many of the most egregious deals stopped in 2002, one quarter before Sarbanes-Oxley kicked in, but management spent the next two years trying to hide or make up for the artificial boost to their bottom line.

The suit names as defendants Delphi, the accounting firm of Deloitte & Touche, six former or current Delphi executives, 15 former or current board members, nine investment banks and three other companies Delphi did business with. Former parent GM wasn't named as a defendant.

Deloitte & Touche spokeswoman Deborah Harrington said her firm hadn't been served with the lawsuit and declined to comment.

The other companies that the suit alleges helped Delphi "present the investing public with a materially false and misleading picture of the company's cash flow, earnings and debt," are Bank One Automotive Group, since acquired by J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., and BBK Ltd., an automotive-turnaround firm based in Southfield, Michigan. J.P. Morgan spokesman Joseph Evangelisti declined to comment on the suit. BBK founder B.N. Bahadur said he hadn't seen the suit and declined to comment. Bank One and BBK have previously acknowledged being contacted by the SEC over the matter.

The suit says Delphi disguised a $200 million loan in December 2000 from Bank One as a sale of precious metals. Delphi used this money to report record cash flow from operations of $268 million for 2000, which was considered significant at the time because the rest of the auto industry was suffering from vehicle-production cuts, the suit alleges.

Delphi's actual cash flow from operations for the year was $68 million. It also didn't record the loan as a debt. A few weeks later, in January after the year-end close, Delphi bought back the assets, the suit alleges.

The suit says Delphi did about $89 million in similar buyback deals with BBK in 2000 and 2001. Quoting an unnamed "confidential source" that worked in the senior executive office of BBK, the suit claims Mr. Dawes was "directly involved in the transactions" with BBK and had a close relationship with Mr. Bahadur.




Monday, October 03, 2005
"
OK, The Good News Is...
"

...I didn't lose my office job...yet.  Rumor has it there's going to be another wave of cuts on the horizon, but no one knows for sure. 

The bad news is that I work for a little auto supplier called Delphi.  Heard of it?  The four people who really know what's going on don't feel the need to share that information with the rest of us, so it's chaos on the shop floor.  It's the nature of the beast...if you don't have the answers, make them up.  What's happening is that someone will read a news article, take two or three points out of it and spin it into some sensational story to run their mouths about. 

It all makes my brain hurt.  I just want an accurate answer one way or the other.  If I'm going to get screwed by my company, I'd like to have the opportunity to prepare myself for it.  We all just want to know.  Are GM & the UAW going to step up to the plate and get a deal done?  I think GM just might, but the UAW scares me.  These guys have their heads stuck in the 70's where strong-armed union bullying was the best negotiating tool.  That shit doesn't work anymore.  If the UAW doesn't bend, they'll condemn us all.  Shit.

I guess we'll just have to wait and see...


Monday, September 12, 2005
"
I Think Therefore I Am, Therefore I Think I'll Have a Beer...
"

I'm having another one of those 'my brain hurts' kind of days.  The company I work for is in financial trouble, and although I'm not worried that I'm going to be unemployed anytime soon, I may lose my cushy office job and be back on the production floor. 

That could have some advantages...no stress...no deadlines...make my parts and go home.

It would also have some disadvantages...pay cut...being in pain when I go home every day...no longer using my brain at work...

Ugh...everyone at home seems to think that I'll be OK, but I'm not sure right now.  With what's going on at work, no one is safe.  Oh well, I guess as long as they still let me come inside the plant when I come to work, it's OK. 

My plant manager says that, if you're going to be affected, you'll know by Friday.  That's great to have an answer, but it makes for a long week. 



Friday, September 02, 2005
"
Speechless...
"

I could ramble on about my feelings on the horrors I see taking lace in New Orleans and elsewhere in the hurricane ravaged Gulf Coast, but I can't. 

Please, just give...

...and pray.


Posted at 05:06 pm by spencemo
C'mon...Bring it!!!  

Monday, August 29, 2005
"
Shut the F*ck Up...
"

Ok, I got to spend some quality time with my sister from out of town this weekend.  Now, don't get me wrong, I love all of my sisters and would die to try to protect them, but sometimes I'm reminded that silence is golden...

My dear sister came home to pick up her son who was visiting my parents this Saturday, so naturally, I went over to visit her.  I wasn't even there an hour when I was reminded ever so bluntly that "her husband goes to work every day so that I can have my fucked up opinion".  My brother-in-law is a Senior Chief in the Navy, and, of course, my sister is a rabid Republican being a military wife.  I'm not sure that she liked being reminded that my husband is a disabled Air Force veteran, and he pretty much shares the same "fucked up" opinion that I have.  Actually, it's pretty funny, but she didn't phrase it quite that way when my husband & Stimpy's husband (an Army vet) were in the room.  Now, I don't go quite as far to the left as my sister Stimpy, but if you couldn't have guessed, I'm definitely not on the far right, either.

I would have really liked to get into it with her, but I wouldn't do that at Mom & Dad's house.  Especially since she let her friends in Virginia dogpile Mom while she was down there to visit, Mom doesn't want to hear any political arguments. 

Ugh. 


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spencemo
All you need to know is I'm a chick and I'm old enough to know better, but just too young to care.
The current mood of spencemo at www.imood.com
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