The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

UPS to hold holiday hiring steady at about 100,000

FedEx, major retailers expected to lay out their plans in next few weeks.

- By David Koenig

DALLAS — UPS said Monday it expects to hire about 100,000 seasonal workers and pay them more to handle the avalanche of packages shipped between Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas.

That’s about the same number of people that UPS hired for last year’s holiday season. UPS is also counting on automation to keep up with the constant growth in online shopping.

Delivery rival FedEx and major retailers are expected to lay out their plans in the next few weeks.

The official unemployme­nt rate is just 3.7%, and the tight job market will make it harder — and more expensive — for those companies to fill seasonal jobs.

Danelle McCusker, the head of U.S. human resources, said UPS paid an average of $10.10 per hour for seasonal workers last year. This year, under a new labor contract, pay rates will range from $14 an hour up to, for truck drivers, $30 an hour, she said.

“Some markets are a bit more competitiv­e, and we will adjust” wages higher and even offer bonuses of $100 to $250, McCusker said, citing San Diego as an example.

Other employers are likely to boost pay, too.

“Last year, there was a flirtation with $15 an hour,” said Tony Lee, a vice president at the Society for Human Resource Management. “This year, $15 an hour seems pretty solid” among nationwide employers, “which puts real pressure on the mom-and-pops, who may not be able to afford $15 an hour.”

Lee said those smaller, local employers will try to counter by offering more flexible schedules — something that often is not possible at the big retail and delivery firms.

Last year, UPS held job fairs at 170 locations around the country on a single day in October to recruit for seasonal workers including package handlers and

drivers. McCusker said the company is considerin­g similar events this fall.

The volume of packages running through the UPS network roughly doubles during the holidays, compared with the rest of the year, and forecastin­g the right number of seasonal workers — and when to bring them on the job — can be critical.

Two years ago, UPS underestim­ated a surge in early shopping right around Thanksgivi­ng, and many shipments were delayed. UPS wound up spending an extra $125 million to catch up and reduce delays.

UPS says that in recent years, about one-third of people hired for seasonal jobs land full-time jobs with the company when the holidays are over.

Atlanta-based United Parcel Service Co. is also relying on more automation to increase package-sorting capacity. The company is opening or upgrading about 20 facilities — after a similar number of new or retrofitte­d centers last year — and estimates that the new buildings are 35% more efficient. The company is also raising the percentage of packages that can be sorted with automation, reducing the number that require handling by workers.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS 2018 ?? UPS paid an average of $10.10 per hour for seasonal workers last year. This year, under a new labor contract, pay rates will range from $14 an hour up to, for truck drivers, $30 an hour.
ASSOCIATED PRESS 2018 UPS paid an average of $10.10 per hour for seasonal workers last year. This year, under a new labor contract, pay rates will range from $14 an hour up to, for truck drivers, $30 an hour.

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