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Human Times
North America
Teamsters seeks court order to halt UPS $150,000 driver buyout plan

The Teamsters union has urged a federal judge to block UPS from offering $150,000 buyouts to drivers, warning that more than 10,000 workers could accept the deal if it proceeds. UPS plans to extend the enhanced buyout offer to around 105,000 eligible employees as part of a broader restructuring that includes cutting up to 30,000 jobs and closing 24 facilities. The company says the move is aimed at reducing its driver workforce amid falling package volumes and a strategic shift away from lower-margin deliveries for Amazon. The union argues the buyout program violates its 2023 labor contract, claiming UPS failed to negotiate the plan and is barred from making individual agreements with drivers. UPS counters that the contract does not prohibit voluntary buyouts and says blocking the program could force it to implement layoffs instead. Chief U.S. District Judge Denise Casper in Boston said she would issue a ruling shortly.

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Human Times
UK
Number of zero-hours contracts hits record high

The number of workers on zero-hours contracts has hit a record high. A surge in 16-to-24-year-olds and workers not in full-time education helped drive the number of people employed on the contracts to 1.23 million in December. Analysis by the Work Foundation at Lancaster University based on Office for National Statistics (ONS) data has found that was a 91,000 increase on a year earlier. Labour's 2024 election manifesto promise of a ban on "exploitative" zero-hours contracts forms part of the government's Employment Rights Act, and is expected to come into force next year as a right to guaranteed hours for workers. The Department for Business and Trade said it "will ensure people can have the security they need by giving eligible workers the right to guaranteed hours."

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Human Times
Europe
PostNL to cut 2,000–3,000 mail carrier jobs

Dutch mail and parcel company PostNL anticipates a significant reduction in its workforce, affecting 2,000 to 3,000 jobs, according to the FNV union. The company plans to manage the reduction through natural attrition, opting not to replace staff who leave the postal division and scaling back on temporary hires. PostNL is also reducing the number of its mail depots, in a move that may force some employees to travel farther to reach their workplace. FNV board member Pieter Beuzenberg said the additional travel time may cause problems for part-time mail carriers who have additional responsibilities. “There is a reason they work part-time for us. The job serves as a bridge, whether due to physical limitations, caregiving duties, or another job they hold in addition,” he said.

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Human Times
Middle East
Workplace equality exists nowhere, World Bank says

The World Bank has said that full workplace equality does not exist anywhere in the world, and only "less than 5% of women worldwide" live in economies with near full legal economic equality. Even in instances when workplace equality laws are passed by lawmakers they are truly enforced in only about half of all cases, the World Bank said in a report on women, business and the law. “Even in economies that have modernised their laws, women still face constraints that shape the work they can do, the businesses they can start, and the safety they need to pursue opportunities,” said Dr Indermit Gill, the bank’s chief economist.

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