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North Texas UPS workers, union leaders demand heat safety for employees after driver crash

A group of men, some of them wearing brown UPS uniforms, stand outside holding signs that read "UPS Teamsters demand our a/c" and "UPS agreed a/c, where is it?"
Penelope Rivera
/
四虎影院
Protesters gather outside a UPS facility in McKinney on Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2024, to demand better heat safety protocols.

鈥淲hat do we want?鈥

鈥淎颁!鈥

鈥淲hen do we want it?鈥

鈥淣辞飞!鈥

Those were the chants at a rally outside a UPS facility in McKinney Wednesday morning as workers and other labor union members called on the company to change heat safety protocols.

The rally came days after a UPS delivery driver fainted from alleged heat exhaustion and crashed his vehicle while working Friday afternoon, according to union officials. Temperatures reached 102 degrees that day.

The driver had reported he wasn鈥檛 feeling well during his route but was told to keep driving to the facility, the union said. He was hospitalized and later released on Sunday.

Teamsters Local Union 767 President David Reeves said he wants UPS to take incidents like these more seriously.

鈥淲hen somebody does call in with a heat related injury, they've got to be taken off the road,鈥 Reeves said. 鈥淏y doing that, [UPS] is going to ensure the safety of their employee, our member, along with the general public.

Last year, UPS and the Teamsters union reached an agreement about vehicle heat safety after another McKinney-based delivery driver died from heat stress while delivering packages on his route. In late May, UPS said it equipped some delivery vehicles with cab fans, forced air induction systems, and exhaust heat shields to reduce floor temperature.

According to Reeves, the back of a package car can reach up to 130 degrees on a hot day.

But the company hasn鈥檛 installed air conditioning鈥痭ew vehicles with AC at the start of this year.

Under the agreement between the union and UPS, the company said it will replace 28,000 package cars with new vehicles that have air conditioning over the five-year agreement.

鈥淲e鈥檙e equipping all new vehicles purchased with AC and making modifications to our existing package cars to improve airflow, temperature, and comfort for our drivers,鈥 a UPS spokeswoman told 四虎影院 in an email earlier this week. 鈥淲e will continue to purchase and deploy new vehicles with AC as quickly as possible.鈥

UPS worker Jonathan Gonzalez said he wants the company to consider what workers experience during extreme weather conditions.

鈥淚 hope somebody hears [our concerns] in the company and somebody makes a change,鈥 Gonzalez said. 鈥淲hether it's hot, rainy, snow, hail, storm, whatever the conditions of the weather, we're still held to the standards of whatever the [company] says. And at times there's disciplinary reactions that come from that.鈥

Gonzalez and other workers said in the past, the company sent warning letters with 鈥渋ntent to suspend鈥 to workers who called in and said they were feeling fatigue while working.

UPS worker Chris Diamond said instead of being told to end their routes, they鈥檙e usually told to keep working.

"You tell him you're not feeling good... and sometimes they make it that you did something wrong,鈥 Diamond said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just you as a driver did something wrong. You didn't hydrate right, you didn't sleep right, you didn't eat right. It's always trying to turn it back around on us."

After asking for a statement, UPS declined to do so, citing an ongoing investigation.

Penelope Rivera is 四虎影院鈥檚 news intern. Got a tip? Email Penelope at privera@kera.org.

四虎影院 is made possible through the generosity of our members. If you find this reporting valuable, consider . Thank you.

Penelope Rivera is 四虎影院's Breaking News Reporter. She graduated from the University of North Texas in May with a B.A. in Digital and Print Journalism.