18-07-2025, 01:57 PM
According to the union, the current situation has generated a "tremendous decrease in the quality of service", with an accumulation of thousands of shipments and a distribution "practically non-existent" in some municipalities.
In a statement, the union warns that the problem especially affects distribution centers such as Morro Jable and Puerto del Rosario, where the accumulation of packages is causing "desperation among users." CCOO assures that the centers are operating with "barely a third of the necessary staff", both in the delivery units and in the customer service offices.
The union center points out that the hiring cut is not new, and recalls that in August last year it already denounced that between half and a third of the positions in the province of Las Palmas were unfilled. This situation, they indicate, has an impact on "long queues, delays in deliveries and excessive burdens for workers".
CCOO maintains that the company is generally replacing full-time work with part-time work, which – according to the statement – "prevents the management of work with quality and on time" and generates a model of "false productivity" based on the increase in the workload of active personnel.
He affirms that the delivery units operate with a third of the workforce and that the deterioration of the service affects the entire Canary Islands archipelago
Faced with this situation, the union demands that Correos adopt urgent measures, including an immediate reinforcement of the workforce, a reorganization of the postal service in Fuerteventura and the province of Las Palmas, and the implementation of a contingency plan to avoid future similar dysfunctions.
The union warns that, if short-term solutions are not adopted, it reserves the right to call mobilizations and take legal action to defend the right of citizens to a "dignified and efficient postal service
John IMHO it is no worse now than it has been for the last 10 Years
In a statement, the union warns that the problem especially affects distribution centers such as Morro Jable and Puerto del Rosario, where the accumulation of packages is causing "desperation among users." CCOO assures that the centers are operating with "barely a third of the necessary staff", both in the delivery units and in the customer service offices.
The union center points out that the hiring cut is not new, and recalls that in August last year it already denounced that between half and a third of the positions in the province of Las Palmas were unfilled. This situation, they indicate, has an impact on "long queues, delays in deliveries and excessive burdens for workers".
CCOO maintains that the company is generally replacing full-time work with part-time work, which – according to the statement – "prevents the management of work with quality and on time" and generates a model of "false productivity" based on the increase in the workload of active personnel.
He affirms that the delivery units operate with a third of the workforce and that the deterioration of the service affects the entire Canary Islands archipelago
Faced with this situation, the union demands that Correos adopt urgent measures, including an immediate reinforcement of the workforce, a reorganization of the postal service in Fuerteventura and the province of Las Palmas, and the implementation of a contingency plan to avoid future similar dysfunctions.
The union warns that, if short-term solutions are not adopted, it reserves the right to call mobilizations and take legal action to defend the right of citizens to a "dignified and efficient postal service
John IMHO it is no worse now than it has been for the last 10 Years
To me drinking responsibly means do not spill it.

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