A United Parcel Service Inc. (UPS) truck makes deliveries July 23, 2009 in Chicago, Illinois. UPS today reported second-quarter income fell 49 percent on continued weak demand. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images) Living in New York City, working full time and without a car, Jessica Ray and her husband have come to rely on deliveries of food and just about everything else for their home.
It has meant more free time on weekends with their young son, rather than standing in line for toilet paper or dragging heavy bags of dog food back to their apartment."I don’t even know where to buy dog food," said Jessica Ray of the specialty food she buys for the family’s aging dog.RELATED: DoorDash will now pick up and drop off your packages to UPS, USPS, FedExThere are millions of families like the Rays who have swapped store visits for doorstep deliveries in recent years, meaning that contentious labor negotiations now underway at UPS could become vastly more disruptive than the last time it happened in 1997, when a scrappy upstart called Amazon.com became a public company.UPS delivers millions more packages every day than it did just five years ago and its 350,000 unionized workers, represented by the Teamsters, still seethe about a contract they feel was forced on them in 2018.In an environment of energized labor movements and lingering resentment among UPS workers, the Teamsters are expected to dig in, with the potential to cow a major logistical force in the U.S.The 24 million packages UPS ships on an average day amounts to about a quarter of all U.S.
parcel volume, according to the global shipping and logistics firm Pitney Bowes, or as UPS puts it, the equivalent of about 6% of nation’s gross domestic product.Higher prices and.