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#311495 - 03/26/08 09:29 PM Companies use scans to track employees
smutspov Offline
Porn Jesus

Registered: 10/29/03
Posts: 9489
This is fucked up, get ready for the microchips, kids.


Companies use scans to track employees By DAVID B. CARUSO, Associated Press Writer
Wed Mar 26, 3:55 PM ET



Some workers are doing it at Dunkin' Donuts, Hilton hotels, even at Marine Corps bases. Employees at a growing number of businesses around the nation are starting and ending their days by pressing a hand or finger to a scanner that logs the precise time of their arrival and departure — information that is automatically reflected in payroll records.

Manufacturers say these biometric scanners improve efficiency and streamline payroll operations. Employers big and small buy them with the dual goals of curtailing fraud and automating outdated record keeping systems that rely on paper time sheets.

The new systems, however, have raised complaints from some workers who see the efforts to track their movements as excessive or even creepy.

"They don't even have to hire someone to harass you anymore. The machine can do it for them," said Ed Ott, executive director of the New York City Central Labor Council of the AFL-CIO. "The palm print thing really grabs people as a step too far."

The International Biometric Group, a consulting firm, estimated that $635 million worth of these high-tech devices were sold last year.

Protests over using palm scanners to log employee time have been especially loud in New York City, where officials are spending $410 million to install an automated attendance tracking system that may eventually be used by 160,000 city workers.

Scores of civil servants who are members of Local 375 of the Civil Service Technical Guild rallied Tuesday against a plan to add the city medical examiner's office to the list of 17 city agencies which already have the scanners in place.

The scanners have rankled draftsmen, planners and architects in the city's Parks Department, which began using them last year.

"Psychologically, I think it has had a huge impact on the work force here because it is demeaning and because it's a system based on mistrust," said Ricardo Hinkle, a landscape architect who designs city parks.

He called the timekeeping system a bureaucratic intrusion on professionals who never used to think twice about putting in extra time on a project they cared about, and could rely on human managers to exercise a little flexibility on matters regarding work hours.

"The creative process isn't one that punches in and punches out," he said.

A spokesman for Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Matthew Kelly, said the system isn't meant to be intrusive and has clear benefits over old-style punch clocks or paper time sheets.

The city expects to save $60 million per year by modernizing a complicated record keeping system that now requires one full-time timekeeper for every 100 to 250 employees. The new system, dubbed CityTime, would free up thousands of city employees to do less paper-pushing.

Another benefit of the system is curtailing fraud. Several times each year, New York City's Department of Investigation charges city employees with taking unauthorized time off and then filling out a false timecard later to make it looked as though they worked.

Other cities have embraced similar technology.

Cities as big as Chicago and as small as Tahlequah, Okla., have turned to fingerprint-driven ID systems to record employee work hours in recent few years.

Ingersoll Rand Security Technologies, a manufacturer of hand scanners based in Campbell, Calif., said it has sold the devices to Dunkin' Donuts and McDonald's franchises, Hilton hotels and even to track civilian hours at Marine Corps bases.

The systems have been introduced into plenty of workplaces without much grumbling by employees, especially those already used to punching a clock.

Still, union officials in New York said they are concerned that the machines could eventually be used not just to crack down on employees skipping work, but to nitpick honest workers or invade their privacy.

"The bottom line is that these palm scanners are designed to exercise more control over the workforce," said Claude Fort, president of Local 375. "They aren't there for security purposes. It has nothing to do with productivity ... It is about control, and that is what makes us nervous."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080326/ap_on_hi_te/fingerprint_timecards

Copyright © 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.


_________________________
"I only insult those who deserve it." - Alfred E. Neuman

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#311496 - 03/26/08 09:53 PM Re: Companies use scans to track employees
Uomo Grassissimo!! Offline
Porn Jesus

Registered: 04/14/06
Posts: 14755
Loc: Busy downloading [LEGALLY!]
Quote:

Ed Ott, executive director of the New York City Central Labor Council of the AFL-CIO.




Ed Ott is a great guy!! Short but tough as fucking nails. He used work with my union in the early 90s, but was forced out for being too radical for our president at the time.

Last I saw him, which was over 10 years ago, he was organizing civil servants for CWA. If you ever need a wingman when breaking the kneecaps of scabs, Ed's your guy!!

_________________________
Amo i Gemelli!! wink

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#311497 - 03/26/08 10:55 PM Re: Companies use scans to track employees
Anonymous
Unregistered


City Unions still have clout, but not like they once did, especially in the face of changing technology. I'm not sure if they have the strength, or even the will, to resist this one. For every Ed Ott, there's a dozen Lillian Roberts Proteges.

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#311498 - 03/26/08 11:10 PM Re: Companies use scans to track employees
Uomo Grassissimo!! Offline
Porn Jesus

Registered: 04/14/06
Posts: 14755
Loc: Busy downloading [LEGALLY!]
Quote:

City Unions still have clout, but not like they once did, especially in the face of changing technology. I'm not sure if they have the strength, or even the will, to resist this one. For every Ed Ott, there's a dozen Lillian Roberts Proteges.




[They can't do it to NY state professional without their approval - and they'd never approve it. There's a "no punch" pre-existing work condition.]

Ed Ott's of the world, are bound to lose in the mainstream. I just admire how they'll go down fighting!
_________________________
Amo i Gemelli!! wink

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#311499 - 03/26/08 11:18 PM Re: Companies use scans to track employees
Anonymous
Unregistered


Ahhh, but the State and the City are two very different employers, my friend. VERY different.

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#311500 - 03/26/08 11:27 PM Re: Companies use scans to track employees
Uomo Grassissimo!! Offline
Porn Jesus

Registered: 04/14/06
Posts: 14755
Loc: Busy downloading [LEGALLY!]
Quote:

Ahhh, but the State and the City are two very different employers, my friend. VERY different.




Never said otherwise. I know nothing about NYC contracts/work conditions.

Just pointing out how it would impact those I represented.

_________________________
Amo i Gemelli!! wink

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