I understand globally what happened with job classifications (I've worked in telephony since 1992) but was more interested in those specific people...y'know...Jason Bright was an operator in 1972, but completed his divinity degree in 1978 and is now a megachurch pastor...Sophia Smits was the first Black female manager in 1968, stayed with the Bell System and retired as Director of XYZ in 1991...et cetera. Just curious.
Working at Cingular was interesting...Bell South's labor relations were far better than SBC's; and it seemed about every year or so the SBC managers had to take strike duty somewhere (so projects came to a halt). Rule was that they couldn't do the work in their local area, so the Dallas people we worked with seemed to go to California for strike duty.
I remember during a phone strike in 1982 or so, I worked for a market research company. Managers were staffing all frontline positions at the phone company, and you could pull some shi** when calling Directory Assistance (normally you were limited to 2 numbers retrieved, but you could keep bopping around the system and get endless numbers).
Another memory during that period...we did agricultural market research (remember calling about Ivermectin paste....goodness where'd that come from) Anyway, it was fun dialing around the country and getting into the reeeallly rural areas where you could here the tones and pulses as the call was routed into East Bumfu**.
Working at Cingular was interesting...Bell South's labor relations were far better than SBC's; and it seemed about every year or so the SBC managers had to take strike duty somewhere (so projects came to a halt). Rule was that they couldn't do the work in their local area, so the Dallas people we worked with seemed to go to California for strike duty.
I remember during a phone strike in 1982 or so, I worked for a market research company. Managers were staffing all frontline positions at the phone company, and you could pull some shi** when calling Directory Assistance (normally you were limited to 2 numbers retrieved, but you could keep bopping around the system and get endless numbers).
Another memory during that period...we did agricultural market research (remember calling about Ivermectin paste....goodness where'd that come from) Anyway, it was fun dialing around the country and getting into the reeeallly rural areas where you could here the tones and pulses as the call was routed into East Bumfu**.