donkiez
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No A2M fees!
Hmmm, sounds like a full service bank.
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No A2M fees!
Abm is out if there are no a2m feesHSBC is shutting down their US operations. I am closing my account (they were gonna transfer me to Citizens Bank, an east coast institution......pass.....and moving it into my Schwab checking account. No A2M fees!
There use to be a Citizens bank in Oregon. I had a savings account in it. It I started saving 10 cents a week thru my grade school back in the mid 50s. I used that money and some money left to me when my grandmother died to buy my first car when I got out of the Army. They were located on State St. near 'A' avenue in Oswego.HSBC is shutting down their US operations. I am closing my account (they were gonna transfer me to Citizens Bank, an east coast institution......pass.....and moving it into my Schwab checking account. No A2M fees!
Can't we just raise the minimum wage, print more money or hand out more stimmys to fix this?
Crazy Sly's furniture and appliances. I'm slashing prices so low that I'm losing money on each sale. Now, back to your late night movie.Get your sword out and start slashing prices.
Can't we just raise the minimum wage, print more money or hand out more stimmys to fix this?
The five and dime store in my home town when I was a boy is probably selling their stuff for five bucks.
They've no longer said five and dime for about 60 years. The closest thing is the Dollar Store.Make it $5.10, and the kids would never guess the original meaning.
barfo
Absolutely. If my guy scraps 200 parts and can hide it he often times will.
Cut more material, the job gets done, the customer is happy. And we make more money on scrap.
Everybody is happy. The paperwork looks good. And lots of waste has occurred.
However, we can't sell plastic scrap. So in those cases we just throw it in the trash.
You can't even imagine how many 100k machines (sometimes $1 million machines) places buy just so they can show a loss on their taxes.
Then the machines usually sit. We have a couple machines that haven't been used since they were installed and tested several years ago.
Happens all the time.
I've worked in the steel industry for 20 years... This is coming from experience. If it's not counted as a scrapped part it doesn't impact the scrap percentage.so far from true in the steel industry.
Yes scrap value has risen, but so has cost of steel so thst offsets.
There is no scenario my boss is content with seeing scrap go that could have been saved or not purchased.
Efficiency is the name of our game and scrapped material is not efficient.cant imagine scrapped material being efficient or owners being happy with the numbers.
I deal with those numbers on a daily basis. No one i know is happy with a large scrap percentage….
I've worked in the steel industry for 20 years... This is coming from experience. If it's not counted as a scrapped part it doesn't impact the scrap percentage.
There is no efficient way to catch it if your employees want to hide it.
I've worked in the steel industry for 20 years... This is coming from experience. If it's not counted as a scrapped part it doesn't impact the scrap percentage.
There is no efficient way to catch it if your employees want to hide it.
Our parts are nearly all under 3". We could scrap $1000 worth of parts over 1ft of material.for more detail, i order 25 lengths @ 40’ of some W30x 247# and the job says we need 23 lengths to net the customers required footage, we know if we used 24 instead of 23 or if we were able to get it out of 22 lengths with three left over.
im not sure how your company isnt able to track scrap. But in my company thats been around since 33’ bending and fabricating steel, we track every foot of material from when it comes in to where it goes.
So im not saying your lieing at all, but if your company isnt able to track scrap, they either don't care about employee efficiency enough or don't know management skills enough to develop a tracking method. Steel, because of it largely being sold by cost per lb is very trackable. One of the easier things to track waste on.
Our parts are nearly all under 3". We could scrap $1000 worth of parts over 1ft of material.
It's literally not worth keeping track of the scrap material. What we want to track is the time on the machine. But again, as rarely as it's problem with good employees it's not worth putting much effort into tracking.
It would cost far more to institute controls than you would ever save in production.
This is where bean counters think they are making a difference but in reality are just costing money and slowing things down.
Like drug tests for food stamps. Incredibly expensive and horribly ineffective. Stepping over dollars to pick up dimes.
Yep, plus steel scrap is with worth nothing to us. Stainless, aluminum, brass, and copper much more so.then Scrap really isn't a factor for you. However that isn't true for all. Our case in point, when a beam costs over $300 per foot, we track scrap very closely and the costs of tracking does not outweigh the costs of the loss of excessive scrap for us.
This conflicts with a report I heard yesterday evening on PBS Newshour that the number stolen was 3% of what was allocated.