999精品在线视频,手机成人午夜在线视频,久久不卡国产精品无码,中日无码在线观看,成人av手机在线观看,日韩精品亚洲一区中文字幕,亚洲av无码人妻,四虎国产在线观看 ?

DAILY EXPRESS

2017-06-05 15:01:42
漢語世界 2017年3期

DAILY EXPRESS

From warehouse to door, Hatty Liu spends 24 hours with the courier army ferrying packages across the city

Work begins early at the distribution center of courier firm STO Express, outside Beijing’s eastern Fifth Ring Road. Drivers report at 7:30 a.m.—6:30 a.m. if the workload is heavy—when the warehouse doors open to reveal packages from all around the country, scattered in heaps across the floor.

China’s delivery industry is now the largest in the world. According to the State Post Bureau, courier companies—kuaidi(快遞, literally“quick delivery”)—processed around 31 billion packages in 2016, a number that’s grown more than 50 percent every year for the last six years. An estimated 1.2 million people work as express deliverymen, also calledkuaidi; at peak periods such as the “Singles’Day” shopping holiday, each driver may deliver up to 300 parcels per day, piled as high as the warehouse ceiling.

Couriers are first responsible for sorting these packages by hand: checking addresses, scanning labels, and taking those in their delivery area to their electric-powered van. Liu, an STO courier, arranges his in neat stacks by community, building, and hall number, before setting out in rushhour traffic to the city center. With an average 100 packages to deliver every day before 3 p.m.—closer to 200 on Mondays, since some offices can’t accept deliveries on weekends—he uses any method he can to save time. After parking outside his first office building at 9 a.m., Liu arranges the packages again by floor in a burlap sack and works his way from highest floor to lowest. Occasionally a package is dropped off with a co-worker or in a convenient cabinet in the hallway, and Liu places a call to its absent owner as he sprints back to the elevator.

The distribution center of STO in Shanghai sees its workload triple over Singles Day

At a Shanghai distribution line for the Yunda courier company, workers toil all night long to meet demand over Singles’ Day

AT PEAK PERIODS SUCH AS THE“SINGLES’ DAY”SHOPPING HOLIDAY, EACH DRIVER MAY DELIVER UP TO 300 PARCELS PER DAY

The best of all possible days is one where nothing disturbs this routine. Although soft-spoken, with an almost Zen-like attitude toward setbacks, Liu has a surprisingly long list of professional peeves—and almost all are wrinkles that cost him extra time:“Big or heavy packages; packages that are strange shapes that you have to carry up stairs; places with no elevators…residential communities, they’re slower [to answer], more spread out than offices; and communities like this one,” he says in front of a locked building, where he just had to fetch a fob scanner from the property management office.

“Cash on delivery is the worst of all, because you can’t just drop thepackage off outside,” Liu adds, picking one up as he speaks. It’s a product that cost 299 RMB and, as he feared, a call to the recipient reveals that they will not be home until evening; 6:30 p.m. is as early as they can make it. Liu will have to come back then, pushing his post-delivery workload even further into the evening.

Courier Liu sorts through his delivery bag, arranging packages by floor from highest to lowest, before heading inside

If a courier’s day begins hours before they show up alongside bleary-eyed white-collar workers at their offices at 9a.m., it also habitually wraps up late into the night. The routine is repeated seven days a week. Couriers work on what’s known in China as a “comprehensive schedule,”which means they take turns taking individual days off every month, but can’t name days off ahead of time. “Sure, come along, but there’s not much to see; just hard work,”Wu, a veteran STO courier, replies when TWOC asks to shadow him for the day. Wu claims that the monotony and comparatively low pay is driving many of colleagues to join the food delivery business. But he’s not leaving anytime soon: “I’ve already done this for so long”—three years—“and I’m getting older now.”

The 3 p.m. delivery deadline is something Liu has imposed on himself, so as not to delay the second half of the “outside” part of his day: door-to-door pickups of outbound packages. Retracing his steps through all the morning’s office and residential buildings, he peers at the outboxes of any company that has pre-arranged for daily pickups, and visits customers who’ve made a special appointment. On a bad day, these appointments, in addition to the cash-on-delivery packages, can keep him out until 7p.m.

But the work doesn’t stop when he straggles back to headquarters. Before evening’s end, a courier also has to wrap, label, and scan the outbound packages; sort them into piles by location for shipping; then scan the barcode on the receipts of all his day’s deliveries and tally the total payment. “That could take me until 9:30, even 10, 11, if it’s peak time like ‘Singles’ Day’,” he says, referring to the mainland’s numerically pleasing Black Friday, November 11, when people across China treat themselves to billions of dollars’ worth of discounted goods.

Liu has only worked as a courier for a year, after cycling through a variety of careers, including IT worker and salesperson.“[Kuaidi] is pretty good,” he reckons. “You get into a routine, you know the people, the places, their habits. In food delivery you earn more but there’s more downtime, which is dull, and there’s much more risk if you’re late with food.”

These “risks” can include traffic accidents, and rudeness and even violence from customers taking a late delivery. For Liu, the biggest conflict that day had been when a security guard snapped at him to move his vehicle. In April 2016, an employee of S.F. Express in Beijing was beaten up by an irate motorist after an alleged collision, an incident that provoked public debate on the profession’s lack of employee protection. In the last two months, there have been at least three reported incidents against regularkuaidi, including one in Shandong province in February where a customer gave a courier nine fractures for being five minutes late.

Fortunately Liu, has had no such encounters of his own.“As long as the packages arrive, then there are no problems, of course,” he comments wryly. Later, he admits that conflicts do happen and people aren’t always polite: “A person is not a machine, after all, and makes mistakes.” In these cases, couriers refer the customer to the company, who will check the records scanned into the system at every step of the process.

There are fines for lost or late packages, paid by the courier if the evidence shows the error was under their stewardship. Liu is cagey to discuss exact amounts, but media reports indicate fines can be hundreds ofkuaifor lost packages, and up to 100 RMB for a late package. Where Liu works, he says, Beijing couriers usually start with “around 5,000 RMB” in monthly base salary with a 1 RMB commission for each package delivered and 10 percent of the shipping cost of every outbound package they pick up. He doesn’t discuss additional benefits. Last November—after a localkuaidiallegedly died of exhaustion—an investigation by the Zhuzhou branch of China National Radio in Hunan province revealed that only two of 10 local firms provided accident insurance for their delivery drivers, and none offered health or pension benefits.

“In this profession, you either stay a very long time, or you’re gone quickly,” Liu says. He then lowers his voice and divulges a rumor going around the office: His colleague and mentor, Wu, is one of those who stuck it out, and is finally seeing some results. “He gets to take some time off on the weekend now,” Liu whispers. “Almost every weekend.”

主站蜘蛛池模板: 女同久久精品国产99国| 中文字幕在线观| 欧美一级在线看| 国产精品女人呻吟在线观看| 亚洲天堂免费观看| 人人澡人人爽欧美一区| 99在线视频精品| 久久特级毛片| 毛片一级在线| 国产日韩精品欧美一区喷| 国内老司机精品视频在线播出| 91毛片网| 久久久91人妻无码精品蜜桃HD| 国产成人综合日韩精品无码首页 | 久久亚洲美女精品国产精品| 色亚洲激情综合精品无码视频| 色九九视频| 国产成人免费| 亚洲av无码牛牛影视在线二区| 日韩在线中文| 亚洲欧美色中文字幕| 国产黑丝一区| 久久久久人妻精品一区三寸蜜桃| 国产91特黄特色A级毛片| 国产精品福利在线观看无码卡| 亚洲午夜18| 在线观看国产精品日本不卡网| 日本一区二区三区精品国产| 99精品视频在线观看免费播放| 伊大人香蕉久久网欧美| 狠狠做深爱婷婷久久一区| 欧美国产三级| 久久五月天国产自| 99这里只有精品在线| 国产网站一区二区三区| 国产成人av一区二区三区| 亚洲男人天堂2020| 国产精品无码AⅤ在线观看播放| 最新国产麻豆aⅴ精品无| 日本91在线| 亚洲欧洲日产国产无码AV| 亚洲欧美综合在线观看| 久久a级片| 久久精品视频一| 欧美一区二区三区欧美日韩亚洲| 亚洲精品视频网| 亚洲五月激情网| 精品久久久久成人码免费动漫| 青青热久麻豆精品视频在线观看| 日本a级免费| 天堂av综合网| 国产视频入口| 精品一区二区久久久久网站| 自偷自拍三级全三级视频| 99热免费在线| 欧美精品亚洲精品日韩专区va| 亚洲国产AV无码综合原创| 色天堂无毒不卡| 国产波多野结衣中文在线播放| 成人无码一区二区三区视频在线观看| 色老二精品视频在线观看| 五月综合色婷婷| 亚洲欧美日韩成人高清在线一区| 99视频在线免费看| 国产成熟女人性满足视频| 成人在线观看不卡| 国产欧美网站| 国产综合另类小说色区色噜噜| 国产无遮挡裸体免费视频| 国产爽爽视频| 亚洲欧美在线综合一区二区三区 | 欧美yw精品日本国产精品| 日本国产精品一区久久久| www.91中文字幕| 波多野结衣久久高清免费| 免费可以看的无遮挡av无码| 激情無極限的亚洲一区免费 | 精品国产毛片| 亚洲码一区二区三区| 亚洲中文字幕国产av| 自拍中文字幕| 国产玖玖玖精品视频|