Factory workers quitting in droves
That's the print title. The article is on page A1 this morning.
Trump tried to save their jobs. These workers are quitting anyway.
By Danielle Paquette August 15 at 7:00 PM
INDIANAPOLIS Kipp Glenn grew tired of standing for eight-hour shifts, assembling steel furnace doors. His knees ached from 25 years on the concrete factory floor. So even after President Trump made his job at Carrier a symbol of American prosperity and vowed to save it, the Indiana native took a buyout. ... What we want to call blue-collar jobs are on the way out, he said.
At a time when the Trump administration argues that creating manufacturing jobs is a critical national goal even coordinating with states on generous subsidy packages to woo blue-collar employers many factory workers are making a surprising decision: Theyre quitting.
Government data shows workers in the sector are giving up their jobs at the fastest pace in a decade. Thats a powerful sign, economists say, that workers think they can find work elsewhere.
Part of this confidence stems from the nations 4.3 percent unemployment rate, a 16-year low. But they say they also fear robots zapping jobs in the future, while many workers have tucked away savings from union-championed raises and retirement benefits.
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Danielle Paquette is a reporter covering the intersection of people and policy. Shes from Indianapolis and previously worked for the Tampa Bay Times. Follow @dpaqreport
For more information about job openings and labor turnover, please see this thread:
Job openings climb to record 6.16 million in June
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Trump tried to save their jobs. These workers are quitting anyway