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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-30-09 11:11 PM
Original message
The Nation: Jobless in America
WHY TAX THE UNEMPLOYED?

I've been out of work for six months. My unemployment benefits, now reaching the final days of their last twelve-week extension, barely cover my basic monthly living expenses. While I am most grateful to receive them, I don't understand why the government taxes unemployment benefits. I'm facing a tax bill against benefits received in 2008 and I have no idea how I'm going to pay it. Worrying about this--on top of worrying about what I'll do if I become sick (since I have no health insurance), on top of searching for a job everyday--is almost too much. Thank you for providing a forum for the people most in need of economic help to have their voices heard.

Kathryn Vanskiloff
Manitowoc, WI



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TOUGH CLIMATE FOR SALES

Three years ago when my husband began as a sales specialist with for a building company, he had a promising career ahead of him. After a year of selling pre-engineered structures such as barns and out buildings, he was the second most successful first-year salesperson across the company. But then the economy started to change. In 2007, his sales plummeted, as did his base salary, from $335 per week to $250 per week. In 2008, his base salary dropped to less than minimum wage, $200 per week--a total on which he was trying to support our family of four. Finally, in October of 2008, he was let go.

The company then tried to deny his unemployment and withheld his last paycheck. They wanted him to sign a statement saying he had not met his sales quota after being repeatedly told to do so, even though no customer is going to build a barn or out building when they cannot get a loan and in the current economy. We had to solicit the assistance of our state representative, Diana Fessler. The corporation appealed the decision once his unemployment was granted.

The worst part of this layoff is that my husband carried our family's health insurance. With my two part time jobs I make just over the amount allowable to put my children on Medicaid. Luckily, Ohio makes children eligible for a buy-in plan if one's children are uninsured for over six months. But what about those six months?

On New Year's Day I went to a party with some old college friends. I discovered that one of my friends had been laid off from a job he had worked for over twenty years. He was the sole provider for his family of five. I remind myself that at least we are better off than his family--better off than a lot of people.

Gail Ruhkamp
Laura, OH



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SMALL BUSINESS BLUES

I have been developing a business for over ten years and now have no access to capital. I have a great product, great market and real demand, but I cannot afford to bootstrap the expansion of my company. The credit crunch my business is facing was caused by greedy financial services executives in urban centers who have essentially siphoned off all of the discretionary capital that makes a national economy function. When small businesses in the heartland of America cannot access operating capital EVERYONE loses.

Tom Simon
Mount Vernon, IA



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DIFFICULT ADJUSTMENT

Last July, with no advance notice, I was laid off from my job of ten years at a trade publication. (I am contractually forbidden from giving specify details about the firm or my job.) I had been working almost without interruption since the age of seventeen, when I landed my first full-time job on a clothing assembly line. Since then, except for two years of attending college during the day, and one year of unemployment, I have earned a salary.

Compared with the dire accounts of other newly jobless--no health insurance, facing eviction, barely enough money for food--my situation is tolerable. My wife is still working, I collect Social Security and unemployment benefits (which stop with each freelance assignment I land), and I belong to a strong tenant organization that has secured rent concessions after a four-year battle. Still, at nearly 67, with two children in college and the accompanying mountain of debt, I am in trouble. I cannot afford to retire and, even if I could, my IRA savings are dissolving at lightning speed. I look for work every day. Here and there I land a freelance project, but the compensation is far below what I had been earning.

Beyond my financial troubles, one of the biggest difficulties I am facing is psychological. Call it macho if you will, but I have always felt good being the main supporter for my family. That was a major part of my self-definition. That sense of pride was taken away from me. I'm not sure when, or if, the emptiness in me will ever be filled.

Nathan Weber
New York City



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OUTSOURCED

Fifteen years ago, I began working as a contracting proofreader at a family-owned textbook company. Over the years, the firm was sold up the value chain, finally ending under the control of a multinational corporation based in New Delhi. Unsurprisingly, my office was closed in December '08. Because I was an independent contractor, I received no severance, will get no unemployment compensation, and am ineligible for COBRA health insurance, which is not affordable to the unemployed anyway. I have little hope of finding such specialized work again, much less at the hourly rate I was paid.

W.K. Grady
Los Angeles, CA



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UNDEREMPLOYED OUT WEST

Both my younger brother and I are trying to get back on our feet after the local economy crashed during the 1980's and 90's. While Wyoming has a low unemployment rate (and has been recruiting from Michigan and elsewhere), the job market mostly consists of low-wage, dead-end positions. My brother was cut loose from his job as a mudlogger in the once-booming local oil industry; now the hospital and Home Depot seem to be the only employers still hiring for mid-level positions.

Thomas O'Brien
Casper, WY


...........more vignettes at: http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090209/jobless?rel=hp_picks





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Tindalos Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-30-09 11:30 PM
Response to Original message
1. The unemployment numbers this week are scary
I've never seen anything like this.


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L0oniX Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-31-09 12:34 PM
Response to Reply #1
6. Yea I heard there were over 500,000 new unemployment comp claims this week.
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Digit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-31-09 12:41 AM
Response to Original message
2. I am receiving unemployment also
In the past two months of searching for jobs, I have noticed that the qualifications for almost every job has increased and the pay for those jobs have decreased. I am even seeing some boasting a pay of 7.00/hr! Sheesh

Since I was in sales, I saw the handwriting on the wall and decided to go back to school at the ripe age of 57. My new chosen field is in the medical field which I am hoping will be hiring when I am done. Alas, it is only as a Nursing Assistant which pays far beneath what I was making, but I am just trying to stay afloat and keep my modest home. I am divorced and unattached, so I have nobody else to help with the bills.
School with all the associated immunizations ended up costing me far more than I anticipated. My arms are so sore with all these damn shots that I could scream, and I am still waiting to see if I have to receive the varicella shots (2 @ $60.00 each - the local Health Dept wanted $110 each). I chose to do the titre first to see if I have immunity.

Do you have any clue what a CNA does? I used to think teachers were underpaid for what they do....I have since changed my mind.

Some days, I wish I could just die in my sleep.
;(

What is even sadder is there are many, many people worse off than I am.
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Tindalos Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-31-09 02:53 PM
Response to Reply #2
7. . . .
I'm sorry to hear things are so difficult for you :hug:

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BR_Parkway Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-31-09 06:59 AM
Response to Original message
3. Doesn't this one just say it all so well:
THE MORE THINGS CHANGE...

I was laid off from my job at a very high-end cabinetry company with one week's notice and no severance, two weeks after buying the house and three weeks before Christmas. Before the layoff meeting was over I realized I had to move out of my hometown. The Naples/Fort Myers area is ground zero for the foreclosure debacle and even if the economy were to recover fully, it will be years before the existing housing inventory is sold.

I am grateful that I have found several companies that are hiring and interested in my services; however, none of these businesses are ready to commit to hiring (and understandably so). Employers that were ready to fly me up for an interview in December reconsidered after the holidays in light of the continued deterioration of the economy. The job offers that remain are short term with ninety-day probationary periods and lodging covered instead of relocation assistance.

I haven't been out of work since I was 23 years old during the last extended recession in 1991. I notice the irony that at that time, George Bush was president, we were at war with Iraq, and the government was bailing out insolvent banks as a result of ill-advised deregulation.

Sean Reardon
Naples, FL
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AwakeAtLast Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-31-09 12:18 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Everything old is new again
this time in a REALLY bad way. x(

Good find. :hi:
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L0oniX Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-31-09 12:32 PM
Response to Original message
5. I guess the health care uninsured numbers are growing enormusly and those ...
who were not for national singe payer health care are now for it and I guess that is a good thing. Too bad it takes unemployment to get some to see the real value of national single payer health care.
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