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The Secret War Against American Workers (no, not THAT one - a different one)

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Triana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Mar-21-09 11:57 PM
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The Secret War Against American Workers (no, not THAT one - a different one)
Bosses are using minor transgressions of work-place rules as the trigger for firings -- putting the fear of god into those who remain.

Juanita Borden, 39 and jobless, patiently waits as her résumé methodically works its way, line by line, through a fax machine at a state-run job center in downtown Philadelphia. Lying open before her on a round conference table is a neatly organized folder. "This is my résumé and everywhere I've been faxing to. This is how I keep track of what day I've sent them on, so I can call and check back," she says, leafing through pages of fax cover sheets. "I usually give five business days before I inquire whether or not they've received it and whether or not they're interested."

Juanita was fired last October, when her employer found out that her driver's license -- a job requirement -- had expired. "It was only a matter of twenty-six dollars. I was under the impression that it expired in November of '08, but it was actually November of '07, and because I hadn't been driving I wasn't aware of it." The one occasion on which she was required to drive, though, she couldn't, and that was all her employer needed to fire her for failing to fulfill her employment responsibilities. She has since renewed her license and says with an air of futility, "I'd like to have my job back if they would give it to me."

She hasn't been asked back and, despite her persistent efforts, she hasn't received a single call from a prospective employer either. "The good thing," she says, remaining remarkably buoyant despite her misfortune, "is that usually when I interview I get the job. So... I'm hoping for an interview soon." Until then, her carefully managed folder serves as a small measure of control over an otherwise steady drift into poverty and homelessness.

MORE...

http://www.alternet.org/workplace/132742/the_secret_war_against_american_workers/
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JDPriestly Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-22-09 02:42 AM
Response to Original message
1. Juanita and others like her are why the bonuses are such an affront.
The bonus beneficiaries at AIG made far worse mistakes than Juanita or the others mentioned in this story. Yet, they walk away with millions, while Juanita and anyone with a small blemish on their employment record, others who just happened to have sociopaths or alcoholics or bad folks as their bosses drift into homelessness and hunger.

This is criminal. The over 200 million that went to AIG for bonuses could be used to give the marginally employable a second chance. How about it, President Obama. Make AIG pay the bonus money back right now, and spend it on providing second chances for people who lost their jobs due to minor mistakes.
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Triana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-22-09 09:23 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. Good plan.
That, and change the goddamned employment laws.
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no_hypocrisy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-22-09 06:58 AM
Response to Original message
2. The doctrine of at will employment: you can be fired for a good reason, a bad reason, or
no reason. Arbitrarily.

I've been fired for falling off a chair and tearing my knee at work (and not being able to work for a week) and for not finding a fax confirmation sheet. The boss in the latter situation was practically chortling as I was discharged. I made him look like a God that day and I got fired.

The desperation is actually having no income and not knowing how long you'll be unemployed.
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