Friday, October 22, 2010

Factory Migration and Disillusionment



The economy in Richmond has had its ups and downs, but the numbers have consistently been lower than the national average, and it seems that over the past few decades the trend has mostly been downward.  Rick Sabados, a 37-year-old Richmondite, has lived in the small city his entire life.  He has his own theories on the local decline of the employment rate. 
“Things started changing with NAFTA,” he said.  “When people started taking jobs out of the country, no one here could get hired anymore.”
Sabados enjoying the day outside.
The goal of NAFTA was to eliminate barriers of trade and investment between the US, Canada and Mexico.  Critics often argue its negative impact on U.S. workers in manufacturing and assembly industries who lost jobs.  Official studies state NAFTA's net effect on jobs as negligible.  However, more than 3 million manufacturing jobs in the United States have disappeared since 1998, though the Economic Policy Institute estimates 59 percent—or 1.78 million—of these jobs have been lost due to the explosion in the manufacturing trade deficit over the period.  As Richmond’s success was and is based in industry, and manufacturing plants are the highest concentration of lost jobs, it makes sense that Richmond would have a hard time under these conditions. 
“Factories here made items for the military during World War II and business prospered for a while,” said Sabados.
But, he went on to explain, factories began to build farm machinery, and machines took the place of people that had previously worked the lands around Richmond, which are still farmed today.  To make matters worse, other factories started closing.  Milso, the casket factory, went to Mexico, and Kemper, a large cabinet factory, went sour due to the economy.  As few could afford build houses or renovate, the company was getting little business.  Kemper was owned by Masterbrand Cabinets, and, according to Sabados, the workers’ union caused wages to be higher than the company cared to pay such an economic state.  The parent company decided it made more sense to simply close the factory.
Sabados, though not a factory worker, has spent much of his time going from job to job.  His specialization is in home improvement, but the market in Richmond is not very supportive of this business, and a high number of empty houses with ‘for sale’ signs can be found around the city.   Sabados did find work with one home improvement company, but had to also take on work at Mendenhall’s Hardware and Domino’s Pizza part-time in order to support himself and his children, who live with their mother.  Eventually, he quit these jobs to spend time with his kids.   
“Then I ended up being broke and my kids stopped coming around,” he said. Currently, Sabados works for the same home improvement company, which allowed him to take his job back, but many wouldn’t be so lucky.
In terms of the national unemployment rate, Sabados acts indifferent and seems disillusioned with governmental efforts to interfere with the economy and reassure the people.  “The rate goes up and down depending on whether people are hired, not wages,” he said.  “So even if someone manages to get or maintain a job, being hired says nothing for the pay rate, which is likely to be low.”  

In order to turn the highest profit possible, companies lay off some and work the people that remain as hard as possible.  Currently, the government is trying to avoid this problem, which leaves many without pay at all.  In order to combat the possible drop in profit, however, companies hire more people and lower the wages they give, knowing that people will take what they can get in order to survive.  But minimum wage leaves families making too little to support everyone, as even single people have trouble affording living expenses on such pay.

“The rates don’t mean anything for a lot of people who are still struggling.”


Thursday, October 7, 2010

What Good is a Degree?



People age 18-24 tend to have problems in Richmond, (as mentioned before, they make up only 11 percent of the population), trying to find jobs and a stable economic environment. A personal interview with Luke Parker, a 25-year-old previous resident of Richmond, helps shed some light on this.

Parker graduated Earlham College in May of 2009 with a degree in psychology. “I really want to work with kids or adults in some form of counseling,” he said when questioned about his plans. But, though he’s been searching for a job since the day he left college, he is still unemployed, one year and four months later. “I’d be willing to do anything at this point – working in a restaurant, dishwashing, you name it,” he said.

Parker now relies on his parents to pay for his part of the rent and food, while his fiancĂ©e, Dana Black, picks up the rest with her low-paying job. She makes a living allowance working for Americorps, but is not actually paid by the hour, though her parents also provide her with backup funds. “I’m lucky enough to have parents that help with everything, but I hate being so dependent on them,” said Parker. “I’d be out on the street without them.”

Parker and his fiancee, Black
Parker himself has applied for “too many jobs to count” but keeps getting told that he is overqualified. This happened once with a group home in Richmond, Adept, which takes care of mentally disabled individuals. He was turned away from this job, which would have given him around $8 an hour to make food, drive people around, and help shower people and help this use a bathroom. For such low pay, most people would turn away from this job due to its up-close-and-personal-nature, but the government-funded house was not hiring Luke, despite its   shortage of workers (three had quit/been fired the week before).

Parker and Black have recently moved to Indianapolis to be near her current workplace, and Luke says he’s already had more promising interviews than he’d ever gotten in Richmond. Right now he’s applying for a volunteer position with the Emberwood Center, working with individuals dealing with addiction. This would not pay him, but would set him up in an environment that could move him more toward his desired position and a job that would look good on a resume. Parker has dealt with addiction, and feels confident that he could help people there. “My dad was an alcoholic, and I understand what these people are going through.” He hopes that the center will soon make his position more permanent. That is, if he gets the volunteer position itself.

Parker reflects on his life since college unhappily. “How things used to be, you could graduate and get a job right out of college. Things have changed.” This does not only apply to Richmond, but the small city it most definitely struggling, and people continue to be laid-off. Just this week Landis Plastics, a factory that is part of the manufacturing backbone Richmond is known for, has laid-off all part-time workers, only retaining those who work closer to 60 hours a week. A few months before, Innatech, a plastics factory, shut down, laying off 75 workers with only a week’s notice. Such tactics make those still working work harder, and those without work feel little cause to hope for a new job.

Parker is not originally from Richmond, and neither is Black, but both remained in the city after graduating from Earlham College. They decided to move in together after graduation, and found that easiest to do in Richmond, where they could be with friends and look for jobs while their parents funded their stay for a little longer. They were sharing a small $400-a-month apartment for more than a year as Parker was turned down again and again and Black scraped by as a substitute teacher. “Richmond is actually ninth in the nation for unemployment,” said Parker. “It used to be second, so I guess it’s not as bad as it could be.” He says this with a sarcastic laugh. Though I couldn’t find proof of this, Richmond’s rate is a full 2 percent higher than the current national rate, and Indiana as a whole has the eighth worst unemployment rate in the nation.

“I never wanted to leave Richmond, because I have so many friends here, and like the small-town feel. I didn’t have a choice, though. Getting a job there is impossible.” Black agreed. “If we didn’t get out now, we never would have been able to. It takes too much money to move, and our parents will support us only for so long.”

This is a perfect example of what’s happening within the United States. Graduated college students are finding job hunting impossible, despite their qualifications, and are forced to depend on already-strained parents. In a time of economic failure, businesses only take the most profitable route. Even a volunteer position is something to struggle for, as people are forced to fight each other over distasteful jobs and small amounts of money. If anything tells us that our economic system needs a change, it’s this.