Walmart Job Applicants: 'I'll Take Anything'
source: http://huffingtonpost.com
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- Buckeye_Bill
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dave.jamieson@huffingtonpost.com
SPRINGFIELD, Penn. -- Among those here in the parking lot of the Masonic Hall, there's an abiding sense that the economic recovery has stalled, if it was ever there to begin with.
Young and old, well educated and uneducated, they're all coming here for the same thing: a job at the new area Walmart, which has set up a hiring center inside the hall; and most of them don't care how many hours the store can give them, what they'll have to do, or even how much they'll be paid. They just want a job.
First requirement: Humility.
"I'll take anything," many say.
"It's hard to keep up the smile," says Parella. "I worry that they can read in my face how I really feel."
Dempsey, who lives in nearby Havertown, has her own business hanging wallpaper, but the work has ground to a halt during the prolonged downturn.
"They're afraid to spend the money," Dempsey says of homeowners. "The painters aren't getting any work, either."
Since she is technically self-employed, Dempsey hasn't had any unemployment benefits to help her make ends meet. Recently she started selling off her jewelry.
"I'm borrowing money from my mother to pay my mortgage," says Dempsey.
"I just want to work," says Parella.
Such desperation is evident in the jobs numbers. Although the unemployment rate fell slightly last month to a still-dismal 9.1 percent, the small dip was primarily due to discouraged workers dropping out of the workforce. Meanwhile, many of the job gains we've recently seen in health care and retail -- these Walmart positions are a good example -- have been obliterated by public-sector losses as state and municipal governments pare back.
So aspiring workers have come here to the hall to scrap for a job that's become shorthand for "low-wage," despite the fact that most of them realize they won't get a position. Another troubling sign of the present downturn: many of the workers interviewed by The Huffington Post don't factor into that 9.1 percent figure. They already have jobs. They just aren't getting enough hours or a wage high enough to survive. They're the more nebulous "underemployed," those who want full-time work but still can't find it.
"It's bad -- really bad -- and I'm blessed to be working at all," says J, a father of three who's applying for a job with his teenager in tow.
J didn't want to give his full name because he already has a job at Home Depot. He's technically a part-timer there, though he works more or less full-time hours. He receives no health insurance through the job, and the pay isn't enough to support his family. His goal is to work night shifts at Walmart on top of his hours at Home Depot, for more than 70 hours total. He's hoping the Walmart gig will even pay a tad more than the Home Depot position.
"It's very necessary," says J. "I'll take anything."
"It's hard," says Tara Durnell, a 37-year-old mother looking for work at Walmart. She gets just one day a week at a Yankee Candle store in the mall, and a few more hours cleaning up a doctor's office.
"I love to work. I don’t like sitting at home. This isn't me," she says.
"It doesn't really matter what it is: overnight, during the day, anything," says Robert Lee, another worker in search of more hours. He has a part-time job at an AMC theater, where his schedule has been unpredictable. He worked only 17 hours last week.
One man, when asked about his job situation, starts shaking his head and pacing. He hasn't found anything in seven months. Even the summer, which he finds ripe for construction work, has been fallow.
"I'm applying for a job at Walmart," he says, sounding defeated and not wanting to give his name. "I don't want to work at Walmart."
A red-headed woman says she's been out of work since she lost her job earlier this year. "I'll take anything. I just want to work, and work legally," she says.
"If everybody feels like things will get better," she goes on, as if asking a question, "then maybe they will?"
The last applicant to leave for the day is Rob Ernst, 54. Ernst been looking for work for more than a year. He spent a long time inside the hall trying to nail the Walmart application.
"It's been one hell of a battle," he says of his unemployment. "I've been living off my savings, which is almost gone."
In 2008, outsourcing to India cost him the quality job he had had for ten years, doing graphics work for telephone books. With help from the federal Trade Adjustment Assistance program, which helps people whose jobs go overseas, Ernst went back to school and earned an associate's degree in computer-aided design. An honors student, he wound up with his picture in the local paper when he finished last spring. But the jobs weren't there.
"They were having jobs fairs at school, and some of the companies weren't even showing up," he says.
He's applied for around 50 jobs in his new field, to no avail. "I've given up on the specialty work," he says.
In addition to Walmart, he's put in applications at Staples, Kohl's and Target. He says he's had to get used to not wearing a suit to certain job interviews, lest he feel overdressed and awkward at the more blue-collar workplaces.
Ernst's hope is that some kind of job will come through, even if it's part-time, to tide him over until things rebound. He hopes his new degree will be of some use in the future, but for now he isn't picky.
"Now, I'll take general work. That's what brought me here," he says, just before hopping into his Toyota. "It's getting to the point where you're just looking for a life raft."
In less than two weeks, managers have fielded well over 1,000 applications for just 300 jobs. On Wednesday, one of those applications was filled out by Andrea Parella, another by Tee Dempsey. The two women just met here, and outside in the parking lot they give each other words of encouragement after long, brutal spells without work.
"It will get better. It has to," says Dempsey.
Parella, a graphic designer with an associate's degree, has been out of work for the two-and-a-half years since her company went under. She long ago exhausted her 99 weeks of unemployment, and she now finds herself filling out up to 25 online applications a day, many of them well outside her chosen field. The search is like a full-time job, punctuated with disappointment, and she says it's tougher than any paying gig she's ever had. The biggest challenge is staying positive.
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charliesommers
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I retired as a meat cutter at Sam's Club in Nashville, Tn. five years ago. I was not over-payed but did make $35,000 the last year I was there (with no overtime). I also picked up a few extra dollars in profit sharing and the company contributed a few bucks to my 401K.
The insurance benefits were not the best but overall I was satisfied with my salary. I just did a Google search for meat cutter's salaries in Tennessee and currently they average only $26,000 per year. I am not living in the lap of luxury now but I am quite content with my lot in life.
Sam's is part of Walmart and they treated me very reasonably.
- 10 months ago
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charliesommers
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Buckeye_Bill
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charliesommers:
Sam's Club is the "rich uncle" compared to the poor nephew in the "Family of Walmart". I have two friends who are in management at the Walmart located in Lafayette, Tennessee. I have a little "inside" information about how Wally World has treated their employees.
I relocated to Ohio in 2001 from Nashville. I married a "Southern Belle" whose ENTIRE family lives there in Tennessee. Dickson, Smyrna, Old Hickory and Murfreesboro. Their "family home" is Duck River,Tennessee. My wife's mother's maiden name (may she RIP) was Anderson, from the Anderson Bend "clan". Addie Belle Anderson. Hickman County has a book about the Anderson Bend family, with pictures and all in their "historical library section"! I resided in Tennessee for 28 years and shopped at the Sam's Store on Antioch Pike! I lived on Overby Drive in Antioch. Talk about changes...that area has grown beyond belief!
But l'il ol' me was born and raised less than a mile from James Thurber's "ancestral home" in Columbus... mine is in German Village. Ich sprach Deutsch in einem frühen Alter!
It sounds as if you "got out" in the nick of time to reap the rewards of your labor. I'm cetainly happy for you! Not everyone can say that today.
And, like you, I am peacefully content with my lot in life, too!
I can't say that for all the young people who are faced with the realities of today. I feel for them all! And wish them all the luck they will need to survive the next few years of these uncertain times.
My "definition" of L.U.C.K is...Labor Under Correct Knowledge!
LOL
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill
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cmc101
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charliesommers:
we have no meat cutters in our Wal Mart all our meat is processed in Texas when the Wal mart store open in Missouri the average grocery clerk received a greater wage than our register nurse in 1965 and all meat was process with union meat processors and the farmer sold their products at the local market round stake was $0.69 per pound
Sears and Roebuck would order 10,000 shirts and only pay for 5,000 let the manufacturer go broke and as Sam Walton would buy the company and hire the employees then put made in USA on their products and i admire Sam for his dedicated service to his employees Personally know at least 20 collage and high school students that went to work and retired with $1Million or just small change less my best friend husband died and she called me to ask what to invest in.
Try that in the 90's and see what they retire with today. and where is the made in USA stickers - 10 months ago
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cmc101
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cmc101
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my unemployment office has been privatize in Missouri
so who get the best jobs?
We use contract labor in state programs jobs - 10 months ago
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cmc101
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Buckeye_Bill
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cmc101:
"Contract Labor". Two magical words that mean you will be working for:
1) Peanuts
2) No company provided health insurance
3) No vacation time off with pay
4) No sick days with pay
5) No
6) Paying 100% of SS contributions
7) Paying 100% MediCare contributions
8) Not contributing to Unemployment Insurance, thereby not eligible for UI checks when dismissed
9) 1099 forms to be filed with the IRS EVERY QUARTER (four times per year)
10) No seniority
11) Classified as "self employed" so you will not count in the tally of who lost their jobs when they calculate how many jobs have been lost!
12) No retirement contributions
13) No protection from labor lawsI could go on........
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill
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cmc101
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Buckeye_Bill:
the only thing different to contract labor and share cropper
A share cropper is that you got to buy your own tools
Now for slavery the owner has to provide food & water and the gospel while the property is being beaten , abuse and sexually taken advantage of
Any problem you get along to the deportation location free of charge [ - 10 months ago
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cmc101
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Buckeye_Bill
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cmc101:
At the turn of the last century there were 10 million or so African/Americans livng in the U.S.
There were ONLY 250,000 Native Americans STILL alive.
The indigenous peoples weren't even afforded clean drinking water, food, shelter or tools.
But the white man tried his best to shove that "gospel" down our gullets!
But you can't survive on that. So the beaten, raped, abused and eventually killed Original Occupants of this Land that were left were rounded up and sent to "concentration camps" the white man today calls, Indian Reservations.It's better to have them all in one of many spots to beat, rape, abuse and kill them. It's easier that way. And indians weren't even worth being called "property". That would have been a step up on that societal ladder.
The white man had no place to deport indians to, since they were in their own country to begin with!
Sad, but true.
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill
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Buckeye_Bill
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"THE PEOPLE THAT CAUSED IT DON'T GIVE A DAMN!"
That's why we have to!
There no one to help us but us. We're on our own. But, secretly? I think we would do a far better job at it if we just bit the bullet and got off our duffs and did something for ourselves!
As Wolfess says, "Power to the Peons!"
That's us.
LOL
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill
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WagonMaster
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This is so sad and so sick at the same time. I never imagined our great country could fall this low and keep on digging it self deeper. I saw whole families begging in the streets in Japan after the war because thel lost everything and wanted to survive.Now I see the same thing on our streets ,also caused by war...class war and THE PEOPLE THAT CAUSED IT DON'T GIVE A DAMN !
- 10 months ago
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WagonMaster
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cmc101
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WagonMaster:
Hell yes
our children are brain washed with entertainment news
it time to kick ass - 10 months ago
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cmc101
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JustZ
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Yet we have no problem paying for illegal wars that cost billions per week. This country needs an enema, beginning with Congress.
- 10 months ago
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JustZ
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EdJoyProductions
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JustZ:
I was thinking more in line with an exterminator in Congress. Go in and get rid of those pesky money eating termites.
- 10 months ago
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EdJoyProductions
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Buckeye_Bill
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JustZ:
I would aim higher. Like a brain transplant. Or just cut to the chase and chuck 'em all into the bearest volcano from 50,000 feet so they will have time to think about what all they've done to deserve what they will about to receive!
LOL
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill
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Buckeye_Bill
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What job would you take just to survive?
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill