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[Marxism] From $70k per year to $12 per hour



NY Times, March 1, 2009
Forced From Executive Pay to Hourly Wage
By MICHAEL LUO

TEMPE, Ariz. — Mark Cooper started his work day on a recent morning
cleaning the door handles of an office building with a rag, vigorously
shaking out a rug at a back entrance and pushing a dust mop down a long
hallway.

Nine months ago he lost his job as the security manager for the western
United States for a Fortune 500 company, overseeing a budget of $1.2
million and earning about $70,000 a year. Now he is grateful for the $12
an hour he makes in what is known in unemployment circles as a “survival
job” at a friend’s janitorial services company. But that does not make
the work any easier.

“You’re fighting despair, discouragement, depression every day,” Mr.
Cooper said.

Working five days a week, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Mr. Cooper is not counted by
traditional measures as among the recession’s casualties at this point.
But his tumble down the economic ladder is among the more disquieting
and often hidden aspects of the downturn.

It is not clear how many professionals like Mr. Cooper have taken on
these types of lower-paying jobs, which are themselves in short supply.
Many are doing their best to hold out as long as possible on
unemployment benefits and savings while still looking for work in their
fields.

About 1.7 million people, however, were working part-time in January
because they could not find full-time work, a 40 percent jump from
December 2007, when the recession began, according to the Bureau of
Labor Statistics.

And experts agree that as the economic downturn continues and as more
people begin to exhaust their jobless benefits and other options, the
situation Mr. Cooper is in will inevitably become more common.

Interviews with more than two dozen laid-off professionals across the
country, including architects, former sales managers and executives who
have taken on lower-paying, stop-gap jobs to help make ends meet, found
that they were working for places like U.P.S., a Verizon Wireless call
center and a liquor store. For many of the workers, the psychological
adjustment was just as difficult as the financial one, with their sense
of identity and self-worth upended.

“It has been like peeling back the layers of a bad onion,” said Ame
Arlt, 53, who recently accepted a position as a customer-service
representative at an online insurance-leads referral service in
Franklin, Tenn., after 20 years of working in executive jobs. “With
every layer you peel back, you discover something else about yourself.
You have to make an adjustment.”

Some people had exhausted their jobless benefits, or were ineligible;
others said it was impossible for them to live on their unemployment
checks alone, or said it was a matter of pride, or sanity, that drove
them to find a job, any job.

In just one illustration of the demand for low-wage work, a spokesman
for U.P.S. said the company saw the number of applicants this last
holiday season for jobs sorting and delivering packages almost triple to
1.4 million from the 500,000 it normally receives.

When Ms. Arlt applied for the job, she sent in a stripped-down résumé
that hid her 20-year career at national media companies, during which
she ascended to vice president of brand development at the On Command
Video Corporation and was making $165,000 a year. She decided in 2001 to
start her own business, opening an equestrian store and then founding a
magazine devoted to the sport. But with the economy slowing, she was
forced to shutter both businesses by June of last year.

After applying for more than 100 jobs, mostly director-level and above
in marketing and branding, and getting just two interviews, Ms. Arlt
said she realized last fall that she had to do something to “close the
monthly financial hemorrhage.”

Her new job at HometownQuotes pays $10 to $15 an hour and has mostly
entailed data entry. But even though she has parted ways with some
friends because she is no longer in their social stratum, Ms. Arlt said
she was glad she was no longer sitting at home, “thinking, ‘Who have I
not heard from today?’ ”

Her new paycheck covers her mortgage but not her other living expenses.
Recently, she cashed out what was left of her retirement portfolio,
about $17,000.

“It has been the hardest thing in my life,” she said. “It has been
harder than my divorce from my husband. It has really been even worse
than the death of my mother.”

Nearly all of those interviewed said they considered their situations
temporary and planned to resume their careers where they left off once
the economy improves. But there are people like John Eller, 51, of Lee’s
Summit, Mo., who offer a glimpse of how difficult it can be to bounce back.

Mr. Eller had been a senior director at Sprint, earning as much as
$150,000 a year and overseeing 7,000 employees at 13 call centers,
before being laid off in 2002 amid the economic contraction after the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

A year later, he found another job, at roughly half the pay, managing a
call center in New Jersey. After he lost that job two years later in a
downsizing, Mr. Eller found himself out of work for another year before
landing a contract position running two call centers in Kansas and
Illinois, earning close to six figures.

But after that ended a year later, he was unable to find work for
several months. In July 2007, he took what he thought would be a
temporary job for $10 an hour as a baker in a grocery store. He was laid
off again last October.

Mr. Eller quickly landed a new survival job, working as a supervisor on
the overnight shift for a contractor processing immigration applications
for the federal government at a salary of about $34,000 a year. But with
eight children and a wife to support, Mr. Eller said he was still “below
poverty level.” The family has not been able to make mortgage payments
in five months and has been on the brink of foreclosure.

“I’m still scratching and clawing and trying to work my way back,” he said.

In Mr. Cooper’s case, relying on unemployment checks was never a serious
consideration. The maximum benefit that jobless people can collect in
Arizona is $240 a week, among the lowest in the country — and much less
than is required to cover the mortgage on the comfortable four-bedroom
home in Glendale that he and his wife, Maggie Macias-Cooper, share.

Mrs. Macias-Cooper, who works as a personal trainer in a gym built in
what used to be the couple’s three-car garage, has seen her client base
shrink to 10 from about 50 over the last year.

In addition to giving Mr. Cooper a job as a janitor, his friend agreed
to pay for the couple’s benefits through Cobra. Maintaining health care
coverage was paramount for the family because Mrs. Macias-Cooper
recently had breast cancer.

Some unemployed professionals said they decided not to seek even
part-time work because it might interfere with their job searches. But
Mr. Cooper rises every day at 4 a.m. and, after a time of prayer,
devotes two hours to his job hunt on the computer. He prints out a
detailed call list of prospective employers to take with him, squeezing
in phone conversations during breaks throughout the day from his pickup
truck, which he calls his “office.”

“There were times I broke down,” Mr. Cooper said. “I broke down
thinking, ‘This is what I’ve become.’ ”

But Mrs. Macias-Cooper, who admitted that she was initially embarrassed
about her husband’s new job, says she is now grateful.

“There is no shame,” said Mrs. Macias-Cooper, who grew teary during an
interview at their home. “I am very proud of my husband that he will go
to any lengths, do whatever it takes, to keep his family afloat, if it
means mopping floors, cleaning urinals.”

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