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Hundreds of jobs available here but ‘we just can’t find people to fill them.’ Employers point to pandemic benefits where ‘folks can make over $16 an hour not working.’
hometownheadlines ^ | April 26, 2021 | Natalie Simms

Posted on 04/26/2021 4:41:52 AM PDT by Prov1322

Despite increasing numbers of initial unemployment claims across the region, local business and industry leaders say the jobs are available but no one is applying for them. The 60 members of the Greater Rome Existing Industry Association report some 400-plus open positions but say additional federal unemployment benefits and stimulus payments give some possible candidates no incentive to work.

“There are hundreds of jobs here, we just can’t find people to fill them. I was at the GREIA meeting this week and all manufacturers were saying the same thing,” says David Newby, President and CEO of Profile Custom Extrusion in Rome, which has approximately 180 employees.

Profile Custom Extrusion has a ‘Now Hiring’ banner up at their facility along U.S. 27 in Rome. Hometown photo. “In my 40 years here, I have never seen anything like this. We have always had a strong workforce in Rome. We do know the stimulus has created part of the problem. With the federal unemployment, folks can make over $16 an hour not working. They don’t have to search for jobs right now…there is no incentive to work.”

The state’s unemployment benefits top out at $365 a week, while the federal government adds $300 a week. That adds up to the equivalent of $16.63 per hour for a 40-hour week, which in some cases is more than they made when they were working.

According to the latest statistics from the Georgia Department of Labor, the initial unemployment claims increased 29% (32,102) in March to 143,410 compared to 111,308 claims in February 2020. Locally:

Floyd had 1,260 initial claims in March, up 26.8% over February. Bartow had 1,671 initial claims in March, up 22.1% Gordon was up 16.1% in March with 1,018 claims. Polk was down 8.6% with 502 claims in March compared to 549 in February. Chattooga was down 3.5% in March with 136 claims vs. 141 in February. For more: Statistics Pam Powers-Smith, director of Business and Industry at Rome-Floyd Chamber, says she has been surveying both large and small businesses on workforce and labor issues. She says all areas of employers are having trouble finding workers, including restaurants, medical, manufacturing, government and education.

“The types of positions that are available are quite honestly all over the spectrum. I think some people make the assumption that it’s only entry level positions but the survey said it was all…entry level, middle management, top level management, customer service, skilled labor, degreed and certified,” she says.

The chamber has a job site (www.romega.com) that is updated daily. It currently has 122 jobs listed. Powers-Smith says it gets some 10,000 hits each month.

Newby says his company has 12 open positions right now and could bring in more but can’t grow until they fill the immediate openings.

“We have both production jobs and management positions as well. We are having trouble just finding people who will show up. We will bring in seven employees just to keep one of them,” he says.

Jennifer Cole, Human Resources manager at F&P Georgia, says her company has 20 immediate openings and is doing “anything and everything to recruit new employees.”

“We have never had this difficulty staffing before. It is not because of our work environment. F&P is a great place to work; we have great benefits and wages. We have 14 million hours worked without a lost-time accident, so we have a safe environment,” she says.

“We’re finding it hard to recruit when we’re learning people would rather stay home and draw unemployment. As long as people are making $15 an hour with unemployment, they will keep drawing it…that is what we’re fighting against…I have never seen it like this in the 20 years I’ve been in the industry.”

John Cothran, Operations Manager at Brugg Lifting North America and chair of GREIA, says his small company has had trouble filling his vacant shop positions.

“Applicants are almost non-existent. Sometimes it is weeks before an agency sends an applicant our way,” he says. “We are certainly not on the upper end for starting wages. However, even some of those businesses with the higher starting wages have the same problem. I am sure the pandemic has played a significant role here but it seems that since COVID, workers can make almost the same staying at home.

“Fortunately, since we are a small company, we are maintaining by all of us covering all the business needs…we all wear a lot of hats. It is a daily struggle and until we are fully staffed, business growth maybe challenging.”

Manufacturers are not the only ones struggling to find workers. Local businessman and developer Wayne Robinson owns several Bojangles restaurants in Northwest Georgia including locations in Cartersville, Calhoun, Adairsville, Summerville and Hiram. He says it has been “extremely hard” to find employees.

“We have ‘Now Hiring’ signs up at all the businesses and have had no applicants. I think every fast-food and quick service restaurant is looking for employees,” he says.

“It is frustrating to operate with such low staff levels. That’s the reason we haven’t been able to open the dining rooms at Bojangles back up…there is not enough staff on shift to cover both dining room and drive-through. We have even had to close earlier because we don’t have staff. It has made us be creative in stretching employees out.

“Restaurants typically have 35-50 employees and everyone is fighting for same folks. The stimulus checks have taken away the incentive to look for jobs. So many are content not to work. But once the stimulus money evaporates, I look for the job market to return.

Hann with JWH Transport “In the meantime, we are offering higher salaries and entry rates…but it’s very frustrating to be a business owner right now.”

Nick Hann, owner of JWH Transport in Rome, also is having a tough time filling transportation jobs for truck drivers.

“We are not exempt…it’s hitting every industry,” he says. “We are a smaller transportation company with 40 trucks. We typically average at least 10 applications per month but we have had maybe 10 applications in the last 90 days…about a 60% decrease.

“Trucking as a whole is hard to find employees because there are lots of guys that hold a CDL (Commercial Drivers License) but getting them qualified is another story because of a bad driving record or drugs.”

“We are constantly hiring, even when the market is doing well. We need at least two drivers right now.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: georgia; paidunemployment; pandemic; pandemicbenefits
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To: rb22982

Well close up shop and learn to code then.


41 posted on 04/26/2021 5:36:07 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: central_va

I really don’t understand why you’re getting so much pushback for stating basic economics.

When steel gets scarce, the price rises and you either pay more for it, or you don’t get it.

When fuel prices rise you either pay more for it, or you don’t get it.

But, for some reason, it’s heresy for employees to expect to be paid market rates when good employees are scarce.


42 posted on 04/26/2021 5:36:47 AM PDT by chrisser
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To: Pikachu_Dad

If you can make $18/hr sitting at home doing nothing, how does raising the pay from $12 pre-pandemic to $14 today induce you to get off the couch and work? At $20/hr, those jobs don’t exist. This is a huge, massive problem as the amount you get from not working is basically right at the median salary in the US of around $40k/year - basically half the country can make the same or more not working and another large chunk is close enough it may make them think twice. Why work for $45k/year if I can make almost the same thing not working.


43 posted on 04/26/2021 5:37:41 AM PDT by rb22982 ( )
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To: T. P. Pole
It seems odd to me that conservatives seem to have lost sight of standard economics.

Odd to me too. They call me a Marxist for pointing out there is free market for labor.

44 posted on 04/26/2021 5:37:44 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: Prov1322

My wife and have been to 4 different favorite restaurants in the past 3 months that have all shortened their hours because of this BS.

One is owned by an 80 year old lady who’s now putting in 60+ hours a week to stay in business. Waiting on tables, busing, cash register, everything.


45 posted on 04/26/2021 5:38:35 AM PDT by albie
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To: central_va

Sure, I’ll bite: how am I a traitor?


46 posted on 04/26/2021 5:38:59 AM PDT by dinodino ( )
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To: dinodino
Oh, so you're a free traitor.

Here's a hint.

Hire back the white males you laid off because of Microsoft's Brian Valentine "Think India! Two for the price of one!"

Companies used to not be so utterly greedy: they'd TRAIN people in the technology they needed, taking the risk of attrition.

But now the Ivy MBA crowd (and the cult of the CEO started by Jack Neutron Welch) have convinced business to push ALL risks onto potential employees.

(While Jack negotiated a severance package which included $2 million/year *for life*. No value added once he's left the company.)

"Train yourself, hoping you picked a stable, popular technology, and then run an uphill gamut against hiring white males in favor of H1-Bs and diversity hires; and if you fail to get a job on either count, it's your own fault. And now you're out the money for the training, and a gap in your resume which makes you even harder to hire. But you deserve that because racism."

So white males took the hint, and ran like droves from IT.

You stupid greedy lemmings in management ate your own seed corn.

Sod off.

47 posted on 04/26/2021 5:39:19 AM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change with out notice.)
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To: chrisser

A lot of Freepers are small business owners or once ran a small business at one time and they feel they are entitled to set wages and cheap labor for perpetuity. The also have COLOSSAL EGOS.


48 posted on 04/26/2021 5:39:38 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: chrisser

See post #43 for an explanation.


49 posted on 04/26/2021 5:40:11 AM PDT by dinodino ( )
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To: TalBlack

People do not want to be forced to wear masks all day. Businesses are becoming nazi like.


50 posted on 04/26/2021 5:41:15 AM PDT by dforest (huh?)
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To: Prov1322

We can’t find truck drivers where I work regardless of what the wages is. Just none available. And to add insult to injury the ones on the payroll lay out for various reasons.

We had one retire just recently who was in his mid seventy’s. Never laid out of work. They don’t make’em like him anymore.


51 posted on 04/26/2021 5:41:35 AM PDT by CodeJockey (Dum Spiro, Pugno)
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To: Freedom_Is_Not_Free

True, they’re getting everyone used to getting a gov’t check!


52 posted on 04/26/2021 5:41:49 AM PDT by Dr. Ursus
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To: central_va

You are clearly posting to the wrong patriot.


53 posted on 04/26/2021 5:42:08 AM PDT by New Perspective (#NotMyPresident -Proud father of a son with DS & fighting to keep him off biden's death panels.)
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To: Pikachu_Dad

Unlike the government, businesses can’t print money or raise taxes.


54 posted on 04/26/2021 5:42:56 AM PDT by skr (May God confound the enemy)
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To: central_va
Not all small business owners are greedy brutes

Indeed, most are not. The very smallest of small business owners are staffed by family that have taken on the risk. It is the move from family-only to hiring others that is the most difficult calculation. Especially since there are basic laws of economics that they have little control over, but still have to account for. Local price of wages being one of them.

On the other hand, big business is pretty much filled with greedy brutes. "We have to freeze everyone's raises this year because of 'Rona" while at the same time taking millions in bonuses because "they saved so much in operating costs." :)

55 posted on 04/26/2021 5:42:59 AM PDT by T. P. Pole
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To: grey_whiskers

I don’t employ one single H1B—not one. I hire the best, and I pay top dollar. If you are competing with H1Bs, that means you have *no talent* and you are a bottom-feeder, low-earning, low-productivity developer.

If you have skills, then go get a developer job—you can have one today, at a high salary, if you’re good. If you have business sense, although I think we’ve established you do not, go a step further and start your own company and implement the hiring practices you prefer.


56 posted on 04/26/2021 5:43:17 AM PDT by dinodino ( )
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To: dinodino

If you profit off of the new indentured servant trade disguised as H-1B then you are a traitor and a human trafficker. But you are nice to pets I’m sure...


57 posted on 04/26/2021 5:43:47 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: CodeJockey

PAY MORE.


58 posted on 04/26/2021 5:44:12 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: skr

They can and do raise prices. All the time.


59 posted on 04/26/2021 5:45:09 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: rb22982

Couple that with working under the table (no taxes), on your timetable and you’d be nuts to go back to a 8 - 5 grind.


60 posted on 04/26/2021 5:45:50 AM PDT by CodeJockey (Dum Spiro, Pugno)
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