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Study: Income gap grows in Sonoma county
The Press Democrat ^ | March 1, 2005 | MARY FRICKER

Posted on 03/01/2005 10:54:10 AM PST by Tamar1973

Pay in 1990s found to rise average of 4% for poor families, 24% for wealthy

The North Bay was a spectacular job machine in the 1990s and into 2001, but the benefits went overwhelmingly to high-income workers while a growing number of low-income residents hardly gained ground, according to a study to be released today by a Sonoma County research group.

"Economic growth in the North Bay has failed to bring shared prosperity to the region's residents," said Martin Bennett, executive director of New Economy, Working Solutions, a group representing union, housing and religious organizations.

The study covering Sonoma, Marin, Napa and Mendocino counties shows "a crisis of low-wage employment and working poverty has spread across the North Bay," Bennett said.

Growing wage disparity has been an issue nationwide among economists and policymakers for at least a decade or more. Several studies have documented the trends both in California and nationwide.

"It's the same everywhere. The well-off are doing better, and the worse-off are doing worse," said Christopher Thornberg, a senior economist at UCLA Anderson Forecast.

The 81-page study, using standard U.S. Census and state employment data, is the first to focus on incomes for specific economic groups in the North Bay. Earlier studies documented overall income gains but didn't look at the lowest, middle and highest earners in such detail.

The study found that in the 1980s, low-income families in Sonoma County made significant financial gains on par with the county's wealthiest households. But in the 1990s they fell behind.

After rising at almost exactly the same rate in the 1980s - 23 percent and 22 percent, respectively - the average income of the lowest paid rose only 4 percent while the highest paid soared 24 percent in the 1990s.

Many economists blame several factors: technology, which cuts the need for low-skill jobs and raises demand for high-skilled people; immigration of lower-skilled workers; and trade, which moves lesser-skilled jobs to other countries. Together, these trends hold down already-low wages and increase the demand and wage for high-skilled workers.

"The main factor is that there are two distinct labor markets in Sonoma County ... based on skill level," said Robert Eyler, chairman of the economics department at Sonoma State University. "There is a large amount of working poor, where their skill level does not allow them to pursue job opportunities that keep pace with the cost of living."

Experts offer a variety of solutions. Some focus on creating high-wage jobs that help support other workers; others say the key is higher levels of education and workplace training.

"Education, education, education" is the antidote, Thornberg said.

Stephen Giordano of Rohnert Park came to that conclusion last year when he was making about $13 an hour as a driver for a courier service and decided to go back to school.

Now he's halfway through two years of night school at Empire College in Santa Rosa, working toward his associate degree in information technology, where jobs can start at $25 an hour.

"The main goal for me is to make a liveable wage to start a family," said Giordano, 37, who now earns $16 an hour as warehouse supervisor at Merry Edwards Wines in Windsor.

The New Economy, Working Solutions study agrees education is a key solution. But it has a 10-point plan that also calls for building community support for unions, raising the minimum wage and passing living wage ordinances.

It says technology and trade don't fully explain the trends this decade in the North Bay, where the economy is creating mostly low-paying jobs that can't be moved abroad, such as restaurant work, nurses aides and retail clerks - jobs that are not affected much by either technology or trade.

The study compares the bottom and top one-fifth of the county's estimated 100,000 working families, ranked by average income and adjusted for inflation. In Sonoma County, the average income for these groups in 1999 was $24,000 and $180,000, respectively.

In neighboring Marin, Napa and Mendocino counties, income for low- and middle-income working families lagged the wealthy in both the 1980s and 1990s, but the difference was bigger in the 1990s.

The trend is not likely to change soon, according to labor analysts at the state Employment Development Department. They predicted two-thirds of new jobs in Sonoma County at least through 2008 will be in fields that require no advanced education, only on-the-job training, the New Economy, Working Solutions study said.

New Economy, Working Solutions commissioned the study which was done by the University of California's Institute for Labor and Employment.

The report is available at www.neweconomynorthbay.org.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: california; classwarfare; poor; rich; sonomacounty; wagedisparity
Some "great" reporting from the PD, mostly regurgitated from this "New Economy, Working Solutions" group.
1 posted on 03/01/2005 10:54:20 AM PST by Tamar1973
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To: Tamar1973
"Many economists blame several factors: technology, which cuts the need for low-skill jobs and raises demand for high-skilled people; immigration of lower-skilled workers..."

Maybe the working poor advocates would like to rethink open immigration. Labor supply goes up, wages goes down.

2 posted on 03/01/2005 11:15:29 AM PST by NYCynic
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To: Tamar1973

One of the most liberal areas of the country. Gee, they really don't like to "share the wealth" after all.


3 posted on 03/01/2005 11:18:38 AM PST by Lorianne
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To: Tamar1973

One of the most liberal areas of the country. Gee, they really don't like to "share the wealth" after all.


4 posted on 03/01/2005 11:19:02 AM PST by Lorianne
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To: Tamar1973
Tamar, the PD has been a left-wing rag since I was in high school in Sonoma County forty years ago and more. It was never a very good paper, and most people in the county used to subscribe their local town paper and either the Examiner or the Chronicle (oh, the humanity, oh, the typos!), pretty much ignoring the PD. I haven't lived in Sonoma County for almost 30 years, but I confess great fondness for a lot of places on the coast, in the mountains, in the woods, in the vinyards....
5 posted on 03/01/2005 11:19:24 AM PST by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo Arabiam Esse Delendam -- Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit)
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To: NYCynic
Maybe the working poor advocates would like to rethink open immigration. Labor supply goes up, wages goes down.

That would never happen. The Nationalist Socialists here in the People's Republic of Santa Rosa would lose their source of reliable, pliable voters.

6 posted on 03/01/2005 11:22:51 AM PST by Tamar1973 (The path to conservative brilliance starts at Free Republic!)
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To: Tamar1973
... the People's Republic of Santa Rosa ...

Ah, Santa Rosa is now a people's republic, too? Most of this is the doleful effect of Sonoma State on the county. I can remember when the place was first opened. It was known as Cotati Tech or Penngrove Poly, even though the campus was in scenic downtown Rhonert Park (then known as the Land of the Midnight Movers for the people who moved in, ran up debts and moved out in the middle of the night leaving not a trace) and the library was in a former Safeway (I think) supermarket.

As the sixites rolled along, every hippie and hippie wannabee who couldn't get into (or couldn't afford) Berkeley, Santa Cruz or Santa Barbara headed for Sonoma State. With the Inn of the Beginning in Cotati headlining the Dead and the Airplane (really!!) and lots of locally grown grass, it was quite the place to turn on, tune in and not quite drop out.... I think the reason the County, which used to elect republicans at all levels (I mean the Bohemian Grove is up on the Russian River for gosh sakes!!), turn so left was all the wasted and near-wasted SSC/SSU students who moved to the area and never left. Arghh.

7 posted on 03/01/2005 11:32:14 AM PST by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo Arabiam Esse Delendam -- Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit)
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To: Tamar1973

"Economic growth in the North Bay has failed to bring shared prosperity to the region's residents," said Martin Bennett

This line says it all.

Socialism doesn't work in other countries, but liberals are determined to make it work here.

Even if it KILLS us!


8 posted on 03/01/2005 12:03:10 PM PST by Bigh4u2
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