Posted on 02/22/2014 11:18:24 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
(VIDEO-AT-LINK)
On Dec. 28, 1.3 million Americans lost their unemployment insurance when an emergency federal unemployment insurance program expired. Critics of extended unemployment benefits say the benefits raise jobless numbers by allowing people to stay unemployed longer instead of taking an available job. But people like Trista Selmar-Steed, a 38-year-old former medical biller who lost her job in 2012, say the benefits have kept her family above water while she looks for work. Special correspondent John Carlos Frey reports from Georgia.
TRANSCRIPT
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: I open it up and just rip it down the middle. Separate it.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: Trista Selmar-Steed cuts a lot of coupons these days In fact shes becomes a bit of a fanatic about it.
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: This is my coupon box, container, I carry it with me to the grocery store. Coffee, cake, butter, milk, pasta, sugar this one here is for household goods and personal items.
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: You never know that coupons will save you as much money as you it actually has.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: The 38-year-old who lives in a suburb just outside of Atlanta, Georgia, has been saving all these coupons because as of December 28th, she has no income. She was one of 1.3 million Americans who lost their unemployment insurance when an emergency federal unemployment insurance program expired.
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: That same week that I expected to get that next check was the same week that I had a bill that was due but I wasnt able to pay it. I had to ask my husband to start paying my part of the bills and thats the sad part, not being able to help my husband pay pay the bills.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: Trista, who used to make $30,000 a year working for a medical billing service, was laid off from her job in November of 2012, and hasnt been able to find a job since.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: I sensed a year out there in this job market has kind of beat you up a little bit, yeah?
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: Its very sad that to have the qualifications and not be able to actually work, you know, get a job in your field. And Ive been doing this 2007.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: Why do you think its so hard for you to get a job?
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: Im not sure. A lot of companies are still laying off.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: Trista has now been without her benefits for 8 weeks. To make matters worse, her husband who is a truck driver was hurt on the job and is now on whats known as light duty, working fewer hours and only taking home about 60% of what he used to which now equals about $2000 a month.
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: So thats another whammy, you know, something else that started started the down spiral, excuse me.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: They say they now have to dip into their savings just too pay their bills. She says things have gotten so bad, that when shes not at her computer for several hours each day looking for work, shes and her husband spend their free time watching TV just to lift their spirits.
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: Cartoons and comedy, it have us laughing. It takes your mind off of the things that you might be going through.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: Theres some people who would say that people who are on unemployment dont want to look for a job. They just want to live off the unemployment. Its its a free easy paycheck.
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: Its not a free easy paycheck. Thats what for me, its not. I know what I like in life. I know what I strive to have in the future. And I can say some people might try to use that, but me personally, I thats not me.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: While Trista believes that extending her benefits would give her the cushion she needs to get another job, Economics Professor Jeff Dorfman, who teaches at the University of Georgia, says that the extended unemployment benefits ARE the problem.
JEFF DORFMAN: The studies show it raises unemployment more by allowing people to stay unemployed longer, still searching for a really great job instead of taking a job thats available.
Dorfman points to North Carolina. Last July the state legislature cut unemployment benefits from 73 weeks to 19 weeks. In the months since the state unemployment rate dropped from 8.9 percent to 6.9 percent.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: And you attribute that to cutting 50 weeks of unemployment insurance.
JEFF DORFMAN: When you suddenly get cut off, you realize, You know, I need to take a job. And people in North Carolina apparently found jobs.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: Others attribute the decline in unemployment there to unemployed workers giving up their search for work. And they note the drop in unemployment has been coupled with a big increase in the number of people there on food stamps.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: As for Trista, she says shed be happy to take a job outside her medical billing field. She says shes applied for all kinds of jobs during the past year, everything from driving a school bus or a truck to clerical jobs at CVS and Wal-Mart. Even as a flight attendant with Delta. All of them met with rejection.
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: We regret to inform you that you have not been selected for this position at this time. Thank you for applying and best wishes for success in your future endeavors. Delta talent acquisition team. And Ive gotten that three times from Delta, so
TRACY MOSLEY: You hear the the theory that some people are just a couple paychecks away from homelessness. Well, we actually see that.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: Tracy Mosley is the Transition Program Coordinator for the Urban League of Greater Atlanta, an organization that helps African Americans find and train for jobs. He warns of dire consequences unless unemployment benefits are extended.
TRACY MOSLEY: We actually see people that had a sustainable income, that had a good job, good employment. But all of a sudden they find themself homeless.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: The problem is particularly acute in the African American community where the unemployment rate is nearly double the national average. Mosley says the interview and job prep classes his organization offers have been filled to capacity with people like Trista Selmar-Steed, who he says are desperate for work. She recently met with a job counselor here.
COUNSELOR: so you are being recommended for a position with MARTA, which is the transit authority for Atlanta, that our bus railway system that we use here. Thats one of the opportunities youll be considered for. So I wanna make sure that you are going to be available on March the 3rd so I can have you lined up for an interview.
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: Ok, well thank you so much, I really appreciate this, this is a big help.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: Trista is crossing her fingers that this lead might just pan out but for the time being just getting to the Urban Leagues office in Atlanta, a 45 minute drive from her home in the suburbs is a financial burden now that she doesnt have an unemployment check every week.
TRACY MOSLEY: And so if their source of income, of temporary income, is cut off A lot of them cannot even afford to come down here for their training.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: But Professor Jeff Dorfman says that government benefits cant go on forever.
JEFF DORFMAN: Our compassion has never been unlimited in this sense. We always eventually cut people off. We already had some mechanism for deciding at some point weve gotta stop paying for you.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: And some would argue that were not there yet. Were not at that point in the recovery where we should start cutting back. We still need to fund for an extended period of time.
JEFF DORFMAN: The longest weve ever kept benefits before is 35 months after the end of a recession. And were at 55 months now. So were 20 months, thats over a year and a half longer than weve ever provided these extended benefits for.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: Dorfman believes that if the government is going to intervene, that money could be better used retraining the unemployed for new jobs. For now, with Congress at an impasse, it looks like Trista, and nearly two million others, will have to survive without the federal life line theyve come to count on in these hard times..
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: I mean, it dampens your spirit a little bit, but the only way you can prosper, Ive learned, is to keep a high spirit // And so I just look at it as where one door closes, someone will eventually hire me.
JOHN CARLOS FREY: After a year, you still feel that way?
TRISTA SELMAR-STEED: I still feel that way. Yes.
When do they stop being unemployment benefits, and start being welfare checks?
If you have not worked for 99 weeks, do you really have more claim to a $300 a week paycheck than a person who wasn’t lucky enough to have a job earlier?
I’m not sure spending several hours a day on your computer is a good way to get a job. There are millions of unemployed with computers who are using the internet to try to find work.
If you want to stand out, do something “remarkable” like actually show up at businesses to fill out applications and ask about jobs.
For example, if I lost my job, I might go spend a week in a local retailer, watching their system and their performance. Then, I’d write up my ideas for improvement, and ask to see the head manager. I would explain how hiring me would pay for itself.
I worry a bit about finding a job as an old person, in part because of government regulations/laws that lock in retirement benefits that make it unhelpful to hire old people full-time.
One way around that is to specifically look for part-time work, and just get a couple of jobs, where they don’t have to offer much in benefits.
Wouldn’t having a job that pays 70% of what you need, and just have to take 30% out of your savings, then not working at all and taking 100% out of your savings?
Or you could kill yourself working two jobs, not a lot of money per hour but maybe enough to live on.
I guess you could move into a house that is smaller as well.
Yes, it is easy for me to say. I’m over 50 but I put 20% of my salary into a retirement fund for pretty much my entire life, so now if I get laid off I could probably retire. Of course, that means I could not take trips to Europe every year, and I got almost all my clothes at thrift stores; but now I’m used to it and you don’t need much of a job to buy thrift-store clothes.
My sister-in-law lost her job, and she wanted to keep her horse, so she took a job shoveling stables in exchange for upkeep.
That was the horrible downside to the extension of unemployment benefits. It put people into a situation where they felt OK looking for work for 99 weeks, and as you said, businesses aren’t all that excited about hiring “experienced workers” who have no reason for not working the past two years.
You’d be better off if you had quit your job, and were coming back into the labor force, because then you’d have a reason.
That is a lesson a lot of people have trouble learning.
When I applied to be a haunt monster at my local theme park, I did say I had a current job, but I gave no other information about my skills at the job. After all, I’m not trying to run their theme park, or re-design their computer system, I just want to scare guests.
So I want them to think of me has a mindless but conscientious employee who will show up for work, do what I am told, obey instructions, and not make waves.
They certainly didn’t need to know my class ranking for my engineering degree, or that they were going to pay me less a day than I’d make in an hour at my real job.
And the woman in the article would have a better chance at knowing people in companies that are hiring if she spend several hours a day volunteering or hanging out with groups of people, instead of watching TV in her living room.
That is something I have going for me — I have no “comfort zone”. I even tell my work that I’d clean the toilets if they wanted. I’ve got a list of jobs I wish I could have done in my life that pretty much encompasses everything that exists. Want me to paint houses, I’ve done that. Dig ditches, I did that too. Cut grass, shovel snow, write opinion columns, work at a theme park — all on my resume. I’d love to do retail, I’d like to be a greeter, or a cashier, I’d love to work on cars for a couple of years, I might be a bit too old to do construction now. As a kid I sold stuff door to door, but for charity — still, I was highly organized, and could have probably made money doing the same.
I’ve done plumbing, electric, and drywall work for my own house so it was like paying myself. If I worked hard at it, I think I could make some money playing music, not singing anymore though. At one time, I thought about setting up a business where I would just help people set the clocks on their VCRs.
“Her monthly bills for her part covers things like $132/mo home phone, $153.60/mo Cell phone, $74/mo cable and car insurance and vet bills plus and entry for $640/month child support(?).
Nice clothes (some kind of designer stuff by Denmark Impressions(?)- wore two different things), goes outside to get into a new Nissan and passes a truck and two SUVs in the driveway.”
Thing is, that the foolish woman can cut her expenses by buying a cheap pre-pay cell phone, buy clothes on Ebay, find a smaller house and get a smaller car. Get rid of the home phone and things will be just fine really.
As for cable, I myself download whatever shows I want, so frankly that is another round of bills ended. As for the SUV cars, she has no need for them, so why two plus a truck?
” this is not the time to be worrying about vacations, tuition, dining out, extravagant entertainment, parties, expensive hobbies, gift-giving and the like.”
Amen!
Time for people to stop living like we aren’t in a recession and start living like adults. People don’t need yearly vacations to the tropics or Europe and they don’t need to have massive amounts of electronic equipment.
Our one and only vacation since our marriage (sort of a belated honeymoon) was a short trip of 3 days to Hot Springs, Arkansas many years ago. I’ve never been on a European, Caribbean or cruise ship type trip. All my time overseas was in fatigues and combat boots. LOL
It was the voters who volunteered for it, but they are taking us down with them.
*snicker*
Glad you enjoyed your honeymoon.
What she could do is take a certification course and then use that to get a job. Courses like that are really really cheap compared to a degree really. A medical certificate will get her any job she should so please to get.
Good for you and your family. Crafts are going to be huge in the future and I think it’ll end up being really big.
It was okay. Did a dinner cruise on a little paddlewheeler that was tolerable. Did a separate (male/female) spa experience that was like a page out of a 1930’s sanatorium. Weird.
http://www.buckstaffbaths.com/
Don't you feel guilty taking that job when there are hundreds of illegal aliens who would be happy to make that job a career?
“What she could do is take a certification course and then use that to get a job.”
Maybe, maybe not.
Here in NY, you can not go to school while collecting unemployment. If they find out, they cut you off. And make you pay back what you got.
Nor can you start your own business. You are not allowed to even make plans for your own business while collecting unemployment. That constitutes “work” and if you work, (for nothing) they will cut you off.
No, you need a propper degree to do well paying medical billing job.
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