Too Young to Retire, Too Old to Hire
By Ashley Keith – Ohio
Bambi is funny, energetic, hard working … and has been unemployed for three years. Last week, I had the pleasure of talking to her at her home in Canton, OH. We sat on her back porch over-looking her garden of budding tomato plants, peppers and beans, as she explained that she can’t afford these items in the grocery store. So she grows them herself.
Bambi has lived her life doing everything she thought she was supposed to do as a working class mother. She started working as a tow truck driver at the age of 18. She stuck with it for 10 years in spite of the challenges, including dealing with a gun being pulled on her, until one day she was crushed between two cars while working. She suffered severe damage to her right leg, an injury that still limits her mobility and ability to stand for long periods of time. Even with this injury Bambi continued to hold various positions throughout her adult life to support herself and her daughter. She was eventually able to send her daughter to college to become a school teacher.
In spite of applying for countless jobs in the last three years, Bambi hasn’t been able to find work. “I think I’m a few years too young to retire, but a few years too old for most employers to hire me,” she explains. Although Bambi has paid off the mortgage for her home, she still struggles to pay her property taxes because she can’t find work. Bambi’s daughter and son-in-law, both of whom are public school teachers in Virginia, have paid her property taxes for the last few years so that she could stay in her home. As they send these funds to sustain their mother, they worry that their school district will face the same massive lay-offs or cut backs that other school teachers are facing.
Bambi’s experience shows the absurdity of the “conventional wisdom” in so much of Washington.
We are told that people who can’t find work are lazy, but with 6 people applying for every job opening, some of the people who need the jobs the most are bound to slip through the crack. We are told that teachers should be laid off, and we should sell out our kids’ education because we are in a recession. But those jobs are sustaining families and communities and businesses around the country, and what sense does it make to sell out our kids’ education to pay for Wall Street’s crimes?
We hear plenty of stories of bad mortgage deals, and we are often confronted with the argument that we as a society had to learn “lessons” about personal responsibility and living within our means. What about people like Bambi who are responsible, who have lived within their means…unfortunately, even those of us who own our homes can barely hold onto them when work disappears.
Bambi’s life also shows how we are connected. When we can’t find work, we can’t pay our property taxes, and when we can’t pay our taxes schools lose revenue. Cutting education will only make it harder to compete for jobs in the future. It is a vicious cycle, and Wall Street’s recklessness is the root of the problem. Bambi also shows us the solution: we need to have the courage to speak out about what is happening with us, stand together, and hold the people who caused the crisis responsible for what they have done. Otherwise, working families will continue to struggle to make it, fighting over the scraps they have left us.
Tags: unemployment

Keep reporting your unemployed status. This will keep the official unemployment more accurately reflecting reality.
Keep calling your US Senators & Representatives.
Make the above comments on articles and in forums. Tell anyone who claims they are paying for you to be unemployed that they are WRONG. Unemployment tax is paid by employers, not employees. They can check their pay stubs or better yet, do a little research and check for themselves:
“The Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA), with state unemployment systems, provides for payments of unemployment compensation to workers who have lost their jobs. Most employers pay both a Federal and a state unemployment tax. A list of state unemployment tax agencies, including addresses and phone numbers, is available in Publication 926, Household Employer’s Tax Guide. Only the employer pays FUTA tax; it is not deducted from the employee’s wages. For more information, refer to the Instructions for Form 940 (PDF). ”
http://www.irs.gov/businesses/small/international/article/0,,id=104985,00.html
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“Bad mortgage deals” wouldn’t be Bambi’s fault anyways. The homeowners are not the real estate experts, the real estate experts are. People were fooled into those mortgages and I feel horrible for them.
Kevin
NWMLS Expert
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Read this dont give up Jobs Working At Home Working Tax Credit Can Fit For Moms Working At Home
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