The Middle and Working-classes have been hammered by the Great Recession
From: Time.com
The Middle and Working-classes have been hammered by the Great Recession and no industry has taken it more on the chin than construction. Nationally, unemployment fell to 9.7% in January, but in construction it jumped to 24.7% from 18.7% in October. In many regions, union officials report 30% of their members are unemployed or “riding the bench.” “In the previous 14 years, I had not been out of work for more than one week,” says Pat O’Connor, 57, a Connecticut carpenter. With no work since July, O’Connor says, “It is a bad dream turning into a nightmare. Is construction dead? It’s just horrible right now. No one expected this. It’s a depression.” He has a mortgage and is worried he will fall behind and lose his condo. “When I go to bed, I keep the TV on just so I have the noise. If it gets silent, I get a panic attack.”
Commercial construction workers are in a bind. Before, if work dried up in Boston or Seattle, carpenters, electricians and plumbers would pack up and go to Las Vegas or Texas or Alaska. “Now there is no work anywhere,” says Mark Erlich, whose New England Regional Council of Carpenters represents 22,000 union members in six states. “The largest problem is the continued lack of financing,” says Jerry Rhoades, executive secretary treasurer of the Florida Carpenters Regional Council. “In the summer of 2009, there were 800 jobs on the books to build across the state. We do commercial, high-rise residential and power plants. The permits were ready, but the financing dried up. I am in my 60s and I’ve never experienced a downturn like this. Three years ago, three contractors would bid on a project. Now 90 contractors bid on a project. That is how desperate people are.”
