Saturday, October 12, 2019
Waiting in the Unemployment Line :: descriptive essay, observation essay
I am standing in line for unemployment benefits. There must be between four  hundred to six hundred others here with me. Everyone here is a locked out  Steelworkers from the Kaiser Mead plant. I see many faces I know in the crowd.  We are all here because the Washington State Unemployment office downtown cannot  handle such a crowd. All the members were told by the Union that this was the  day that we had to signup for a new benefit year.     Everyone was told to meet at the Carpenter's hall just off Division on  Mission. The building is getting old and could use some maintenance. It is a  cold dreary damp morning, and I am glad that I brought my coat along. The  weather reflects the overall mood of the people in line. There is a lot of  talking going on about what it is going to take to requlify for benefits. I  think many fear that they will not receive any more checks from Unemployment.             This morning I got up early to make sure I could make it on time. The last  time they locked the doors on the hour. This is the only day we have to do this,  so I did not want to miss out. Without unemployment benefits, I would go under  fast. This is true for most of the people in line. I don't think they thought  this many of us would have made the mandatory $2,646. If they had used the same  method for sign up that they used last October, this whole process would have  been easier on everyone. Previously people with last names starting with A-H  went at 9:00am, I-P at 11:00am and so on. This kept it from becoming overcrowded  like it is today.            After about ten minutes someone comes out of the building yelling, "Go home  if you have not made at least $2,800 since the benefit year started". The reason  for this is because the state requires us to make six times our weekly benefit  amount to be eligible for another benefit year. Of course no one let us know  this until the benefits ran out in August. This left most steelworkers only a  month and a half to make the money.  					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.