Saturday, July 18, 2009

They All Need a Break

There are a lot of unhappy people out there. Not just the poor unfortunates who are getting foreclosed on and are moving into rental housing. Not event those who are taking a ten to twenty percent cut in fees to close business that is now entrenched in a buyers market. I'm talking about the people on the edge. A decrease or loss of income means couching it with various friends and relatives, with the next stop being Hotel Car.

A good friend was riding pretty high until last year. he installed designer kitchens for the the folks north of the Boulevard. (For those of you who don't live in the San Fernando Valley, "north" is another way of saying across the tracks.) Anyway, the economic crunch was a equal opportunity hit. The downturn in the housing market was a second blast. People began opting to leave their kitchens as is. Work dried up, and a couple days work replaced 40 hours a week plus overtime.

I'm happy to say that my friend is staying in the guest house of a former customer, now a friend, with an open-ended invitation. Work is still hit and miss. Certainly a long way from last year. Point being that secondary markets are equally battered by the recession (depression).

Another friend survived the Human Resources axe by dropping lower and absorbing more responsibilities. He is still working, but has a day filled with incidental tasks that are expected to be accomplished, while redirecting his time elsewhere.

What's the point? The bad economy is affecting families, school kids, end the elderly to be sure. But the less newsworthy are also hurting. Sure, when a single guy ends up on the street, he is just one of the myriad homeless. But he (or she) is suffering just as much. The problem is that single homeless men are the very stereotype of, well, the problem. Someone new to the system is lumped in with the chronically homeless.

They all need a break.

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