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Jolted workers rethink life's basics
Dallas Morning News ^ | June 26, 2004 | KATHERINE YUNG

Posted on 06/27/2004 4:52:11 AM PDT by neutrino

Jolted workers rethink life's basics

09:54 AM CDT on Saturday, June 26, 2004

By KATHERINE YUNG / The Dallas Morning News

 

Mark Olesen and Jerry Dugick live 181 miles apart. They're strangers to each other, but they share a common bond. Losing their tech jobs to overseas workers cost each of them more than paychecks and pride.

For Mark, a former software engineer for IBM in Austin, it led to bankruptcy and nearly a year away from his family, driving big rigs to natural gas fields around the country.

Jerry, a former engineer and project manager for Cadence Design Systems, sold the Dallas home he treasured to eliminate debt. He can pay for his daughter's first two years of college. But he doesn't see a way to cover the rest of her tuition with a part-time job.

The upheaval in both their lives illustrates why moving U.S. white-collar jobs overseas has caused so much anxiety and controversy. In many cases, the disruptions go far beyond lost income.

The irony: Offshoring has been a boon to American businesses, consumers and Third World workers – boosting profits, cutting prices and increasing incomes.

"We are kind of a victim of our own success," says Dane Anderson, program director of outsourcing and service providers for META Group, an information technology research and consulting firm.

White-collar workers affected by offshoring usually land other jobs. But for the first time in their lives, many are struggling to adapt to a lower standard of living.

And the emotional toll can be just as burdensome. Most worked hard to get a good education only to discover what plenty of former manufacturing employees already know: Workers overseas can do their jobs for less money."There is no job that is America's God-given right anymore," Carly Fiorina, chief executive of Hewlett-Packard Co., declared earlier this year. "We have to compete for jobs."

 

Humbling experience

 

Offshoring has come full circle for Mark, a 37-year-old with curly brown hair and a wide grin. Three years ago, his job was moved overseas. Now he spends his nights at his north Austin home collaborating with a group of programmers in Israel.

The group is updating software used to help companies and entrepreneurs figure out whether their products will sell on eBay. The programmers perform the work, and Mark sends them sales data.

The job pays $36,000, about half of what he earned at IBM. He and his family lack health insurance.

And with Israel eight hours ahead, he stays up most of the night. During the day, he talks to his boss in Utah and other folks.

But the software engineer isn't grumbling. He's relieved to be employed in the tech field again, especially since the small firm from Provo, Utah, that hired him is owned by one of his college buddies.

A year ago, Mark rarely saw his wife and the two teenage girls he helped raise. He spent his days at natural gas fields in Colorado, Michigan and other states, setting up and moving pumps and other heavy equipment. His nights were spent sleeping in strange hotels. Most of the men he worked with hadn't gone to college. And the pay: $10 an hour plus overtime.

It was the best he could do. When Mark lost his job in the midst of the tech slump, he couldn't find anything that would allow him to use his computer science degree from Brigham Young University. Employers were interested in hiring only foreign workers on H-1B visas.

The months dragged on. One of his cars was repossessed. On the brink of losing his house and unable to hold off his creditors any longer, he filed for bankruptcy.

 

Moving on

 

The move allowed him to reorganize his finances and clear away enough debt to save his house. But it also frightened him, leading him to sign up for the oil services contracting job.

"It was a humbling experience," says the Star Trek fan who grew up in Long Island, N.Y. "You start to really realize how fragile life is."

It's the last thing Mark expected to happen when he decided to study computer science. "I wanted to go for a career that provided me with some security," he recalls.

One day while out on the road, Mark received a call from one of his college pals, asking whether he'd be interested in a job. In October, he began working from home.

Today, Mark is paying off medical bills for his family and struggling to make his property tax payments. He hasn't bought a pair of shoes for himself in more than a year. And like many other laid-off tech workers, he has lost his respect for corporate America.

"It's really hurting the American people," he says of offshoring. "They are strip-mining society."

But the turmoil in his life has yielded an unexpected benefit: a newfound appreciation for what he does have. His family has learned how to have fun the low-cost way – with barbecues and visits to state parks.

"I don't think I take things for granted anymore," he says. "Life beats you down. You can either stay down or get back up and try to live."

 

Absorbing the shock

 

For Jerry, offshoring has been more of a one-way street heading south.

For seven years, he was proud to work for Cadence Design Systems, a company in San Jose, Calif., that sells software used to design microchips, printed circuit boards and other items.

A trim man with alert blue eyes and closely cropped hair, Jerry spent most of his time interacting with Cadence's customers. He taught them how to use the software and listened to their concerns. Most recently, he was in charge of making sure chipmaker Intel Corp., one of Cadence's biggest customers, received top-notch technical support.

The questions he encountered often proved so complex that he needed a team of engineers to find the answers.

The work was rarely dull. He never lacked for something to do. And he earned more than $100,000 a year.

One day last August, after dropping off his daughter at the University of Arizona for her first year of college, Jerry returned to North Dallas to find an e-mail from his manager. Would he be at work the next day?

The next morning he was told his job was moving to Noida, India. Cadence could hire three or four engineers for what they were paying him, Jerry learned.

Until that point, Jerry hadn't thought much about offshoring. He knew Cadence wanted to staff a technical support center in India and had started eliminating jobs in the United States. But the University of Missouri electrical engineering graduate never thought one of those jobs might be his.

"I had never been fired or laid off in my life," said the 43-year-old from St. Louis. "This kind of shocked me."

He felt like he'd been pushed from a train.

Once he got over the initial shock, Jerry started looking for another tech position. He quickly realized just how many people with master's degrees couldn't find work. His wife had just received her MBA and was also searching for a job.

To prepare for the worst, the couple decided to sell their house in North Dallas, where they had lived for the last seven years.

It sold the day they put it up for sale, at the asking price. The couple rented another house nearby so that their 14-year-old son wouldn't have to switch schools. With the money, they paid off debts and made some investments.

Jerry got a few interviews, but nothing came of them. The one offer he got required him to travel more than 80 percent of the time. He turned it down.

"My job is not worth my life," he says.

In the meantime, he took some classes at the University of Texas at Dallas, passed an exam and got certified in project management.

 

New priorities

 

Without a job, Jerry started to take stock of his life. He realized that he had been working for his family and his company but not himself. If he had died the next day, he says, his tombstone would have read, "He was a good employee."

Jerry began volunteering and networking with others who'd lost their jobs. He vows to make the next 20 years of his life more fulfilling.

"I am not going to become a slave to some corporation," he says, still stinging from the memory of how he sang Cadence's praises before it dropped him.

A few months ago, he walked into the office of a small engineering firm in Dallas. It was the first time he'd dared to drop into an office to leave his résumé and cover letter. He knew the owner from his days at Cadence.

What do I have to lose? he asked himself.

Today, Jerry is working part-time as a project manager for Circuitpac Corp. in Dallas, earning about a third of his former salary.

He and his wife, who speaks fluent Spanish, hope to start their own business, selling computers to Hispanics.

"I feel more stress than I used to," he says. "I'm still trying to figure out where Jerry is going to be a year from now."



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: freetraitor; offshoring; outsourcing; trade
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To: WilliamofCarmichael

"IMO this is more than jobs chasing cheap labor. It's the Third Way. It's Kyoto-lite, redistribution of wealth that lets corporations profit instead of forced redistribution of wealth to the third world."

Exactly. Don't forget the open borders, NAFTA, CAFTA. The WTO and other such organizations to which we belong prove this is the plan. And how is this in the best interest of America? We have further to fall. As another poster pointed out on this thread as well both Bush and Skerry are globalists.


141 posted on 06/27/2004 6:13:20 PM PDT by PersonalLiberties (...)
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To: Poundstone
I know I made the right decision when I started my goverment career over 20 years ago.

You may, I say MAY, have enough years to protect you from government downsizing and outsourcing. I hear that many agencies are suffering from these threats (the most recent being the Army Corps of Engineers).

142 posted on 06/27/2004 6:28:03 PM PDT by Ciexyz ("FR, best viewed with a budgie on hand")
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To: Gorzaloon
From what I have seen (14 nieces and nephews) even mediocre colleges know how to turn out lab drudges, but independent, innovative thought seems to be a lost art

I beg your pardon? ;-)

No, in the long and short of it, we need to take the "liberal" out of liberal arts education. Then we're home free. I have to take a course titled "Gender and Inequality" The very title makes me feel dirty. I don't think that I'm going to like being brainwashed... "Women good! Men bad! *Grunt* *grunt*"
I had a friend tell me that I needed to get a degree in something.. ANYTHING in order to make it. But, if it's not a degree that I WANT, why spend all the money getting it in the first place? I should just up and quit if it came down to that.
143 posted on 06/27/2004 6:38:40 PM PDT by Beaker (Tag line? What tag line? I don't see a tag line.)
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To: Gorzaloon

And you forgot too many project managers and not enough workers. Guy gets laid off because he's over qualified and uses his money to get a job to make him a disposable middle man. Companies want people who can do things that make them money.

Hint. Hint.


144 posted on 06/27/2004 6:59:19 PM PDT by Joe_October (Saddam supported Terrorists. Al Qaeda are Terrorists. I can't find the link.)
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To: neutrino

LOL!!!!!!!!


145 posted on 06/27/2004 7:00:06 PM PDT by m18436572
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To: William Terrell

Of course our country is defined as a democratic republic I don't disagree with that. But we aren't talking about political order here, we are talking about how we live and work with each other, especially as described by a class-fixated media.

The quoted remarks do not address a persons's aspiring to a higher career for his or her own fulfillment, but simply seems to disparage the coworker's high school education.

I managed a staff that included a high school graduate and two college graduates and the dedication and energy of the high school graduate was superior to the others. When I was in graduate school I was a bell-boy. I learned a great deal from my coworkers.

We will be a stronger country when the nobility of all work is again recognized.


146 posted on 06/27/2004 7:14:24 PM PDT by gogipper
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To: gogipper
We will be a stronger country when the nobility of all work is again recognized.

It will be a sad day when those who invest the time, effort, and money to achive higher education are not rewarded for it.

147 posted on 06/27/2004 8:04:12 PM PDT by m18436572
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To: Huck

88 - "What's to stop a company from using cheap overseas labor?"

Good - I've got many contacts and would like to replace you, among others. What is your company and position, so we can contact your employer and save him money on your salary.

That way you can compete to your hearts content.


148 posted on 06/27/2004 8:18:38 PM PDT by XBob (Free-traitors steal our jobs for their profit.)
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To: m18436572

My post didn't say anything about financial rewards..I am only saying that the media frequently disparages people working in lowly positions. This plays into class warfare which is the left's best weapon. How many times have we heard of McJob? Well for some people (e.g. a mentally challenged person) a low level job is a rewarding and challenging thing.

The market place needs all kinds of workers and we should respect people who give their best and live up to their responsibilities in amy job whether its a minimum wage worker or a CEO.


149 posted on 06/27/2004 8:19:43 PM PDT by gogipper
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To: XBob
Good - I've got many contacts and would like to replace you, among others. What is your company and position, so we can contact your employer and save him money on your salary.

I wish. Then I could kick back, collect gubmint checks, go fishing. But I can't seem to get laid off, no matter how little work I do. But, to your point, I am exposed to the same pressures as every one else, and I ain't whining about it.

150 posted on 06/27/2004 8:20:44 PM PDT by Huck (Be nice to chubby rodents. You know, woodchucks, guinea pigs, beavers, marmots, porcupines...)
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To: gogipper
How many times have we heard of McJob? Well for some people (e.g. a mentally challenged person) a low level job is a rewarding and challenging thing.

The market place needs all kinds of workers and we should respect people who give their best and live up to their responsibilities in amy job whether its a minimum wage worker or a CEO.

Right on. I totally agree. I learned a lot from entry level jobs...busing tables, washing dishes, line cook, retail sales clerk, deli counter help, etc. And I've come a long way with no college degree. Just ignore the a-holes and keep your nose to the grindstone I say. There is dignity in working, even entry level work.

151 posted on 06/27/2004 8:23:19 PM PDT by Huck (Be nice to chubby rodents. You know, woodchucks, guinea pigs, beavers, marmots, porcupines...)
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To: gogipper
"In a nation where excellence in plumbing is disparaged because plumbing is a humble profession, and shoddiness in philosophy is celebrated because philosophy is an exalted profession, neither the pipes nor the theories will hold water."

I don't think the fellow is complaining that he has to work with people below his class and that he has looks down on his fellow workers. I think he more just is interested in vistas his education has opened up for him and he can't talk shop with those who vistas never were.

It's an intellectual thing. And it's ok.

People have been dividing themselves up in classes and cliques according to interest and beliefs since time began. I don't think you are going to be able to do anything about it.

It's not just the media that's class fixated.

152 posted on 06/27/2004 8:31:50 PM PDT by William Terrell (Individuals can exist without government but government can't exist without individuals.)
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To: Mulder

108 - excellent simple explanation. And guaranteed free-traitors will not understand, because they wish to rape our country.


153 posted on 06/27/2004 9:04:43 PM PDT by XBob (Free-traitors steal our jobs for their profit.)
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To: WilliamofCarmichael; Cronos

120 - Which bottling plants are exporting Coke and Pepsi to India? I haven't heard of any. We should have giant container shiploads of coke and pepsi being loaded, and tons and tons of cans and bottles being manufactured.

Just where are they doing this?


154 posted on 06/27/2004 9:22:40 PM PDT by XBob (Free-traitors steal our jobs for their profit.)
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To: sweneop
the fact is, if the people who were working all around me several years back in the good times were actually delivering value for money to their clients and customers then we wouldnt be in this situation

I'm not quite sure I follow the rational of your statement. My helpdesk has been the crown Jewel of EDS. Never ever ever missed a metric - not once. And have always rather beat them and usually quite handily. Great resolution rates, great first pass.. No matter what they have ever thrown at us - even when they were absolutely positive we couldn't do it, we've done it. Simply put, we are the US Marines of EDS - adapt and overcome. And I'm rather proud of that. The client and the company both thanked us by shafting us. EDS has softened the blow a little for which our local bosses and one fine lady that managed our account should be commended. Our account negotiator actually came in and apologized to us. I felt sorry for the guy because they put him in a position where he could not win - period. When he showed up, he looked like someone who could really use a friend.

Tall and short is, we produced a level of value that the customer was sure we couldn't day after day, year after year - always overcoming. The account has been broken into pieces to be moved a bit at a time to Mexico and it is a disaster of epic proportions in the making. Some of their support services for their core operations has been farmed out to Budapest (who'd have thought of that one). Their workers are constantly calling now saying the functional desk in Mexico isn't helping them, is dumping their responsibility, sometimes outright lying to the customer, etc. On top of that, I got my first call the other day that was sheer disgust and no hiding it. Lady called and had been left a message on her voicemail and she couldn't understand a single solitary word of it.

We aren't talking about delivering value for the money. They are just looking at the money. The value to them didn't matter. They sold out the star performer in EDS for third rate performance at slavery prices. Any way you cut it, they're cutting their throats and ours at the same time and they think they're doing something because they aren't spending as much. The one upside is that the guy that pushed our client and us into this position got fired a while back, though I don't think anyone's saying why. Based on what's happening - it wouldn't be too hard to guess.

I put my life in God's hands at this point. Cause I sure can't see where it's going. But I can see what's happening to my client and my company and I hate it for both of them. Even with the disloyalty they have shown me of late at the top end, I still find it hard to be disloyal to them. Somebody has to stand up and speak up or this crap will keep going on. This isn't about value, its about greed. They had value and dumped it in favor of slave labor in another land during wartime. I don't think one need say much more than that to the older generation who gets the weight of that. To some who are younger and see the workforce as pawns to do their bidding - people who don't have morals because they think morality is bad for business, they don't get it. But they understand backlash and are doing everything possible to blunt the blow of this in the public eye to save face. Companies who outsource now are hesitant to talk to tell the press the truth about it. And the funny thing is, EDS has opened up a branch specializing in "onshoring" now - to offer a solution to businesses burned by offshoring. How poetic is that.. lol. The upshot is that it still depresses the wages paid so that we get the jobs back; but, businesses are still using slave labor to set the standards here. Six of one, half a dozen of another - point and pick your poison it's all bad news.

155 posted on 06/27/2004 9:24:48 PM PDT by Havoc (.)
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To: m18436572
It will be a sad day when those who invest the time, effort, and money to achive higher education are not rewarded for it.

Higher education might be personally rewarding, but it is often not rewarded by financial gain. The colleges and universities aren't upfront with their prospective students - maybe because the professors need the students to justify their money.

I can give a lot of examples - how about the class of 16 who got MBA's, only to find out that only 8 jobs were being recruited from their campus? (That was the average).
How about the Computer Science major who found out that she was competing with a class trained by the unemployment commission?
How about the PhD in Diversity Studies who found out that the only jobs he was eligible for were professorships in the field? (Not many slots available)

Young people are being misled to think that a higher education leads to a better job. Not always. Plumbers, electricians, auto mechanics, etc. often do better financially.

156 posted on 06/27/2004 9:28:55 PM PDT by speekinout
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To: schu
I believe big business has hurt themselves with this slash and burn approach.

Of course they have. Try to think of a more subversive thing to do than breaking trust with people. Doesn't matter what label you put on it from adultry to treason - breaking trust is nasty business and there will be a hell of a long term price to pay for it.

157 posted on 06/27/2004 9:31:59 PM PDT by Havoc (.)
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To: WilliamofCarmichael

You got it. They took supply and demand within a capitalist society and smashed it against a cheap global labor pool.

Used to be that labor supply and job supply within the country determined pay rate. The companies don't like that model now, so they broke it. Now it's heads I win tails you lose. Companies get what they want here or they go elsewhere and sell their product here anyway. Supply and demand is dead and the worker has ZERO leverage. Great way to scuttle a capitalist society.


158 posted on 06/27/2004 9:42:34 PM PDT by Havoc (.)
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To: Huck

150 - "Good - I've got many contacts and would like to replace you, among others. What is your company and position, so we can contact your employer and save him money on your salary.
I wish. Then I could kick back, collect gubmint checks, go fishing."

For a few months, then the unemployment checks will cease, and you must get another job or lose your house. Where do you work and what is your job, so we can make your wish come true?


159 posted on 06/27/2004 9:52:01 PM PDT by XBob (Free-traitors steal our jobs for their profit.)
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To: Havoc

I am now to the point I am purposely trying to boycott and sink US companies who move our jobs overseas. If they want to sell me chinese products at American prices, I now try to just cut out the middleman, and buy direct from the Chinese.

Good idea? I don't know, but at least it's cheaper junk than chinese made junk with an american label.


160 posted on 06/27/2004 10:19:47 PM PDT by XBob (Free-traitors steal our jobs for their profit.)
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