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WSWS : News
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America
In run-up to Democratic Party primary
Western Pennsylvania workers speak on struggling economy
By Alex Lantier
22 April 2008
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Living conditions in small-town Pennsylvania have become the
focus of national debate over the past week. A press scandal erupted
after Democratic presidential hopeful Senator Barack Obama of
Illinois described voters there as bitter and economically
devastated.
As Obamas rivals, Democratic Senator Hillary Clinton
of New York and Republican Senator John McCain of Arizona, have
attacked these comments, big-business politicians and the corporate
media have been unable to avoid a brief discussion of the broader
social problems facing millions of people in the small cities
and towns of Americas Rust Belt.
Speaking at a closed-door fundraising event in the exclusive
Pacific Heights neighborhood of San Francisco, Obama said: You
go into some of these small towns in Pennsylvania, and [...] the
jobs have been gone now for 25 years and nothings replaced
them. And they fell through the Clinton administration and the
Bush administration, and each successive administration has said
that somehow these communities are going to regenerate and they
have not. And its not surprising they get bitter, they cling
to guns or religion or antipathy to people who arent like
them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a
way to explain their problems.
Obama subsequently backed down from his comments, describing
them as poorly phrased. However, correspondents for the World
Socialist Web Site who traveled to small towns in western
Pennsylvania found unanimous agreement that deindustrialization
carried out under Democratic and Republican administrations alike
had indeed left behind bitter, struggling communities.
Sharon, Pennsylvania
Sharon is a small manufacturing town on Pennsylvanias
western border, near the steel and automotive manufacturing center
of Youngstown, Ohio. Its steel, machining, and automobile components
industries were progressively shut down during the late 1970s
and 1980s, with the Westinghouse Transformer Plant ceasing operations
in 1984 and Sharon Steel reducing production until its owners
finally shut it down in 1992.
As of the 2000 Census, Sharon had about 16,300 inhabitants
and a median household income of $26,945just over half the
2000 national median income of $50,046and a poverty rate
of 17.6 percent. The towns population voted 51 percent for
George Bush against 48 percent for Democratic candidate John Kerry
in the 2004 US presidential elections.
The World Socialist Web Site spoke with Larry, a worker
at Duferco Steel, which bought and now operates a portion of the
former Sharon Steel mill. Larry said:
There are about 500 salaried and maybe 150-200 hourly
workers. When I started in 1978, it was Sharon Steel then, there
were 2,500 people working there. We had steelmaking then. Now
we import steel from different countries and we just process and
finish it. When Sharon closed in 1992, I was out of work for a
while. I took a job in Grove City, then that plant closed down.
When Sharon went bankrupt I lost over $20,000 in an employee
stock ownership plan. Then union was trying to save the mill.
Each week we would get paid, but they would take so much out of
it to buy stock. We only got pennies on the dollar for what we
put in.
Asked about other jobs in Sharon, Larry said: There are
not many good-paying jobs in Sharon. If you dont work in
the steel mill or the tube mill, the most you can make is maybe
$10 or $12 an hour, and very few benefits. You cannot do anything
on that. I have seen a lot of people leave here. I went to work
in Cincinnati for a while, but I had to move back. [...] Families
break up when you move around so much. It is hard on a family.
I feel our politicians have been sitting on their hands.
The House and Senate, they have not been doing anything to help
the American people, they only help themselves and the rich. It
is their system, the people have no say.
Kathy, a gas station cashier, told the WSWS: The local
economy is very bad. It used to be booming, now its dead.
The businesses died, the Bavarian festival, the steel companies
folded, even the food strips. People are bitter about the world
in general. Gas prices are high because of the warwe shouldnt
be there.
Darlene said: Yes, people are bitter in Sharon. You can
find a job, but is it going to be enough to pay the bills, to
put food on your table, to clothe and take care of your kids?
Thats the problem. The way the economy is now, food prices
are going up, gas prices are going up and its going to get
a lot worse before it gets better. Politicians dont care
about us. They get their money from the rich people and that is
all they care about.
Donna, a nursing home worker, told us: I am bitter. I
take care of my daughter and grandson. All I do is work, eat,
and sleep. After you pay the bills, there is nothing left. There
is a lot of crime and drugs in Sharon. People have no jobs and
that is what happens. There is nothing for the kids to do, they
just hang out on the streets.
I used to take my grandson fishing, but I cant
even do that anymore because the price of a license has gone up.
Jobs are real hard to come by in Sharon, the mills have cut back
and all there is are McDonalds and those kinds of places. Maybe
that is a job for kids, but a man is not going to be able to support
a family on minimum wage.
She added: I do housekeeping. It is hard work. I only
get paid $8.00 an hour. This winter, my gas bill was between $500
and $800. I cant pay that; I do what I can. I will pay it
after a while, but there are families that have to decide not
to heat their homes so they can afford to eat.
The politicians dont care about the working people
and the poor. They will make promises to get elected, but they
never keep them. I am against the war in Iraq. We should leave
those people alone. Bush is causing more trouble than he is solving.
He is causing more people to hate us. They should bring our troops
home now. That money should be used to help people, not to kill
people. I was for Obama at first. He says it is time for a changebut
what kind of a change, that is what I am asking.
The World Socialist Web Site also spoke to Heather,
her husband Gene and her father Glennhull. Heather works at a
convenience store, Gene works at a local furniture factory, and
Glennhull went on disability after being laid off from National
Casting as it closed in 1982.
Heather said: They need a lot of jobs here. [...] My
husband gets $7.15 an hour, just minimum wage. He makes barstools.
We could only make money with overtime.
Gene said: After 90 days they fire you to not have to
pay medical insurance. The companys making millions and
you cant get insurance! A lot of people are bitter. The
factory pays minimum wage and its a big company, making
parts all over the world. Especially if you have kids, a family,
or youre buying a car on this income, youre stuck
losing everything because theyre going to fire you after
90 days.
Meadville, PA
Meadville, whose population hit 13,700 in the 2000 US Census,
has seen several industries cut back production in the 1970s and
then shut down in the 1980s, notably textiles and railroad freight.
In 1985 zipper-maker Talon Corporation ceased operations at
its Meadville plant and laid off 2,200 workers; Avtex Synthetic
fibers shut down and laid off 900 workers in 1986; and in 1989
Conrail Freight shut down its operations laying off 700 workers.
Other industries, such as plate glass and tool and diewhich
originally serviced Talonhave reduced operations.
Meadvilles median household income was $24,502 in 2000
and it had a poverty rate of 22.7 percent. It voted 57 percent
for George Bush versus 42 percent for John Kerry in the 2004 elections.
Mark, a groundskeeper whose son works in tool and die, told
the World Socialist Web Site: The economy here never
recovered since the early 1980s. Weve lost too much manufacturing
in this country. In the early 1980s there were over 17,000 people
living in Meadville, now were down to 12,000. There are
not enough manufacturing jobsthere are tool and die jobs,
hospital and school work, and service work. In tool and die, wages
used to be $25-26 an hour, now they are down to $17-18 an hour.
There are over 4,000 tool and die jobs in Crawford County
[the area around Meadville, with a population of 90,000]. Now
tool and die is doing better, a lot of companies went out of business
in the 1980s and 1990s. [...] Probably employment is down roughly
one third from what it used to be.
Karen, a school teacher, commented: For new people coming
in things dont look too good. There are fewer retirements,
because baby boomers are hanging on for longer. [...] More young
people leave than stay.
She added: It used to be that the more you made, the
more you paid to help otherswhy isnt it like that
any more? Ill send a letter to Oprahif you want to
give money away, why dont you pay for my sons education?
See Also:
Obama-Clinton debate: A whiff of McCarthyism
as media pushes Democratic campaign to the right
[18 April 2008]
The Obama mistake: Breaking
the taboo on discussing class in America
[17 April 2008]
US media, Clinton assail Obama for bitter
truth
[17 April 2008]
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