SEIU like
Acorn
, just yet one more connection used to finance no good
lying,
un-patriotic
and sleazy
Senator Barack Obama's
bid for the Presidency. Further evidence that
Barack Obama
supports criminal, subversive, and un-American individuals and/or
organizations at the expense of law abiding U.S. citizens
.
*****************************************
L.A.
County temporary student jobs last for decades, Officials
acknowledge abuses in program in which people work for years with
low pay and no benefits.
By
Garrett Therolf, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer,
October 6, 2008
Anne Cusack / Los Angeles Times, Patricia Lopez, 51, who has
worked under the L.A. County program for 20 years, takes a class
after managers recently told her she'd lose her job if she didn't
enroll.
Like others classified by the
Los
Angeles County bureaucracy
as a
temporary
student
worker,
Patricia Lopez, 51, was not temporary and not a student.
For two decades she has answered phones in county health
clinics, a job she took initially to get off welfare. Today, Lopez
works about 39 hours a week and takes home little more than $1,000
a month.
Now, as
county
officials acknowledge poor oversight and widespread abuses in the
program
,
Lopez and others who have long worked in positions intended to
employ students for short stints face possible termination with
little recourse.
An audit of the program found that at least 64 of the nearly
1,000 participants have been working for six years or more in jobs
that offer no paid sick time, no paid vacation, no retirement, no
health benefits and little chance to win a promotion.
The longest tenure? Twenty-eight years for a Fire Department
employee.
"What are you going to do with that employee that worked with
us for 28 years as a student worker, 38 hours a week? I think, two
more years [and] she would have qualified for a real good
retirement in our system," county Supervisor Gloria Molina said at
a recent board meeting. "This is really disgraceful."
Although the county-funded program has academic enrollment
requirements, a survey taken in recent weeks found that at least 73
workers were not taking classes -- even as managers rushed
employees to register for school amid growing scrutiny. Among the
718 student workers who reported that they were enrolled in
classes, it was unclear whether their course work was enough to
qualify them.
County officials concede that those figures are inadequate
and that there may be additional problems in the decades-old
program,
under which hires were made by individual departments with no
countywide oversight. They acknowledge that some workers have
languished in jobs for years and could have obtained better
positions if the county had classified them differently -- in
welfare-to-work programs, for instance. But managers said no effort
will be made to aid those workers retroactively.
"There is nothing we can do in terms of the past," said Mike
Henry, the county's director of human resources.
Under new rules proposed by Henry, the program would be
restricted to full-time students and allow no more than six years
of participation.
Many of the questions being raised came to light after the
student workers voted recently to unionize and begin negotiations
to improve working conditions.
Service
Employees International Union's
chief negotiator on the issue, Suzan Pour-Sanae, said the
workers were "abused and exploited. . . . Every other temporary or
recurrent employee that
SEIU Local
721 represents does get healthcare after three months."
With more than 100,000 staffers, Los Angeles County is the
region's largest employer. A county job has long been considered a
path to the middle class, raising questions about how some workers
were left in dead-end jobs for so long.
The program was intended for students seeking to gain
government experience during a summer or academic quarter before
moving on to other things -- recent fliers read, "Get a Life! Be a
Student Worker." Over the years, many participants did just that,
working directly for one of the five county supervisors or in other
government-related roles.
A
significant number have had a political or familial tie to the
county, according to managers who have reviewed a full list of
student workers.
When used to create de-facto permanent positions, however,
the low wages and lack of benefits conflict with some of the
policies of the Board of Supervisors. The board, for example, has
on occasion forced developers and county contractors to provide a
living wage and health benefits, in part to reduce the strain on
public housing projects and county health facilities.
Lopez uses both.
"When I started working for the county, I lived in the
projects, and 20 years later, I still do," she said with a chuckle,
speaking on a recent day in her cramped Boyle Heights apartment in
Building 59 of Ramona Gardens.
A mother of three, Lopez has never had
health
insurance
. She receives no preventive care, and when she's ill,
she
visits a county clinic at taxpayers' expense.
Other student workers said they have been left with steep
bills when they fall ill.
Monique Purry, 24, has worked 40 hours a week in the district
attorney's office for three and a half years. A student at Cal
State Dominguez Hills, Purry said her student health plan did not
cover much of her care when she recently had pneumonia.
With no county health insurance, she said, she was left with
a bill of $2,300 after visiting a private doctor.
"I couldn't pay it," Purry said.
In Lopez's case, she may not have qualified for the student
worker position in the first place. She was enrolled in only two
classes at East Los Angeles Occupational Center near her home when
she was first hired to do clerical work. A short time later, she
quit her classes without objection from her bosses. Lopez said she
thought she was on track for a county career.
Lopez said she stayed in her low-paying position in part
because when she took the county exam and applied for a permanent
job, she lost out to people with higher test scores. And her years
with the county did not help her because as a temporary worker she
did not have an official track record.
Although her employer, the Department of Health Services, has
staffers who have built careers despite serious criminal histories
or lengthy unexplained absences, as a student worker Lopez's years
of service do not count in her favor for other county jobs.
Until two weeks ago, Lopez said she had no idea her job was
in jeopardy. The first sign of trouble, she said, came when her
managers, preparing for a Board of Supervisors meeting where the
student worker program was scheduled to be discussed, told her she
needed to quickly enroll in classes or she would be fired. Lopez
went back to the occupational center she left two decades ago --
now called East Los Angeles Education and Career Center -- and
enrolled once again in classes to prepare for the high school
equivalency exam.
"I'm happy to be learning, but it means I have to leave early
from work and make a little less money each week," she said. "I
realize, though, that I'm uneducated and need to educate myself."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times
*********************************
...and in the event
Monique Purry is a U.S. citizen, it is foolish of her to
allow her legal status, that makes her qualified to receive student
benefits
to be aligned with, Patricia Lopez, who fraudulently acquired
educational or employment status or benefits, who more than likely
entered the U.S. illegally, who misrepresented herself as being
a citizen, and/or may still be an illegal immigrant.
In response to assignment:
Black in America[1]