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News & Letters, June 2001


Workers (not) making it in America

Review: NICKEL AND DIMED: ON (NOT) GETTING BY IN AMERICA, by Barbara Ehrenreich, Henry Holt and Company, 2001

This book corrects people who believe that if you have a job and work hard, you can "make it" in America. Ehrenreich tried in three different U.S. locations to live on low-wage jobs. But in spite of being white, a native English speaker, childless and in much better health than most of the working poor, "making it" in entry-level jobs proved almost impossible. In addition, Ehrenreich could be cheerful and upbeat because she knew she wasn't trapped in a bleak future with more of the same.

Ehrenreich worked as a waitress in Florida, a house cleaner and weekend nursing-home attendant in Maine and a Wal-Mart floor person in Minnesota. Her experiences are rendered with poignancy and humor in these pages. There was George the cook, a Czech immigrant who shared a flop-house bed with a person of different shift; he was accused in English (thus unable to defend himself) of stealing food (he was probably hungry). There was Maddy, who was constantly in a paroxysm of worry over her child's poor-quality daycare. And there was pregnant Holly, whose husband abused her and who was undernourished and without funds for food (as were most house cleaners Ehrenreich worked with).

Reading Ehrenreich's experiences looking for housing, jobs and food gives one a window to the exhaustion and fear of poverty. At the end of the day, the week, the months all the additions and subtractions of incomes and expenses resulted in negative sums. She couldn't scramble fast enough for one month to pay the second month's rent-even working two jobs, putting car expenses on her credit card and having a small stipend that she allowed herself to get started. After a monumental struggle to find affordable housing in Minneapolis-St. Paul, she read that prosperity had shrunk the number of low-cost units nationwide and commented, "I'm a victim not of poverty, but of prosperity."

Ehrenreich's weekend job in Maine was to help to feed an Alzheimer's ward in a nursing home. She was alone on a day that was bedeviled by a series of administrative snafus. She managed well, including all feeding times. She was proud of this; yet the nagging question remained-why was an unknown, relatively untested person alone with all those patients for a whole shift and at such low pay?

Time after time, really terrific books like Ehrenreich's end weakly. The contradictions hang out at the end like a tree-top cradle in a strong wind. Ehrenreich calls for forming unions, which though important in the capitalistic system, can only be temporary, because unionizing, as we have seen, can become its opposite in the untrustworthy and mercenary union leader that collaborates with the bosses. How many times does that have to happen before we catch on?

In her last paragraph Ehrenreich expressed a kind of certainty that "someday, of course" the working poor will demand what they are worth. But paying workers less than their worth is the warp and woof of capitalism. Economic systems should serve us; however, the efforts of Ehrenreich's co-workers in NICKEL AND DIMED were commodified so that the owners of their time (their lives) could make a big profit.

But we want a new society that never requires a person to sacrifice her basic needs, work hard with treatable illnesses or raise children with blighted lives-one where the bottom line is expressed, not in money, but in the life-quality of each individual, what that person needs to become educated in her own personality.

--January B.


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