[Mb-civic] When There's No Ford in Your Future - William Jeakle - Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sat Apr 8 05:02:19 PDT 2006
When There's No Ford in Your Future
<>
By William Jeakle
The Washington Post
Saturday, April 8, 2006; A23
The recent announcement by Ford Motor Co. of as many as 30,000 layoffs,
mostly in white-collar jobs, echoes the turbulent days of the early
1980s, when Japanese imports, endemic inefficiency and the residue of
two oil crises conspired to sharply reduce the size of Ford, GM and
Chrysler.
The numbers in the Ford layoff announcement were large, though small in
the context of a U.S. working population of more than 100 million. But
numbers can never be more than abstractions. Each layoff will set into
motion some very real and painful dramas in 30,000 Ford families.
I know. My family was a part of the last major Ford layoff drama 25
years ago. In 1980 Ford announced the closure of several plants,
including the aluminum engine plant in Sheffield, Ala., where my family
was living. We were a Ford family, transferring every few years from
plant to plant, from Michigan to California to Pennsylvania and,
finally, to Sheffield. For years, life was good, with two cars, a nice
house, even a membership at the modest local country club.
The layoff announcement threw our family, and the families of 1,500
other workers, into turmoil. Families went from planning vacations and
seeking college educations to planning cutbacks and seeking low-paying
but available work. There was some initial optimism. Lifetime union
workers felt freed from the constraints of the factory and planned to
start businesses of their own.
One of our family friends started a woodworking business. Another opened
a factory outlet for mattresses that his brother manufactured in
Memphis. The planning and dreaming helped ease the pain of losing a
substantial paycheck. But the realities of a dwindling local economy
soon shuttered these modest businesses. Wal-Mart arrived. Downtown withered.
Our own family, with me attending Stanford and my sister at Vanderbilt,
took out student loans, applied for scholarships and sought positions
that helped pay room and board. I bused tables at one residence and
became a resident assistant my senior year, which defrayed my
room-and-board cost. There was pressure to transfer back home to the
University of Alabama, but I persuaded my parents to let me stay at
Stanford if I could pay for my education myself.
My brother was a junior in high school when the layoffs hit, and he bore
the brunt of the downsizing. Though the highest academic achiever in our
family, easily gaining admittance to Stanford and other elite schools,
he was encouraged to attend a military academy, which would cover the
cost of his education, though he was a gifted writer and creator, hardly
ideal material for the military.
He chose Stanford, and, with two classmates, became one of the first
students to attend that university on an ROTC scholarship since the
program was expelled from the campus in 1970. He attended ROTC classes
weekly at Berkeley, waking at 5 a.m. for the one-hour drive across the
bay, then returning for afternoon classes in engineering.
The greatest sacrifice was made by my parents. My father was a lawyer
who had left day-to-day legal work to get a higher-paying job at Ford in
the go-go '60s. With news of the plant closing, he made twice-weekly
trips to Birmingham to take legal refresher courses, sleeping on the
couch of my best friend from high school, who was attending the
University of Alabama at Birmingham. My dad, in his fifties at the time,
took classes with twentysomethings from wealthy suburbs. At age 53, he
passed the Alabama bar exam, the oldest person in the state to do so
that year.
My mother, who had left a career in a bank to be a stay-at-home mom,
went back to school to get her teaching certificate, and then taught
Spanish and special education in the Alabama public schools. At an age
when most couples were contemplating sunny retirement, my parents
soldiered on.
Our story was far from unique. The American spirit is powerful, and we
saw dozens of inspiring stories from our fellow laid-off Ford families.
But when you move from the statistical forest to the individual trees,
you can see that each successive year was lived with more stress, fewer
dreams and altered futures.
When I heard that Ford was again laying off thousands of workers, I knew
what those families would be going through. I get a tear in my eye for
their pluck and determination.
It's funny. Despite everything, even today, everyone in our family
drives a Ford.
William Jeakle is a writer and creative director at Filmateria Studios
in Seattle.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/07/AR2006040701734.html
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