FULL article:
http://blog.aflcio.org/2006/08/29/waging-a-living-tonight-on-pbs/Waging a Living: Tonight on PBS
Working poor “ought to be an oxymoron.”
So says filmmaker Roger Weisberg, whose documentary “Waging a Living” airs tonight on PBS’ P.O.V. series (check your local listings).
“Waging a Living” documents the hard work and struggles of four of the estimated 30 million U.S. workers whose incomes fall below the federal poverty level for a family of four. Says Weisberg in an interview on the PBS website:
The idea that you can work full time and still be poor in this society is a real crime. And the numbers of working poor have risen so dramatically. Since 1977, there has been a 50 percent increase in the number of people working full time who are still poor.
…I want to show that it’s different for folks on the bottom of that income ladder, and in many ways the situation now is different than it was years ago. My film is not really about all of the reasons the situation has changed over time: it’s not about globalization; it’s not about the transition from a manufacturing-based economy to a service-based economy; it’s not about the diminished power of labor unions today. What Waging a Living is really about is the impact that those forces are having on low-wage workers today.
The camera follows Jean Reynolds, a 51-year-old certified nursing assistant in Keansburg, N.J. She earns $11 an hour with no health insurance. She also supports three children, including her eldest daughter, who suffers from cancer, and her four children. Says Reynolds:
I’ve worked hard all my life and I’m still stuck. There is no American dream anymore.
Barbara Brooks is a single mother of five in Freeport, N.Y., who earns $8.25 an hour as a counselor at a juvenile detention home. She works hard to win promotions on the job only to find she loses more in government assistance than she earns with the extra pay. She says that she feels like her life is “hustling backwards.”