Day Work: Better Than Nothing, but Not by Much. Peter Gorman.
by Gorman, Peter; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2006Article 51Business. Publisher: World & I, 2005ISSN: 1522-3191;.Subject(s): Contingent workers | Day laborers | Poverty | Temporary help services | Underemployment | WagesDDC classification: 050 Summary: "It's 7:30 a.m. on a Monday morning. Seventy men--white, black, Mexican--sit in the four areas of the Fort Worth (Texas) Day Labor Center, waiting for contractors, home owners, and apartment managers to begin coming in looking for day workers. Each of the men have a number. Those with the good numbers, numbers 1 through 30, sit on folding metal chairs in the dreary, dull, white front room where the contractors enter. The rest of the men, with little chance of getting out that day, sit in a large room with cafeteria tables, two televisions, a magazine stand, and a computer, the anteroom, where the 10-cent coffee is sold, or a fenced-in outer area set aside for smokers." (WORLD & I) The article profiles a Day Labor Center in Fort Worth, Texas, discussing many of the hardships that workers face trying to find employment on a day by day basis.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 49 How Corporate America Is Betraying Women. | REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 5 Free Trade and the Climb Out of Poverty. | REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 50 Crime in Progress. | REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 51 Day Work: Better Than Nothing, but Not by Much. | REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 52 AFL-CIO Divided As Union Leaders Debate Federation's Future. | REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 52 Two Rebel Unions Split from AFL-CIO. | REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 53 U.S. Visa Quota Leaves Businesses Struggling for Seasonal Workers. |
Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2006.
Originally Published: Day Work: Better Than Nothing, but Not by Much, March 2005; pp. n.p..
"It's 7:30 a.m. on a Monday morning. Seventy men--white, black, Mexican--sit in the four areas of the Fort Worth (Texas) Day Labor Center, waiting for contractors, home owners, and apartment managers to begin coming in looking for day workers. Each of the men have a number. Those with the good numbers, numbers 1 through 30, sit on folding metal chairs in the dreary, dull, white front room where the contractors enter. The rest of the men, with little chance of getting out that day, sit in a large room with cafeteria tables, two televisions, a magazine stand, and a computer, the anteroom, where the 10-cent coffee is sold, or a fenced-in outer area set aside for smokers." (WORLD & I) The article profiles a Day Labor Center in Fort Worth, Texas, discussing many of the hardships that workers face trying to find employment on a day by day basis.
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