Comments on: Discrimination against the unemployed
- I've got 30 years of experience. How would a 2 year gap cause me to be unemployable? Would they rather we get a job at McDonalds or Wal-Mart in between career positions?
I've tried that, they don't take mid-level managers for part time work! "You'll just leave when things get better, etc..." is the common reason given. I've also tried to take lower-level jobs in my career path: Same excuse given by employers and recruiters. It's a reverse catch-22 for Post-Boomers. - Reply to this comment
- Apart from discrimination from employers, what about EDD? I was employed for 11 years with one company before losing my job and going on a year unemployed...actively seeking employment and, mostly, getting the silent treatment. I am also a US Vet. EDD has delayed 3 of my payments to date because they either want to update my information or schedule phone interviews. I was ready for the first phone interview a few months ago...and their call went directly to voice mail (?????). It took another 2 weeks to get 1 missed benefit payment. Susequently, I lost my apartment. Now I get another request for a phone interview and my benefits are late. I won't be able to pay my phone bill so won't have a phone number for them to call me. I call them but always get a message saying they cannot answer my call and to call back later. No one at the office is willing to speak to me either. What is going on? We have earned our unemployment benefits!
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- While ugly and unfortunate, I am convinced this is the new way companies discriminate based on age. Many companies do not like to hire individuals who may fall into "protected" labor classes for fear of litigation down the road. I've seen this unwritten (and deniable) discrimination first hand over the years in the financial sector. As a manager I was questioned years ago when I hired someone over 50. Now as someone over 50 I see this again first hand. It is the older worker who may not have the new skills nor sufficient experience with the new skills that are in demand. And for that reason they get 'locked out' of potential opportunities even if they have transferable applicable skills.
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- I am 48 and unemployed.Sick and tired of this vicious cycle. Tired of applying everywhere, practicing interview, and rejection letter. Wish I'm dead and be done with this world. Adios.
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- Since 1972 when I turned 16, I've faced discrimination as "no experience" even when applying at a fast food restaurant(to flip a hamburger-you need "experience"?!?), and it continues to this day. There's no government bill or legislation that can or will prohibit discrimination that can prove such a case. Yes, discrimination is against the law, but you must be able to prove it first. It is sad when companies do post "must be currently employed" to be against the unemployed. In the same sense, those very companies, in my opinion, would wind up hurting themselves in the long run when nobody is able to buy anything due to lengthily unemployment. Yes, there should be a law against this type of employment practice-enforcing it is one thing-proving it another. Companies have their choices based on what they want to accomplish in a free market enterprise to make a profit.
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- Employers have every right to select for hire the most qualified applicant who applies for a job opening. There are bona fide cases where an applicant who is currently working is the most qualified, but this can't ALWAYS be the case. Turning away job applicants solely on the grounds of their employment status is unfair, discriminatory, bad HR practice, bad for the economy, and must be prohibited under law.
We're of the view that job seekers also need be proactive in helping to fix the problem of discrimination against the unemployed. The next time you apply for a job and then a recruiter asks you, "Are you currently working?" consider asking immediately "Why do you ask?" and then document their answer. - Reply to this comment
- As someone who has been unemployed since October 1, 2010, I believe this type of discrimination cannot be regulated. All employers with this mentality have to do, is just not overtly say that you "must be currently employed"...and then weed through resumes to exclude those people who are unemployed. It would be as simple as that! Regulations for this type of discrimination would be a waste and impossible to prove.
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- I'm 31, with a BSEE & MBA, who worked 10 years for a single company. Next month will be 10 months without work. I work in defense, and have seen the biggest of companies in the field put these 'must be currently employed' requirements in their openings. I agree it's discrimination. But that also does matter, because they can do the same things behind closed doors without anyone knowing the wiser. I just take these statements as a company putting a big banner over their front door that says "Ethics Probably Not Important Here"
Here is the big thing that irks me. There is among some an unspoken acknowledgement that someone losing a job or getting laid off directly implies that person was not good at their job or unproductive. That is patently false. All companies are not good or even ethical. I lost my job because my company was too focused on a single product line, and sales and contracts plummeted due to circumstances no one could have predicted. But with no other products, what is there to work on? So many people, 50% of a 700 person workforce, were let go 40 or 50 at a time, every 3-4 months, in a direct attempt to circumvent WARN Act requirements. People doing the work, with no connection to the business aspects, are the ones who get let go. The ones who already had retirements were let go. But also people like me, who were (quote) "young enough to start over" because I was single, no kids, and could relocate. Because of sick family I have chosen to stay close to them, in a city were an auto supplier plant closed, putting 200-300 BSEE's on the unemployed line and making it extremely difficult to find a job locally. But that's my choice, and it looks like I'm going to be penalized for not abandoning my family while they are in the hospital.
I was most likely to succeed in my high school class, full-time worked while a full time student to get my degrees and become the first in my family to ever graduate with a 4 year degree. I work my tail off, but the people who do the right things are always the ones who get the pointy end of the stick.
Sometimes a person gets laid off just to make the layoff stand up to legal challenge. If a company lays off all 50yo men, they could be sued for discrimination. So throwing a few young people in keeps the legal challenges at bay.
What does people shifting around the country for employment do to political landscapes? Do states become more obsolete as laws migrate nearer to each other as people move around? What does it do to personal loyalty? I happen to love my home state, but I'm being forced to give that up. I really worry about America's future and I have a hard time believing this is a country worth fighting to change. Has anyone stopped to wonder if our government really does in fact accurately reflect the majority of the people? - Reply to this comment
- Gatta' job you bums.
Or are you only applying for the "Jobs Americans will not do" so the mega-millions" of illegal aliens within the USA are filling those positions?
And you MUST leave openings for the continual million or so legal immigrants allowed in yearly along with the ever-increasing number of H-1B and other job-related visa holders Congress uses to assist their corporate USA masters to enter the USA.
Just OBEY you complainers.
So what if the "Greatest Generation" did not confront the various barriers to employment within the USA as you do today.
All is well.
All is proper and as it should be!!!
Our masters at the apex of the socio-economic pyramid and corporate USA and other such entities are doing very well.
Just OBEY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Prove your patriotism.
OBEY. - Reply to this comment
- I have hit the three mark of unemployment. I have had only a hand full of interviews and no offer of employment. My experience exceeds over 20 years of professional service. I'm beginning to think that a lot of hiring managers are nimrods.
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