Jan. 25, 2009
Economic Storm Batters Ohio Town
60 Minutes' Scott Pelley Reports From An American Town In The Path Of An Economic Storm
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Play CBS Video Video A Town In Crisis The town of Wilmington, Ohio has been devastated by the economic crisis and, as Scott Pelley reports, DHL, the town's largest employer, is shutting its domestic operation.
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Video The Line In 2003, Scott Pelley reported from food lines in Ohio and found many were the working poor who found it ever more difficult to make ends meet.
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60 Minutes The Air Park A look at recent events impacting the Wilmington Air Park.
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Interactive Eye On The Economy In-depth features on U.S. markets, taxes, employment and the Federal Reserve.
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- Portraits Of Hardship
Since the economic crash of 2008, taxpayers have committed to more than $1 trillion in various bailouts of Wall Street. But not much of that is reaching families in crisis. On kitchen tables, headlines from Washington and New York lie beside unpaid tuition bills and foreclosure notices. After all the speeches and parties of Inauguration Day, what were the families in Wilmington asking?
"Are we going to lose our home? Are we going to be able to pay our property taxes? What are we gonna do for insurance? What are we gonna do for food? You know, and these are questions that you'd never think that we'd ask yourself. And now they're discussions in the home," says Mike O'Machearley, who is losing the job that helped support four children and a grandson.
"They always say that God closes a door, he opens another one. And we have faith that he will," he adds.
Faith is what sustains Wilmington now. Settled by Quakers 200 years ago, it's a community with such an all-American look that it seems like a movie set. About 12,000 people live there. And many, like O'Machearley, work in the last industry you'd expect in a laid back town.
In 1980, Airborne Express turned Wilmington's abandoned Air Force base into a hub for overnight shipping. Eight thousand people found work at what they call "the air park." Then, in 2003 a German company, DHL, bought Airborne in an effort to win a big piece of the U.S. market. It didn't work. The merger was rocky, there were service disruptions, and customers left in droves. With last fall's economic crash, DHL was losing $6 million a day in the U.S.; layoffs started coming by the hundreds.
People who worked there for decades found themselves in DHL-sponsored meetings learning about unemployment.
"We could tell you what we did on a daily basis, but you wouldn't believe it. You know, boxes in a big container, and it'll weigh 800 pounds, you push it out the door through eight inches of snow, and push it up on a barge, and we were idiots enough that we did it by ourselves. We worked as a team, and we had a good friend right along side of us," Keith Rider tells correspondent Scott Pelley.
Clarification: On Jan. 30, DHL Express ended its point-to-point shipping within the United States. Two other DHL brands-DHL Global Forwarding and DHL Global Mail-continue their U.S. domestic operations.
"You're losin' a lot more than a job," Pelley remarks.
"Our friends. It's crazy. You'll never understand it. But we loved it," Rider says.
"I remember people with scarves breathin' through ice in just unreal…eyelashes frozen and I started in '81. And when you worked, you worked. Why weren't we bailed out?" Morris Deufemia asks.
DHL is spending $260 million on severance pay and health insurance that will keep many workers going for several months. But there is a feeling in town that the German company wrecked a successful American business and wiped out thousands of jobs.
"I was educated here, Wilmington city schools and then at Wilmington College," says Mayor David Raizk, who has been getting layoff notices for months.
By federal law, companies have to notify local government when layoffs are coming. Raizk is getting a new letter from DHL every week or so, adding a few hundred at a time to the growing list of lost jobs.
"It's got classifications and numbers on it, but there's not names, addresses and who their wife and their family and children are. So you look at these and at the end of the day, you think that's 800 and some people, folks, live here, work here, you know," Raizk says.
The mayor told 60 Minutes one out of three households has a family member working at the air park.
Angela and John Pica are raising four children on two air park salaries. Angela started at Airborne Express when she was 19. Now, as a supervisor, she walks laid off workers to the company gate and takes their ID badges away.
"Today, I escorted five individuals out today. Last week, I think I escorted three," she tells Pelley.
Asked what the last thing is she says to them, Pica says, "I tell them that I wish them the best. And it has been a pleasure, working with every one of them, because they're a great bunch of people. And they deserve so much better than this."
Did you know…
Produced by Solly Granatstein and Nicole Young
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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See all 157 CommentsI really like the attitude of Mike, the guy making the knives. He knows what it takes to make it and I am sure he will do great!!!
I feel the problem at DHL comes down to "poor management" period!!! Shame on you high paid CEO''''s for taking advantage of the very people that were making your paycheck!!!!
And as for people being upset about having to pull thier child out of college....What are you thinking anyway???!!! If a "child" over 18 is attending college because his/her parents are paying for it all, what are they learning? Maybe they need to consider a job and paying for their own tuition?!! Especially, if mom and dad are loosing their job! I would think those folks have much more to be concerned with than having to stop paying for thier kid to go to college!! Soo many people live beyond thier means and expect a handout! It is shamefull! The old attitude of giving our children more than we had has gotten clear out of control. What happen to "working for what you have"!
It isn''''t just Wilmington! It''''s everywhere! It could be much worse! These hard times should be a wake up call to all of us, to look for small miracles, see things in a positive light, and do your part!
we that are born in this country are AMERICAN regardless of our skin pigmentation. lol sorry this just cracks me up. i''m not trying to be rude nor say that any certain race hasnt suffered due to ignorance of others . suffering is suffering and when that happens we should ALL show compassion and be willing to lend a hand. Not blame other AMERICANS.
these folks are the real deal when it comes to a place that really cares. i,m sure there food pantry could use some help right now.
allen
sugartree ministry
If there was ever a time for finger-pointing, that time has passed. We are all on the same team, here, no matter what state you live in or who you voted for. E Pluribus Unim, no?
If there was ever a time for finger-pointing, that time has passed. We are all on the same team, here, no matter what state you live in or who you voted for. E Pluribus Unim, no?
Three companies, DHL, ABX Air, and ASTAR - we are all getting laid off. For those of you who want to sit around and say we''re fat, lazy Republicans, all I have to say is the majority of people that work here and at facilities around this country work their rears off everyday. As far as red vs blue, well both Obama and McCain were here while they were campaigning. They both wrote letters and demanded a fix and they both got absolutely nowhere. We''re still in the unemployment line. The people of Wilmington and of the surrounding counties are very upset about our own situations, but also very aware that all the ABX hubs in the country closed, DHL stations have gone from 475 to 120, that this doesn''t just effect us but it effects the contractors delivering our freight, the trucking companies that haul it etc. This episode focused on this town, because this is where the impact is the greatest. We know this effects people all over this country. This problem is bigger than Wilmington. While this story focused on three or four families and their stories, there are many thousands of similar stories. But we will do what we always do, we will pick ourselves and our communities up and we will rebuild; we will succeed.
To Mike, Angie, John and the others, thank you. We may not know what the future will bring, but I think we can all agree that it''s important to keep fighting.
My husband agrees with some of the messages we have read. As with any company, you have some employees who don''t put a lot of effort in to making their customers happy. I am thankful that he believes in working hard to please his customers because he understands that in the long run it is his customers who ultimately provide his salary!
How many millionaires/billionaires are in your town...How many people make over $250,000 in your county...
How are those Bush tax cuts treating you...
Your county - Clinton- has you voted Republican for 40-50 plus years.. Why don''t you look at the voting record for your Republican Congressman (Rep Mike Turner) and Senators over that period of time.
What do you people expect... Your surprised... Mmm DHL made a cold hearted business decision and now we are to feel sorry for you.. Sorry but I don''t... No good jobs... mmm
No health insurance?
COBRA too expensive...
Financial Aid for college?
Unemployment Insurance?
Bankruptcy reform?
Anti Union laws...
Trillion dollars for an unnecessary war...
Deregulation, deregulation...
Now you want help ???
Wake up people, next time why don''t you vote with your economic interests instead of listening to your Sunday morning preachers and F*X News.
I''m sure Bush feels bad for you... Remember him the compassionate conservative!!!
This is what happens when people vote against there economic interests.
WAKE UP PEOPLE!!!
if you would like ,you are welcome to bring a couple by the store, i would be honored to sell them for ya!!
we could put them on our website also. i''m in the book under this n that shack.
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