Category Archives: Economy

Lincoln mill’s restart shows papermaking still pays | Bangor Daily News

Lincoln mill’s restart shows papermaking still pays | Bangor Daily News

Mushers embark on grueling race | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Mushers embark on grueling race | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Anniversary that just isn’t worth cotton, paper or China

The traditional gift for the second anniversary is supposed to be cotton. Unless you are in the United Kingdom and then it is paper. (Those Brits are always throwing a wrench in things.)

Of course, a modern gift for the second anniversary is China.

Today I am “celebrating” a second anniversary that is not worth any of those gifts. Today marks two years since I was laid off from work after 22 years in journalism.

It has been a time of disappointment, discouragement, loss, fear and sadness. It also has been a time of growth, I think. But someone else can judge that, because “they” always do.

I do not want to belabor this whole unemployment thing. (Or should I write that I do not want to belabor the lack of labor?) I already have written about losing my job and the struggles searching for a job for which a prospective employer likely looks at me as “overqualified” – and, therefore, thought to want a large salary that would cause a strain on his or her budget for wages – or “undertrained” – which is probable for anyone born in a time when televisions still used tubes, not transistors.

I continue to be frustrated in my considerable effort to find suitable work. I continue to apply for openings in journalism since that is the vocation for which I am trained. I also look for employment with nonprofits, environmental and green industries, colleges and universities, and local, state and federal governments.

No luck … yet.

But news about the economy is getting better. … Isn’t it?

There are 13.7 million Americans out of work. That figure is twice what it was before The Great Recession, but lower than it had been. That is an improvement. … Why does it not feel like an improvement?

I have run through my Unemployment Insurance benefits and now I am living on the money from a small IRA. I do pray – I have been doing more praying – that I will find a job before that money runs out. Not really sure what will happen when I run out of that money, but it very likely will include moving out of California.

But I will get by. Somehow.

Anyway, I really did not want to spend too much time at this. The second anniversary really does not mean anything. Not really.

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Maine governor’s budget brings out hundreds of union workers in protest | Bangor Daily News

Maine governor’s budget brings out hundreds of union workers in protest | Bangor Daily News

Oysters in Maine: A fishery’s uncertain fate| Maine Sunday Telegram

Oysters in Maine: A fishery’s uncertain fate| Maine Sunday Telegram

Record lobster harvest for state | Maine Sunday Telegram

 

24th annual Camden Conference focuses on U.S.-Asian relations | Bangor Daily News

24th annual Camden Conference focuses on U.S.-Asian relations | Bangor Daily News

 

World Cup Biathlon in Fort Kent

Biathlon memories stick as athletes part | Bangor Daily News

World Cup Biathlon: One fantastic finish | Portland Press Herald

Hall-of-Famer Pippen enjoys biathlon baptism| Bangor Daily News

Katahdin region paper mills find tentative buyer | Bangor Daily News

Katahdin region paper mills find tentative buyer | Bangor Daily News

LePage budget proposes spending increases, changes for state workers, welfare | Bangor Daily News

LePage budget proposes spending increases, changes for state workers, welfare | Bangor Daily News

For many older Maine workers retirement is not an option | Bangor Daily News

For many older Maine workers retirement is not an option | Bangor Daily News

World Cup Biathlon moves to Fort Kent | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

World Cup Biathlon moves to Fort Kent | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

WORLD CUP NO. 8

WHERE: 10th Mountain Ski Center, Fort Kent

THURSDAY: Men’s 10K sprint

FRIDAY: Women’s 7.5K sprint

SATURDAY: Men’s 12.5K pursuit and women’s 10K pursuit

SUNDAY: Men’s 15K mass start and women’s 12.5K mass start

Biathlon World Cup at Nordic Heritage Center

Added snow makes conditions tougher in Biathlon World Cup | Maine Sunday Telegram

Germany cruises in mixed relay at Cup biathlon; US team finishes 7th | Bangor Daily News

Mogul’s 1M-acre Maine buy may put him atop US landowner list | Bangor Daily News

Mogul’s 1M-acre Maine buy may put him atop US landowner list | Bangor Daily News

Biathlon World Cup in Presque Isle

Sweden’s Ekholm, Germany’s Peiffer claim biathlon sprint races | Bangor Daily News

Students volunteer medical assistance at biathlon | Bangor Daily News

Biathlon World Cup opening day becomes a team effort: Late replacement on U.S. team drives from New York to compete in men’s 10K sprint | Portland Press Herald

Resolving that these will be the best resolutions – ever

Here I go again writing down resolutions for the new year.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know, I know, I know! I’m posting this very nearly on the last day of the first month of the year. Resolutions should come before the new year or very soon after the start of the year, not at the end of the first month.

I mean, after all, most people have made and broken their resolutions a dozen times over by now.

But I was tied up on the job search and other projects so I could not get to it the way I wanted.

And, yes, I considered making “improving time management” one of my resolutions. … But I ran out of time.

Each year most of us look at what we have done during the past year, perhaps cringe a bit, and vow never ever to do those things again.
We vow to stop smoking. To drink less. To work out more and drop those nagging 20 pounds. We promise to take more time for our families, for ourselves. We pledge to be better in everything we do.

But it hardly works out the way we plan.

That is OK. We are human. We are not perfect. A few flaws are part of our character.

And so is trying to fix those flaws.

Here are my resolutions for 2011. Well, my resolutions for 11 months of 2011, anyway:

1) Find fulfilling, meaningful, suitable work. I have been out of work since March 2009. That is much, much too long to be out of work, trust me. It is has been financially and emotionally devastating and demoralizing and frustrating and disheartening … you get the point.

Not long ago I saw a television news story about the passage of the extension of unemployment insurance benefits as part of the continuation of the Bush-era tax breaks. A fellow was interviewed who had just been laid off and said that if he did not have a job after a year, then he did not deserve the benefits.

Of course, he was JUST laid off as the economy seems to be making a move upward. It would have been interesting to talk to that guy if he had been in my situation.

I want to work and work soon. I have been working since I was a teen. I worked a green chain at 16 or 17 and held down three part-time jobs while going to college fulltime. I know how to work. And I want to work. I just need a chance to prove myself to others.

2) Be more diligent at updating this blog and my for-fun blog, “Coffeehouse Observer.” I wrote in an earlier blog entry that was going to be my No. 1 resolution for 2011 (“Vowing to be a better blogger … I promise,” “Letters From Away,” Jan. 1, 2011), but then realized there is nothing more important to me than finding work, as it has been for nearly two years. Being a more diligent blogger will have to be No. 2.

A head cold sort of derailed that effort for a while, putting me behind in other things that are of higher priority, such as finding a job. I blogged about that, too. (“Polishing up vow to be a better blogger – I promise … again,” “Letters From Away,” Jan. 13, 2011)

3) Which all sort of brings me to Resolution No. 3 – stop putting off eliminating procrastination from my life. Yeah, perhaps it should be No. 1 – especially since we are into the third week of the new year and most people have already broken their resolutions – but at least it made the top five.

Most years I make at least five resolutions. I can prove it because I’ve written about resolutions in the past as a blogger and before:

“Resolving to avoid resolutions this year … or not,” “Letters From Away,” Dec. 31, 2009 and

“Tips for sustaining a job search in 2010,” “Letters From Away,” Jan. 2, 2010.

This year, three seems plenty.

I resolve to do my best to follow the spirit – if not the letter – of these resolutions and perhaps dip into the old resolutions that have gone unfulfilled. And as with most things, better late than never at all.

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Advocates urge focus on facts, not stereotypes, as Maine Legislature tackles welfare | Bangor Daily News

Advocates urge focus on facts, not stereotypes, as Maine Legislature tackles welfare | Bangor Daily News

 

Enviros: For Good & God, LePage Should Go Green | DownEast.com blogs

Enviros: For Good & God, LePage Should Go Green | DownEast.com blogs

Maine getting $2.8 million in LIHEAP emergency funds | Bangor Daily News

Maine getting $2.8 million in LIHEAP emergency funds | Bangor Daily News

Maine Gov. LePage: Loosen rules on environment | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

[This guy is getting scarier all the time. — KM]

Maine Gov. LePage: Loosen rules on environment | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Acadian Congress chooses executive director | Bangor Daily News

Acadian Congress chooses executive director | Bangor Daily News