Life in ObamaNation

March 14, 2009

Rabies Clinic Today in Nashville

For those of you who need rabies shots for your pets, here’s a low cost alternative. We’re taking our cats this afternoon. Normally, Tiger and Christmas receive the full vetting yearly, but we are on a limited income this year. This item is from the morning Tennessean:

$10 rabies shots offered today in Nashville

March 14, 2009

Low-cost rabies shots will be available today in Nashville, the first of three weekends of clinics this month sponsored by the Metro Public Health Department and the Nashville Academy of Veterinary Medicine.

Rabies vaccinations for dogs and cats will be offered 1-4 p.m. for $10 each, less than the average vaccination and office visit charged at area veterinary offices. Tags also help identify stray or lost pets.

Today’s locations: Dodson Elementary School, 4401 Chandler Road; McGavock Elementary School, 275 McGavock Pike; Joelton Middle School, 3500 Old Clarksville Pike; Madison School, 300 Old Hickory Blvd.; Bellevue Middle School, 655 Colice Jeanne Road; Bordeaux Elementary School, 1910 S. Hamilton Road; Hillsboro High School, 3812 Hillsboro Pike; Rosebank Elementary School, 1012 Preston Drive; DuPont Elementary School, 1311 Ninth St. in Old Hickory; and Metro Animal Care and Control, 5125 Harding Place.

February 20, 2009

Volunteer on May 14

The Metro Beautification Environment Commission needs groups of volunteers for the Great American Clean Up event in downtown Nashville on May 14. Here are the facts:

NASHVILLE’S GREAT AMERICAN CLEANUP EVENT
THE TENNESSEE BICENTENNIAL MALL
Thursday, May 14, 2009, 8 a.m – 4:00 p.m.
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED – PLEASE JOIN US!

Be one of the 1,000 + volunteers coming to Nashville
from all 95 counties in the State of Tennessee

Participate in cleanup projects, beautification projects, litter pick up, waterway cleanups and more

The MBEC needs groups from all over Tennessee. Contact vickie.ingram@nashville.gov. For those of us who are currently unemployed, this is a great opportunity to spend the day helping our community. Stop applying for those Career Builder “marketing” jobs (at least for one day). Hit the streets.

January 30, 2009

The Downslide Continues

Filed under: Unemployment — Barbara Mathieson @ 8:06 am
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From the Tennessean:

50,000 are jobless in Nashville area

Employers have their pick of applicants as state sees worst job market since 1986

By Chas Sisk and Wendy Lee • THE TENNESSEAN • January 30, 2009

It was the boom that brought Calvin Buckley to Nashville.

It was the bust that put him on its streets.

A year ago, Buckley left Memphis for a job welding and bolting steel components for the Terrazzo condominium in the Gulch. After a July layoff, Buckley, 51, found himself out of a job, out of his apartment and out of luck.

“I’m homeless because I can’t work,” Buckley said Thursday at a Nashville job fair for military veterans.

The labor market has tightened across Tennessee, as all 95 of the state’s counties posted a rise in unemployment in December, according to data released Thursday by the state.

The Nashville-Murfreesboro area reported 6.5 percent unemployment, up from a 4.2 percent rate a year ago. Some rural counties in Middle Tennessee were much worse off — with rates as high as 11.3 percent in Smith County.

In the Nashville metropolitan area, the ranks of the unemployed surged past 50,000 people, and thousands more are thought to be underemployed as the state wrestles with its worst job market since 1986.

Many companies have slowed investment in their operations, and people fortunate enough to have jobs have held onto them more firmly, leaving fewer employment opportunities for those out of work.

It’s in this environment that Buckley has been trying to find work. He has sent résumés to 50 employers, trolled online job listings, and even flagged down truck drivers hoping for tips on openings at their companies.

Each time, the answer has been the same: Maybe they’ll hire, if things improve later in 2009.

“That’s not just one company,” Buckley said. “That’s almost every company I went to.”

The tight jobs market has made it hard for people to advance their careers.

Adrian Edsall, 29, earns $15,000 a year teaching classes on health and safety as a part-time instructor at Middle Tennessee State University. He longs for higher pay to provide “a better lifestyle” for his 4-year-old son.

Like Buckley, Edsall searched for a better job at Thursday’s career fair. He has applied for 300 positions, including jobs such as a customer service representative, since being medically discharged from the U.S. Air Force in 2007.

He has been turned down for several positions on the grounds that he is over-qualified. He jokes that he will soon list only his high school diploma on his résumé.

“I’ve not found a better job than the one I have,” Edsall said.

Employers at the job fair at LP Field seemed to have their pick of applicants.

URS Corp., a U.S. military vendor, said it would hire about 50 percent fewer people than a year ago for its Anniston Chemical Agent Disposal Facility in Alabama, in part because fewer people are leaving the facility, said Rhonda Ford, a human resources specialist.

“Because of the economy, we haven’t lost anybody,” Ford said, adding that she sees more white-collar job applicants these days.

Meanwhile, others are considering renewals or first-time hitches in the military amid the slower civilian job market.

The Tennessee Army National Guard has seen a 20 percent to 25 percent increase from a year ago in people expressing interest in joining, said Sgt. 1st Class Julius Santini. He described it as the biggest surge since just after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

“When people are losing their jobs, they are looking for stability,” Santini said.

Rural counties worse

Nationally, on Thursday, the U.S. Labor Department said the number of people continuing to receive unemployment benefits reached a seasonally adjusted 4.78 million for the week ending Jan. 17 — the highest level on records that go back to 1967.

As a proportion of the work force, the latest total is the highest since August 1983.Companies across a variety of industries have been slashing their payrolls by the thousands. Starbucks Corp., Eastman Kodak and Allstate Corp. became the latest major employers to announce big job cuts — 7,000 at Starbucks, 3,500 to 4,500 at Kodak, and 1,000 at Allstate.

“It seems like we’ve gotten through the financial crisis. Now we’re dealing with global synchronized recession,” said Brian Battle, vice president of trading at Performance Trust Capital Partners in Chicago.

In Middle Tennessee, even as jobs become harder to find in urban areas, they are even scarcer in the state’s rural areas.

Thirty-six counties now have an unemployment rate higher than 10 percent, including Macon and Smith counties.

Hardest hit has been Perry County, 90 miles southwest of Nashville. It has been reeling since the auto parts maker Fisher & Co. moved to Mexico in September.

In December, Perry County’s unemployment rate topped 20 percent, and many more are under-employed, said John Carroll, the county’s mayor. Workers at another major auto parts plant have been working on reduced shifts.

“We need more employers in the area,” Carroll said. “We’re trying to attract, but nobody is having a lot of success. A lot of people are not turning loose of the money and investing.”

December 14, 2008

Vote Down English Only in Nashville, Tennessee

Filed under: World Image — Barbara Mathieson @ 12:44 am
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Today I attended a Barack Obama event in Nashville, Tennessee, called Blue County in a Red State. Most of the attendees voted for Barack Obama, but one spouse who attended did not. We welcomed her to the event, as we want to show non-partisanship. We do not want to alienate anyone, as some of us have been ostracized during the Bush years.

None of the attendees were native Nashvillians. For those not living in Nashville, it is a joke that there are no native Nashvillians, or they are rare people. All of us spoke about why we had voted for Obama. We agreed that the work had just begun. We also discussed about the importance of acting locally.

The host mentioned that only 100,000 folks had voted in the August mayoral election, but more than 250,000 voted in the presidential election in our city.

In January, Nashvillians will vote whether or not to pass an English only rule. This means that English would be the only language spoken in the city. We need to defeat this rule, as it is absurd. Nashville is a city of immigrants. There are very few natives.

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