|
London eventually found a job through Experience Works, a national nonprofit organization that receives money from the Senior Community Service Employment Program, a Labor Department program. The $787 billion economic stimulus package that President Barack Obama signed includes $120 million in additional money for the program, which provides subsidized, part-time community service jobs to low-income workers 55 and older. London works part time at Pennsylvania CareerLink, a state unemployment office in nearby Punxsutawney, Pa. She is happy and healthy, but knows her work days are numbered. "I'm trying not to dwell on the future because right now, I'm just glad I can write a check for the $400 gas bill," she said. "We'll never be able to build up a nest egg again. We didn't have a fancy life, but we took a golf vacation one week out of the year. There's no golf vacations anymore." Darnell Holopirek, 62, of Great Bend, Kan., and her husband are postponing retirement in hopes the economy will turn around. Part of their decision is personal. They don't have enough funds to retire. But she also is motivated as director of institutional advancement at Barton Community College Foundation to stay on the job and help the school as the recession hits its investments and donations. "It's a little bit scary to us when we see people who have retired now looking to having to go back to work," she said. "We sure don't want that to happen to us. We'd rather keep the good jobs that we have that we're happy with, rather than retiring and then in a year or so, finding out that we just can't stay retired." When Randall Gainforth, 55, of Tampa, Fla., retired from his county job in September 2007 after 33 years as a children and family mental health counselor, he took his $130,000 in retirement savings and put it in stocks. He figured that with the help of a broker, he could make more than the 3 percent to 4 percent he was guaranteed by the Florida state retirement system. Today, that account is worth only about half, and the mental health work he started doing in semiretirement is drying up. Gainforth is looking for a job in the medical industry. "I need to work until that money gets built back up," he said. He's hardly alone. The net worth of U.S. households fell by 9 percent over the last three months in 2008. It was the biggest quarterly decline since record keeping began in 1951. "I think most people are scared to death, first of all, about the prospects for the market," said Kelly Campbell, a financial adviser and principal of Campbell Wealth Management in Fairfax, Va. "They feel they've been let down by the market, by their broker and/or by their government. They're paralyzed right now because they don't know what to do." ___ On the Net: AARP: http://www.aarp.org/ Social Security Administration: Experience Works: http://www.experienceworks.org/ Senior Community Service Employment Program: http://www.doleta.gov/seniors/
http://www.ssa.gov/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor