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In January 2009, Wayne Drescher of Mishawaka, Ind., lost his job of 23 years as an auto-industry engineer. Since then, he's landed just two interviews; neither led to a job. "I'm 59 years old and for the first time in my life have filed for food stamps," he says. "I have no health insurance at all." Eventually, employers will find they can't keep squeezing ever-higher output from their slimmed-down staffs that survived the recession. Stronger customer demand will require more workers. Reports from the Institute for Supply Management indicate that both service and manufacturing companies plan to step up hiring because of a rise in orders. Even then, many of the unemployed may be left out. That's because even companies that must hire will often avoid unemployed applicants
-- especially those who've been out of work for many months. Some employers worry that workers lose skills when they're idle for months. They also fret that formerly unemployed workers wouldn't stay long in a new job, especially if it carried less pay and stature than their old jobs
-- and that they'd quit once a better opportunity arose. "There's a lot of hiring managers that think that way: 'Only get me people who are already working,'" says Andrew Beck, 59, who's been unemployed since he lost his PR job at a Connecticut hospital chain in March 2009. "They must think we're lazy or we're no good." Beck estimates he's sent out more than 600 resumes and had 25 interviews in nearly two years. No luck. He and other long-term unemployed are evidence that the longer you're out of a job, the harder it often is to find one. The Labor Department says that at the end of last year, 28 percent of people who'd been unemployed for fewer than five weeks found a job the next month. By contrast, only 10 percent of those unemployed for at least 27 weeks found work within a month. Long-term unemployment has grown so much that the department is changing how it records it. It will now calculate how many people have been out of work for up to five years. Previously, it tracked long-term unemployment only up to two years. Lorena Atwell, 47, of Orlando, Fla., has sent out 1,200 resumes since she lost her job as an administrative assistant in October 2008. She's exhausted her 99 weeks of unemployment benefits, burned through her savings and struggled with no health insurance. Now, she and her teenage son get by on child-support payments and food donations from church pantries. "It's almost like the best of times and the worst of times," Challenger says. "If you're on the outside, you're still having a hard time getting back in. But if you have a job, you're holding onto it. You have more leverage, and you have more confidence."
[Associated
Press;
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