This story appeared in the Facebook Group: "ATOS Miracles". If you're not a member - sign up now! I would love to give credit for the author, but it seems to have been anonymous. Whoever you are, thank you!!
A very
powerful short story on the consequences of workfare I believe everyone should
read. Many thanks to one of our members for sharing this with us.
Coming
to an area near you..... A Grafter’s Tale…..
October,
2015.
“God
this rain is like ice!” I think as I pedal as hard as I can up the hill. “Well
at least it’s not too much further” I reassure myself as my thighs and lungs
burn. Not long after I arrive at work, park and lock the bike up and go inside
to change into my factory worker clothes before my shift begins. I’ve worked
here on the factory floor for 11 years now and am very proud of my long,
sickness-free tenure. Of course it’s not like it used to be. Years ago there
was always overtime available and an honest hard-working bloke like me could
earn a packet! Now I’m lucky to have a job I suppose. Of course, my ethos has
always been: “look after your job and it’ll look after you!” My employers, an
international manufacturing company, know that I am the sort of bloke they want
and I never take advantage. I am confident they’ll look after me. As I clock in
and begin work I am washed in the reassuring sound of machinery working and men
shouting. I breathe in the unique scents that tell me I can hold my head high
because I have never skived in my life. I married my partner Shelley 4 years
ago and we have 2 kids and a 3rd on the way. This last one wasn’t planned but
that’s ok. Shelley is like me – a hard worker who loves her administration job
at the local university and between us we earn enough to pay the mortgage and
have a holiday each year. “What the hell’s that lazy scrounger done this time?”
I muse as I see the floor manager rushing over and berating one the yellows –
the term that’s been coined for the free-workers or long-term unemployed
working for free here. Don’t get it myself – the company keeps saying profits
are down and there’s not enough work yet the numbers of yellows keep rising, as
do the numbers of redundancies. Mind you it’s good to see them having to work
for my tax for a change - makes me proud to have voted for the Tories the last
two times. “Oh well, keep your head down and plough through – what do I know of
balance sheets and statistics? I’m just a Good Ol’ Grafter” I remind myself. Of
course times are harder now and the money doesn’t go as far – how the heck the
utility and fuel prices keep going up I do not know! – but then we’re in a
recession (or was as we’re told by the Powers That Be!) so we all have to keep
our heads down, tighten our belts and suffer through it. It sits ill in my gut
though that all those layabouts on the dole get more than we do though – we
struggle just to live a decent life and can’t afford all the new phones and
gadgets yet all those bloody skivers get it all! Makes me sick! Of course
they’re not ALL like that I know! After all, George isn’t a scrounger either
but still out of work. Can’t understand it myself – I can still remember the
day he found out… George and I go way back. We began here the same year and I
kind of took him under my wing when he began several months after me. The same
age, we knew each other in school but weren’t close back then. He’s a grafter
like me – never took a sickie in his life although he did have that glandular
fever back in 2008 and was off sick for a few months. That was hard financially
on him and Pat, his partner then but wife now. They got married same year we
did and their 3rd son was born early last year. He and I were team buddies all
the way. I look with contempt at the yellow that’s working at George’s old
station next to me. “No point getting to know any of them” I remind myself,
“They’re never here long”. The 1st break bell sounds and I stop my machine and
head out for some fresh air and a cuppa, musing on the way of how it all went
bad for George over a year ago now.
George
was called in for his annual review. We all hated it but neither George nor I
was worried. We’d both always got good reviews and knew we had nothing to worry
about. They were always making redundancies but they’d never get rid of a
couple of long time grafters like us. I patted George on his back as he left
for his and gave a sigh of relief that mine was over already and carried on
working. Didn’t think much of it but wondered why his was taking so long when I
went for lunch. “Must’ve been called to train someone up” I thought as I ate
the cheese and tomato sarnies Shelley made for me that morning. After lunch and
still no George I called out to Dick the floor manager as he was rushing past:
“Hey Dick, where’s George!?” but he never gave a reply despite my knowing he
heard me. As the day wore on I got more and more worried but reassured myself
with thoughts like “He must’ve came down funny or something and gone home” but
knowing inside he’d never leave without telling me, his best bud! When I walked
in the door that night Shelley was on the phone crying and I could hear Pat’s
tear-filled wails over the line and my heart sank like a stone. “What’s
happened?” I shouted as I rushed to her. “George was laid off today!” she says
as she turns away to keep consoling Pat. “What the heck?” I think as I grab my
mobile to ring him. Anyway turns out the company laid him off despite his
record! Turns out that short time off sick all that time ago, him starting
later than me and the economic downturn have all conspired against poor old
George! “Poor bugger!” I muse as I sigh in relief and thank my lucky stars
guiltily. Course I haven’t got the time to keep up with him now but Shelley and
Pat still talk. For a while we still had our barbecues and games nights but as
the months went by he began to change… at first he was out all day every day
looking for work but as time went on and he had no luck he stopped trying so
hard. He started cancelling on us and when we did see him he was obviously
letting himself go. Shelley tells me Pat’s at her wits end with worry about
him. Which she don’t need on top of everything else. I hear they’re losing the
house now as he hasn’t managed to get another job. Don’t understand it myself –
a grafter like him with all his experience but Pat says all the factories are
laying off and there’s no jobs and what I see and hear backs that up. Anyway
it’s third break and I head to the office to see about any overtime – even
though I know there won’t be any as usual but I have to try if we want to save
enough for a holiday next year. As I walk the lines I spot a yellow that looks
a bit familiar and as I get closer I can’t believe it!
“George!?”
I shout to the bloke’s back as he slouches along in front of me. The bloke
turns, reluctantly and replies “Hey Dave. How ya doin mate?” ,looking at the
floor.
I can’t
believe it! “Mate, they take you back on then?” I ask hopefully, but knowing it
can’t be that as he’s wearing yellow!
“nah,
mate. I been on the dole too long mate and now I gotta work full time for my
dole money” he admits. He looks rough I have to say – I’m shocked at the
difference but then it’s been a while since I last saw him, I realise a little
guiltily.
“You’re
kidding mate! But no one was looking harder than you! Pat told Shelley how you
were out pounding the streets all day every day!” I exclaim.
“Don’t
matter mate. Rules are rules. Now I gotta look in the evenings and weekends.
Gotta say tho’ mate – it sticks in my groat that I’m now doing my old job for
free!”
He
rushes on, “Was gonna stop by and say hello when I could of course” he mumbles,
avoiding looking me in the eye.
As I
stand there I’m stunned and suddenly it all makes sense – the ever increasing
numbers of yellows that now seem equal to us blues; the constant lay-offs, the
rumours of the never-higher numbers of sk…unemployed; the ever-rising costs of
living and I realise, with a gut-wrenching sense of guilt and shame, that I did
this! Me! After all – my vote counts too doesn’t it?
Then, as
I stand there looking at poor George who has never looked so ashamed and
downhearted as long as I’ve known him, I hear the floor manager shouting:
“DAVE! MANAGER NEEDS YOU IN HIS OFFICE RIGHT NOW! DON’T BOTHER SHUTTING YOUR
STATION DOWN – WE HAVE A NEW YELLOW THAT’LL FILL IT!” and I just know, with a
sinking feeling, that it’ll be me going to the dole office tomorrow and Shelley
who’ll be crying on my shoulder tonight.
so the 'yellows' get more money, have greater job security, contribute to the recovering economy by keeping businesses afloat, and have a growing CV (sounds like they don't stay put for long). This all sounds like a good thing to me.
ReplyDeleteI'm hoping that was just an ironic poke!
ReplyDelete