DiogenesTheWiser
Well-Known Member
http://www.foxbusiness.com/features/2017/05/26/rural-america-is-new-inner-city-2.html
I used the fox business site because the Wall Street Journal requires a subscription to read their shit. Fox business news reprinted the article, linked above.
I currently live in rural America and have since 2010 once my prison outreach organization got off the ground and I began coordinating field work. Since I work at prisons with prisoners, this has taken me to several rural communities from West Virginia to Georgia, and now, finally, in Louisiana. I'll be in Texas by this time next year if our deals with state government pan out.
Louisiana's rural communities in the northern part of the state are hopelessly backward. Few jobs exist here, and most of the people here, white and black, are impoverished and they work. Yes, they work, upward of 50 to 60 hours or more a week at usually two part-time jobs that both pay $8/hour if they're lucky.
The major industries here are gaming, poultry processing, paper mill work, agricultural labor. Gaming pays well, but the casinos aren't hiring and they've staffed their skilled positions with mostly trained workers from other gambling communities like Atlantic City, North Mississippi, or St. Joe, MO.
The poultry processing is the worst of the worst--very low pay. Usually at $7.50/hour for the first year, and the first raise is $.25. No benefits.
People here tend to be hopeless. If folks are smart, they get an education and get out and only return to visit family on holidays. Walking my dog every day, I see spent condoms on the streets alongside broken crack pipes and the little containers that hold crystal meth (and a lot of cigarette butts). I also see lotto cards and receipts. The typical convenience store trip here takes a moment or two because the person in front of you is buying lotto tickets because they're hoping, and praying, that they can get some money to get out of this hell.
Louisiana's rural communities along I-20 are filled with hopeless people. Thanks GOP state and local governments for this.
I used the fox business site because the Wall Street Journal requires a subscription to read their shit. Fox business news reprinted the article, linked above.
I currently live in rural America and have since 2010 once my prison outreach organization got off the ground and I began coordinating field work. Since I work at prisons with prisoners, this has taken me to several rural communities from West Virginia to Georgia, and now, finally, in Louisiana. I'll be in Texas by this time next year if our deals with state government pan out.
Louisiana's rural communities in the northern part of the state are hopelessly backward. Few jobs exist here, and most of the people here, white and black, are impoverished and they work. Yes, they work, upward of 50 to 60 hours or more a week at usually two part-time jobs that both pay $8/hour if they're lucky.
The major industries here are gaming, poultry processing, paper mill work, agricultural labor. Gaming pays well, but the casinos aren't hiring and they've staffed their skilled positions with mostly trained workers from other gambling communities like Atlantic City, North Mississippi, or St. Joe, MO.
The poultry processing is the worst of the worst--very low pay. Usually at $7.50/hour for the first year, and the first raise is $.25. No benefits.
People here tend to be hopeless. If folks are smart, they get an education and get out and only return to visit family on holidays. Walking my dog every day, I see spent condoms on the streets alongside broken crack pipes and the little containers that hold crystal meth (and a lot of cigarette butts). I also see lotto cards and receipts. The typical convenience store trip here takes a moment or two because the person in front of you is buying lotto tickets because they're hoping, and praying, that they can get some money to get out of this hell.
Louisiana's rural communities along I-20 are filled with hopeless people. Thanks GOP state and local governments for this.