Monday, June 17, 2013

Filling the Unemployment Quagmire



NYS Dept. of Labor’s Preliminary Area Unemployment Rates monthly report for April 2013 puts the state’s rate at 7.8%, which is the state’s lowest level since March 2009.  NYC’s rate (all 5 boroughs) for April was 7.7%.  This is down from 8.5% since the preceding month.  These figures strongly suggest that the local economy is bouncing back from the “Great Recession”.
Digging deeper reveals where high unemployment persists.  The Bronx County’s rate is 10.5% and Kings County’s is 8.4%, followed by Queens, Richmond County, and New York County at 6.9%, 6.7%, and 6.5%, respectively.
Census 2010 and historic residential patterns show that the Bronx is the home of most Hispanics and Brooklyn having the highest number of blacks in the City.  Could it be that NYC blacks and Hispanics experience higher unemployment than other New Yorkers?  Unfortunately, this is the case.
April 2013 figures for NYC Human Resources Administration’s three cash assistance programs count 363,991 recipients where most reside in Brooklyn (36.8%) and the Bronx (32.5%).  The case heads, regardless of residence, are primarily black (46%) and Hispanic (42.3%) for these programs.  White and Other are cumulatively a distant 11.67%.
What accounts for the high unemployment?  “Lack of education makes them unemployable”, asserts Michelle George, Brooklyn Community District 8 Manager.  This district covers Prospect Heights, northern Crown Heights, and Weeksville.  “Their high school dropout rates are higher than whites and the types of jobs that ‘lack of education’ affords—fast food and retail—[this population] doesn’t want”.  Workforce One Centers are dealing with this aversion by preparing Workforce One members for such employment.  Their clients include Home Depot, Lowe’s, Victoria’s Secret, Hale & Hearty Soups, and Burger Shack.
Glen Ettienne, owner of Delux Gallery Natural Hair Salon, in Clinton Hill, contends media exposure shapes young blacks' and Hispanics' life decisions.  “The people who own the press understand that we’re followers.  50% can’t think for themselves.  In owning the press, they can sway the public”.  Ettienne believes the music industry is another influencer.  “The original rap music was conscious rap that lifted us”, Ettienne opines. “So the record executives had the musicians change their lyrics.  Now nobody raps about going to college, respecting your brother, or raising your child.  'It’s drive a nice car', 'get, the money', 'get the bitches'”.
Others observe that neither public schools nor parents are adequately presenting the breadth of career and occupation options that youth could consider.  There are black businesses that admirably weather the current economic climate.  Black Enterprise’s Industry Leaders lists include many local enterprises.  Kristal Auto Mall, Uniworld Group, Inc., the Brooklyn-based advertising agency, Carver Federal, with branches in three boroughs, Valentine Mfg, in Hauppauge, and Prime Access, a marketing company need mentioning.
Where there is no apparent work people must make work.  One recession-proof industry is food and beverages.  Lowell Hawthorne turned one Caribbean cuisine restaurant into a franchise called Golden Crust Caribbean Bakery & Grill.  Franchising resulted in not only a business for Hawthorne and his co-founder but businesses and employment for 120 franchises.
Franchising can be an expensive proposition.  Golden Crust franchisees invest between $173,000 and $564,000 to operate the moneymakers.  There are franchises that require much lower cash outlays.  Janitorial franchises are within reach of moderate income households.  The investment ranges between $1,500 and $55,000.  JAN-Pro Cleaning Systems with 10,414 franchises in the US counts 2,675 franchises owned by black executives.  Investment is from $3,145 to $50,130.  Returning to attitudes, blacks and Hispanics must rethink what is worthy work and how to build wealth, if the community is determined to solve the unemployment quagmire.

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Match Made in Cyber



The tri-state region went from chilly-spring to midsummer-like weather all in the month of May.  Soon summer love madness will be in full effect before June is out.  Do you have your options to meet your spouse-to-be or a summer amour?  Many people choose cyberspace to connect with those special “someones”.
The pioneer of web romance connections is Match.com.  Going live in 1995, Match.com still offers online and face-to-face local events.  Quantcast.com, the digital advertising company, estimates 120.5 million Americans visit the site per month.  77% identify as Caucasian; 9% as African American; 9% as Hispanic; and 5% as Asian or Other.  If a subscriber has challenges in waxing dynamic statements to catch the imagination of prospects, Match.com has Profile Pro® that assigns writers to be the Cyrano de Bergerac for them.
Chemistry.com is Match’s sophisticated sister site.  Here subscribers take personality tests, write profile essays; and receive Chemistry Coaching to improve social skills.  Dr. Helen Fisher is the in-house psychologist.  While Quantcast.com estimates “84.6 thousand Americans visit this site monthly”, Chemistry.com boasts having “over 13 million people worldwide who completed the personality test.”
Apparently having a psychologist on staff adds to creditability.  e-Harmony.com is founded by Dr. Neil Warren who established “the 29 Dimensions of Capability”.  PerfectMatch.com relies on Dr. Pepper Schwartz and her Duet® Total Compatibility. Zoosk, the tidal wave that swept the online dating and social networking scene in 2006, doesn’t trumpet a Ph.D. but uses “Behavioral Matchmaking”.  Why is Zoosk the tidal wave ?  “Over 40 million people globally log onto to it and it has 12.5 million Facebook Likes.
Zoosk is “available in 25 languages and subscribers in over 70 countries”.  As opposed to finding long-term, committed relationships, Zoosk positions itself as “a fun and social online dating experience”.  Zoosk offers a Facebook dating app, a Mobile dating app, a singles chat, and video messaging.  These offerings can keep things flirty and non-tactile.
Dr. Julie Spooner, Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology, practicing in Brooklyn, recognizes the value of such sites.  “As a clinician I have recommended it to people who have trouble meeting people.  I don’t suggest it to everyone.  If I see that the person can’t meet others, [I present it as a means] to exponentially increase the number of people to meet”.
If the income levels and educational attainment of subscribers to four of the reviewed sites are factual, then roughly 57% of subscribers have completed undergraduate studies and did some graduate studies.  Most are prosperous with six-figure incomes.  Is this truth or ‘rubbery’ truth?
Dr. Spooner “encourages moving to the telephone and then moving to the face-to-face meeting.  You shouldn’t interact exclusively online.  The voice and facial expressions are not there for intimate communication”.  Zoosk tries to keep things transparent by virtue of its parent Facebook.  One need only visit FB profiles.  Dr. Lisa Orbé-Austin, Ph.D., a partner in Dynamic Transitions Psychological Consulting, LLP, also sees the value in online dating and has clients who share the good and bad aspects of it.  The bad being where “some women are surprised by men that were simply interested in a physical relationship.  However, they later realized that it’s a function of the particular site to which they were subscribed”.
Some people reject the online scene.  Take Hapi Kamenthu, Merr (director) of The Earth Center of Maanu, in New York.  She believes it would be “disastrous” if online dating were to eclipse face-to-face as the first choice in the initial meeting between people.  “It would be disastrous because the modern educational system doesn’t teach people about themselves and their roles in life.  Traditionally, [people] will do extensive family background checks”.  Dr. Orbé-Austin doesn’t see it eclipsing face-to-face but, “thinks that online dating will be one of the primary ways that people meet.  This is not a conversation that I was having with my clients 10 years ago, but now it’s a very normal part of the dating discussion.”

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