The pandemic and your job

What exactly is an essential job vs a non essential job? I think that distinction depends entirely on ones point of view. In other words my job is essential to ME 'cause it is how I feed, house and clothe myself and my wife.

My automotive industry job was designated essential by our state(Pa.), along with vape stores, beer distributors, etc.
 
I'm a security guard in a town that's overrun with tweakers and street rats and in which the police aren't responding to non violent crimes.
....

You've mentioned this a few times and I've commented back, but I'll comment again. What's happened to the Springs, a place that used to be one of my favorite places, really breaks my heart. The homelessness. The crime rate.

Who would have thought Eastern Nebraska could look more appealing than the Front Range.
 
When the pandemic hit I worked as a QA tech in automotive reman facility. After about one month we started having core shortages and could not get new parts so started some layoffs. I read the writing on the wall and took early retirement. Sold off a bunch of stuff and moved to a remote, fly in location on the peninsula. Never looked back and never been better!

Very interesting, but how do you deal with medical stuff when you live in a remote area of Alaska like that?
 
I slowed down and finally stopped working 4 yrs ago.Having had a stroke 6 months ago and discovering several cardiac problems more recently,I've been keeping a very low profile.Home and the grocery store are my whole world now [emoji33]
But after some surgery (I hope) and a vaccine, I'm busting outta here lol
 
I'm retired, but work two part time jobs. One is doing backgrounds for a local PD and the other is firearms instruction for a very large defense contractor.

Both jobs shut down for the corona.

On a whim, I applied for unemployment and listed my govt pension. It took them about a week to move me from pending approval to approved.

Both jobs are back now so no more unemployment. It paid for some nice guns, my dog's vet bill, and I still have a few grand on the debit card they put the dough on.
 
Very interesting, but how do you deal with medical stuff when you live in a remote area of Alaska like that?

We have a health clinic here but for anything major you have to go somewhere like Dillingham or Anchorage. If it's a stroke or heart attack I suppose you could get medivac but I am in reasonably good health, take no meds, no BP trouble, etc. and don't really spend too much time worrying about it, life's too short.
 
I am retired but my wife's job had no impact other than increased phone traffic. State banned non employees from entering the premise for 4 months.
A friend has rental storage units in a nearby big city. [Butte, MT]
He claims most of his are rented to people recently moved in from other places who found they could work from wherever they wanted and live wherever they wanted.
 
ooking forward to next week, but with some trepidation, because under the best of circumstances, a school bus is a festering sink of contagion.


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Maybe one of these loaded with delousing powder and saltpeter might help :).
 
My automotive industry job was designated essential by our state(Pa.), along with vape stores, beer distributors, etc.

And yet PA closed the state stores, losing hundreds of thousands of dollars to neighboring states that kept them open.

And car dealerships. God forbid you totaled your car in an accident. I drove my sister from Gettysburg to MD to buy a car in May. Since new and used car dealerships were closed here.

This state is screwed up.
 
I'm a security guard in a town that's overrun with tweakers and street rats and in which the police aren't responding to non violent crimes.

I haven't missed a day of work. As a bonus I work alone nights on a 9 acre fenced in site, I don't have to wear a mask and I have zero traffic to deal with going to and from.

Sounds like a dream job to me, but only if armed.
 
Laid off/job eliminated in April.
Was a T53 helicopter turbine engine parts inspector and detail/close tolerance repairman for a small company that does engine overhauls for about $300,000 per engine. Business dried up almost overnight. Owner had to get rid of 75 percent of employees, and may go under yet. Foreign and domestic customers clamped down on budgets until they know what the future holds.
 
And yet PA closed the state stores, losing hundreds of thousands of dollars to neighboring states that kept them open.

And car dealerships. God forbid you totaled your car in an accident. I drove my sister from Gettysburg to MD to buy a car in May. Since new and used car dealerships were closed here.

This state is screwed up.

Why yes, yes we are.
 
Did two months working from home on some general tasks for work. Couldn't do my normal job as it's all proprietary. Back to the office with no restriction in June, mostly because I am a lucky one with an office to myself. I only come out to get coffee, microwave my lunch and pee.
 
"Used" to work for an essential business. However, we made stainless steel cookware for everyone that was forced to close, schools included. There were 3 shifts, they went down to one, with only 15 people. Now I start a new job on Tuesday! One thing I have learned over the years, EVERYONE is expendable. Many of us found out we were essentially, non-essential...
 
I'm retired. So no change for me. Just bored as hell sitting at home.

Younger son works Geek Squad at Best Buy. Even when the store was closed, he kept working.

Older son works for an IT contractor. Currently he's working in a Cummins Turbocharger factory. Just about everything in that place is computer controlled. They had to shut down for a couple of months due to Covid. However, my son's company has a status they call "on the bench". Basically that means you're still employed, but aren't currently working anywhere. They keep paying you while you're on the bench. He's never missed a paycheck.
 
I haven't worked in 12 years despite many opportunities. I just don't feel like working.

The idea of picking essential and non essential workers is a bunch of BS, imo. Politics plays a big part.

The gyms around here opened up before the powers that be gave the ok. They finally got wise and used the " medical exemption". To save face, the governor came out and opened gyms, which he should have done weeks ago when the numbers were much lower. What's up with that? Where's the "science" ? He's someone's puppet.
Right now he's being sued by bar owners, and other businesses.

I'm going to go out on a limb and say 25-33% of mom and pop restaurants go belly up. I get this from just about every one that I go to for a meal or take out. I eat out, or take out, at least twice a week, doing my best to support them. They are hurting badly.
 
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I could not have timed my retirement any better! End of March was my last day on paper. On Friday, March 13th, they told us not to come to work Monday the 16th, my birthday! Only emergency work if needed. I helped my buddy repair a walk-in cooler on the 17th at one of our schools that needed to run because it was one of our schools designated to give out lunches in the parking lot. We weren't laid off, they paid us our 40 hours because they didn't have a clue how to handle what was happening (PGH Public School District). They gave us extra straight time pay if we happened to work after they figured out how to Covid-budget our pays. That was my last day I worked. I planned March 31st 4 months before and had all the paperwork done, thank God! Like I said, I could not have timed it any better! Steamfitters pension, PA schools pension, and Social Security all taken care of.
 
When the court system closed down in March I was informed I was "essential" (or maybe the boss said "expendable", probably best I didn't ask) and would continue working. I was also informed that they did not want us arresting anyone, and since Court was cancelled we wouldn't have any court orders to serve. Until the courts reopened in June I spent my time doing admin work and otherwise remained "on call". I got to keep track of all the people I put in prison getting early release, all the cases we could close after the defendants died from overdoses, and I finally figured out how the new computer system worked. It was the most boring three months of my career, but I was happy to still have a job. Ironically if I had been furloughed I would've made more on enhanced unemployment than I got working.
 
No changes for the wife or myself. She's a pharmacy tech and was considered essential. As management at a grocery store I was also considered essential. We were so busy for about three months that it seemed like Christmas Eve every day. It has finally returned to something close to normal except for the availability of cleaning products and a few other things.
 
And yet PA closed the state stores, losing hundreds of thousands of dollars to neighboring states that kept them open.

And car dealerships. God forbid you totaled your car in an accident. I drove my sister from Gettysburg to MD to buy a car in May. Since new and used car dealerships were closed here.

And our governor closed all the gun shops in PA until my honorary nephew, a firearms law attorney, took the governor to court before the ink was dry on the order and made the governor back down.
 
Pawnshop has been open regular hours the entire time. Myself, I've only worked part-time(semi-retired) for a number of years. My business partner and I rearranged our hours as she has 3 school age kids at home so she could supervise them a little more. Foot traffic has been down but total sales are up. Profits margins down some due to the increased costs of acquiring firearms as a small player. Pawn loans are down close to 50% and very few defaults.
Overall, summer in the area has been a little rocky but I don't anticipate any businesses closing permanently. Hardest hit was probably the large YMCA, they did permanently close one of their off-campus fitness centers.

Ironically, 3 local restaurants closed permanently in December & January.

Daughter works in insurance, has worked the entire time, SIL already worked from home, IT programmer.
Son was furloughed for 3 months, back to work for 4 weeks, off again now for at least 2 weeks. He is Operations Manager at a convention center.
 
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