Lori Shepler
/ Los Angeles Times
Blacks
lose ground in job slump
Jocelyn Brayton, 40, had built a career in property management
and was running a four-story office building before she was laid
off this month.
California
has a 10.5% unemployment rate -- but 12.5% for African Americans.
Nationally the gap is even wider.
By Ronald D. White and Marc Lifsher March 21, 2009
Reporting
from Sacramento and Los Angeles -- California's unemployment rate
rose for the 11th straight month in February, hitting 10.5% as
a recession-racked economy shed a higher-than-expected 116,000
jobs, the state reported Friday.
The rate
is up from 10.1% in January and is the highest since April 1983.
All but one of 11 industries surveyed lost jobs, with construction
the hardest hit. California employers have cut nearly 606,000
workers from their payrolls since February 2008, driving the state
jobless rate well above the national rate of 8.1%.
The state
is far from hitting bottom, analysts said. Slowing growth in Asia
bodes ill for California's trade-dependent economy. And a painful
wave of cuts is just beginning in the government sector, normally
a reliable source of employment, as the state prepares to lay
off thousands of teachers and other public servants.The
losses are slamming California's minority workers. Black unemployment
-- which tops that of other racial groups in the best of times
-- has reached levels not seen in decades. The average annual
unemployment rate among blacks in California was 12.5% in February,
compared with 7.8% for whites and 10.4% for Latinos, whose jobless
rate has grown faster than that of other groups because of a heavy
dependence on construction jobs. These ethnic group data are compiled
as moving averages of unemployment rates from the previous 12
months.
Nationally,
the picture for blacks is even worse. The overall unemployment
rate for blacks in February climbed to 13.4%, while the rate for
black men reached 16.3%, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
"Last hired, first
fired" is an old adage in the African American community.
Factory hands and the unskilled have long been whipsawed by the
economy's downturns. Now layoffs are beginning to reach a once
fast-growing cohort of black professionals, managers and government
workers, including many who overcame discrimination and limited
economic and educational opportunities to win quality jobs.
Jocelyn Brayton is
a 40-year-old single mother with a teenage son, whose self-confidence
and determination spurred her to get off welfare and work her
way up through the ranks of a couple of property management firms.
She was running a four-story office building in Orange when she
was laid off this month.
"This
is the first time since my son was a baby that I don't have a
job," said the Santa Ana resident. Brayton has cut back on
her telephone service and canceled her satellite television service.
She told her 16-year-old son, Zaine, to start looking for work
to help with household expenses.
While the recession
has touched virtually every industry, it has battered traditional
strongholds of black employment and is threatening such secure
bastions as public education and government services.
Nationally, the troubled
auto industry, which has been particularly welcoming to African
Americans, has slashed tens of thousands of high-paying, unionized
positions. Retail, services and manufacturing, which disproportionately
hire blacks, have slumped.
In Southern
California, the downturn has hurt African American men, who are
heavily represented in many blue-collar industries. The effects
of slowing trade with China are rippling through the ports of
Los Angeles and Long Beach, long a steady source of work for black
longshoremen, truckers and warehouse workers. Since February 2008,
more jobs have been lost in California's trade, transportation
and utilities sector -- nearly 160,000 -- than in any other industry
segment.

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The
growing layoffs among higher-paid African Americans and steep foreclosure
rates in their neighborhoods are dealing a crippling blow to the
nation's black middle class, community leaders say.
"I have
not seen anything like this. It's just different," said the
Rev. Norman Johnson, pastor of the First New Christian Fellowship
Missionary Baptist Church in South Los Angeles. The church's food
bank serves about 700 families a month, up from 400 before the recession
started.
"A lot
of middle-class African Americans built their wealth through their
homes," he said. "With the declines in real estate we
have seen, they are really struggling."
Catrisa Booker,
a 12-year veteran of the Los Angeles public school system, fears
she's about to be locked in just that struggle. Until this month,
Booker thought she had it made, earning a six-figure salary as a
reading and writing specialist. On the side, she was close to finishing
work on a doctorate in educational administration at Pepperdine
University.
Then she got
the news that her position was being eliminated because of recession-related
budget cuts. If she's lucky enough to land a teaching job back in
the classroom -- and that's far from certain -- she would have to
take a 40% pay cut.
"It's
disheartening," said Booker, whose mother and father were also
longtime employees of the Los Angeles Unified School District. "I
feel like I did everything the right way. I went back to school.
I kept improving my credentials."
The crumbling
economy can be even crueler for black workers with less education,
skills or job experience than Booker or Brayton.
Eight months
ago, Aaron Collins lost his job at a Nebraska homeless center and
was forced to move back to Los Angeles to live with his grandmother.
But the part-time electrical engineering student couldn't find work,
even as a janitor or dishwasher. The 31-year-old is now looking
to enlist in the Army despite anxieties about being sent to Iraq
or Afghanistan.
"I'm hoping
it will set me up for a better career," he said.
The Economic
Policy Institute, a Washington think tank, in January projected
that black joblessness could hit a peak of 18.2% nationally by mid-2010,
and head even higher for black males and teens, who are plagued
by a lack of education, little job training and high incarceration
rates.
African American
community leaders and academics are hoping that President Obama
-- the ultimate glass-ceiling smasher -- and his $787-billion economic
stimulus program will keep the institute's grim estimate at bay
by giving blacks more career options than joining the military.
That can be a tall order
in tough times, says Lola Smallwood Cuevas, project director for
the African American Union Leadership School at the UCLA Institute
for Research on Labor and Employment.
A long-term fix needs
to focus on "how do we create real jobs locally in the state
of California that provide people with an opportunity to support
themselves and their families," she said. To make that happen,
she said, prospective workers need to be trained in cutting-edge,
alternative-energy technology and other needed skills in "green"
construction, healthcare and other growing fields.
Targeting federal
stimulus money to "the community that suffers disproportionately
from unemployment so we can reduce racial and ethnic disparities"
is an essential part of the fix, says Austin Algernon, a sociologist
who directs the Economic Policy Institute's Program on Race, Ethnicity
and the Economy.
But, that alone won't
be enough to bring down black unemployment substantially.
"There's
no way the black community will improve without the rest of the
economy improving," he said.
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