From a middle-management job to one as a food server is a common story.



From a middle-management job to one as a food server is a common story.
SUDBURY, Mass. (AP) -- Tom Calderini used to supervise three teams of software programmers spread across two states and an office overseas, but that job never tested his "people skills" quite like this.
"Sorry," an apron-clad Calderini says gently, addressing the mother of a girl in purple flip-flops whose head is barely level with his new workstation -- the counter at the local Starbucks. "We're all out of blueberry."
Spoken like a true survivalist in a job market that calls for desperate measures.
Desperate, but increasingly familiar to scores of workers who, unable to find jobs equal to well-paid white-collar positions they lost in layoffs, are grasping at survival jobs offering considerably less.
Millions of jobs lost
Since early 2001, the economy has shed about 2.7 million jobs, stranding workers from the stricken information technology and telecommunications sectors and the broad ranks of middle management thinned by corporate cost-cutting.
In the 1990s, those jobs were the prizes of the New Economy, offering substantial paychecks, stock options and generous benefits, along with the promise of hopscotching to something even better.
But that's all a memory, and many displaced white-collar workers driven by frustration and money worries are settling for work as food servers, security guards and retail clerks.
"A lot of people are going into auto sales or working at The Home Depot," said Larry Elle of Success Associates, a Boston-area job counseling agency. "They're kind of grasping at straws."
For some of those survival-job takers, "there's a lot of shame and embarrassment in doing it because it's a feeling of going backward," he said.
The attraction is largely financial -- a paycheck to cover bills and, in the best cases, employer-subsidized health insurance. But for some, at least, it's also about the need to do something, anything, to again participate in the working world.
Not an easy task
That doesn't mean finding such a job is easy. Calderini, a 41-year-old father of two who used to make about $80,000 a year, was indignant after being turned down for work at a home-improvement store, an upscale grocery store and an outdoor gear shop.
It's hard to know just how many workers like Calderini have taken survival jobs -- since they're working again, they're not reflected in the unemployment rate -- but their ranks are swelling.
The shift is hinted at in figures tallied by the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics showing that about 4.7 million people who want to work full-time have settled for part-time jobs because of economic conditions, nearly a 50-percent increase from three years ago.
The willingness to settle reflects the difficulty of finding equivalent jobs. The time the average jobless worker remains unemployed has stretched to more than 19 weeks, up from about 12 weeks in early 2001. More than one in five jobless workers -- about 2 million people -- have been out of work longer than half a year.
But many workers settling for lower-paying jobs have been searching for much longer.
Take Herman Gold, who lost his job as a project manager for a consulting company at the end of 2001. When months went by without a nibble from potential employers, Gold took a job as a clerk in a Kinko's photocopy shop near his home in Naperville, Ill.. a Chicago suburb. He left that job for another as an office administrator at a used-car dealership, working 20 to 30 hours a week.
Looking at positive side
Some survival holders see a silver lining in all this.
Andy Massa was making $130,000 a year when he was cut from an executive job with a software subsidiary of Group Bull in late 2001. Since then, he's sold jewelry in a department store and worked as a cashier at a ski slope, both at $8 an hour. An avid golfer, he's moved on to jobs related to his hobby -- one helping run the pro shop at a local golf course, another selling golf equipment in a mall sports shop.
"It's a lot simpler and less challenging than it used to be, but I've learned to be humble," says Massa, of Hudson, Mass.
"I see guys coming on to the golf course wound pretty tight. They're guys who come in and are late for their tee times and they expect me to do something," he says. "I enjoy dealing with people who remind me what I used to be like."