The new
January issue of BTSe-mag has come out, and it’s a great one, including the new featured
columnists on writing, publishing, the single woman, and novel excerpts. My new
full page ad for
LAYLA is in there along with my other half pagers. My friend
Raine Weaver was nice enough to let me put her blurb for LAYLA in my ad, and
she got a nice centerpiece spot. Thanks Raine!
I’ve also received a lot of
great feedback on my short story
THE REUNION, including more e-mails than on
anything I’ve done for a while. Maybe it will help on sales with the other
stuff. I’m sure it will help with name recognition. I have a funny shop encounter
about that old cliché ‘giving back to the community’ for the blog today too. Here it is:
Since my work week had been
busier in auto repair land, I’d put off the cleaning for a few days. As I
caught up on my sweeping I was accosted by a couple of ambling sidewalk
strollers. It’s been between 40 and 50 degrees in the shop, so I’m really
moving to build up my body BTU’s. For purposes of anonymity my strollers will
be named Heckle and Jeckle. This owing to the community thing gets hashed over
at the shop every once in a while, usually when someone sees me cleaning my own
shop. Heckle and Jeckle did a double take at my big garage door, seeing me
doing high speed brooming, along with some cackles of enjoyment. It’s always
nice to provide entertainment, and at my age, making someone laugh is a good
thing. :) I won’t go into descriptions of my audience other than to
say it was 10:30 AM on a Thursday, and they were three sheets into the wind.
They were at least dressed warm to allay the blood thinning they’d been doing.
“Man… you been here a long
time,” Heckle called out as he and his partner Jeckle strolled in.
I stopped to be polite, because
I’m not around at my shop 24/7, and it’s not a good idea to be surly with
anyone in East Oakland. “Yeah, it sure feels long.”
“When you start here?” Jeckle
asks after he and Heckle cackle over my answer.
“1976. Some days it feels like
1956.”
“Damn… you work here alone?” Jeckle
asks, looking around.
“Yep. It’s not a sterling
location, so I’ve kept it a smalltime operation.”
“You need to get some help,”
Heckle informs me. “How old are you?”
“62, and some days 82.”
More cackles. They liked that
one.
“Man… you should hire… you know…
give back to the community,” Jeckle observes.
Jeckle didn’t get the community
word out very well, probably due to the hair of the dog antidote to last night.
It came out sounding more like ‘commuty’. I had to pause for a moment as I
wondered briefly if the subject had changed to commuting. Heckle picked up on
it and his brows knitted as I didn’t answer instantly. He liked his partner’s
admonition, and thought I hesitated to say anything because I was carrying
guilt about the ‘commuty’.
“Yeah, dude… you got to give
somethin’ back. People need jobs.”
Okay… I knew what we were
discussing now. No, I don’t feel guilty. The community never gave me a damn
thing. Oakland uses the water company, gas and electric company, phone company,
waste management, and even the fire department to steal money from businesses
in every bill I get. The state makes sure my property is never, ever owned. I
pay rent to them in property taxes. If I get hurt in a one man shop or fail to
pay even one bill/tax, I’ll be on my way to the street, and the community will
shrug its collective shoulders. I ain’t givin’ back anything other than honest
labor for an honest wage. I had no intention of getting into all that with
Heckle and Jeckle, so I stuck with the facts.
“You guys don’t understand how
things work in California for a business like mine. The minimum wage is 8 bucks
an hour. State workman’s compensation charges for anyone working in my shop,
either cleaning or fixing cars is nearly 9 bucks per 100 payroll. Add on payroll
taxes, vacation days, breaks, sick days, health care, and possible injuries or
accidental damages to customers’ vehicles, and hiring someone would be the same
thing as shooting myself in the head. The days of letting someone come in and
do cleanup for a few bucks ended decades ago. The state sends people around
regularly, checking to see if I’m hiring workers under the table. If I did, I
could be fined out of business. Sorry, guys, there just ain’t no money for the
community. Now, let a brother sweep.”
I left Heckle and Jeckle
speechless, probably because they didn’t understand even half of what I spewed
on a subject that really sets me off. The understanding of what our entitlement
system has done to the hiring of workers and business survival no longer
exists. We here in self-employed business land have become the ‘blame all’
pariahs of a nation in the midst of welfare and entitlement bankruptcy. I had
started sweeping again, but more slowly, waiting for Heckle and Jeckle to decide
on whether to say goodbye or not.
My suspicions about
understanding were confirmed a moment later.
“Hell… I’ll take 8 bucks an
hour to help you clean up,” Jeckle tells me.
I stopped again. “Who pays the
other thirty an hour it’s going to cost me to put the broom in your hand?”
“Huh?”
The horse was dead, and kicking
the poor thing would not get my floor swept. “Anyway, you guys have a great
day. Be careful out there.”
This time I moved my sweeping
butt further inside the bat cave. Heckle and Jeckle mumbled something and moved
on. That’s one thing I never will be… three sheets into the wind at 10:30 AM.
Having once been unemployed and in my twenties in California at one time, I
knew from experience that was a job hunting no-no. Yeah, it felt more like age 82
yesterday. :)