Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Work Hours

When I was growing up (centuries ago, seems like), everybody talked about 'banker's hours'. I wasn't paying much attention at that tender age, but apparently, bankers started work in mid-morning, and closed up before most folks got off work. Oh, and they probably had a long lunch in there, too. Looking back, I wonder how people managed to do any banking at all; there was no direct deposit, no drive-up windows, no evening or weekend hours when the bank was open. But it must have been nice to BE a banker; no getting up before the sun, no late hours, and you got all sorts of holidays off.

But times have changed, as people say. I have a friend who works in a bank. She doesn't work in the lobby, helping customers; no, she works in one of the back offices where they push papers around and never really even touch money. So, she's a banker, since she works in a bank. But bankers hours have changed. She and her co-workers arrive before the bank lobby opens, they work a full day and trudge out as the guards lock the building up, past the ATMs and the still-open drive-through windows to their cars in the parking lot. And this year, when Christmas and New Year's Day happen on the weekend, they don't get any time off for them. Some of the back offices in these large banks have more than one shift. How would you like to be a banker working the 'graveyard' shift?

No doubt in my mind; bankers hours aren't what they used to be.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Grinch Days

I always like Christmas. It almost always disappoints, but I still like the season.

I DON'T like seeing Christmas decorations going up before Halloween has arrived, nor when the Christmas music starts almost before those Halloween costumes are discarded. It seems to me that each holiday deserves its own bit of time, and Christmas does not need to infringe on months that already have celebrations.

So, here's to the tree - which is looking a little bare this year - and here's to all the season's goodies – which I'm not supposed to eat – and here's to all the pretty lights – which I thoroughly enjoy. Hope you have a good one.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Bicycle to Nowhere

Okay, planning bicycle routes for an entire city that has (virtually) none can't be an easy job. Still, I have to wonder that that bike czar in Omaha is thinking. I haven't seen a LOT of progress so far, but a few streets have been reconfigured to introduce a bike lane on the side.

Last winter, St Mary's underwent some major reconstruction between 29th and Leavenworth, about 3 blocks. It now has a bike lane on the right side … for 3 blocks. Where the bikes are supposed to come from to use that bike lane, or where they are supposed to be headed, I haven't figured out.

Further out on Leavenworth, the two-lanes-each-way has since been reconfigured into two lanes headed downtown and one lane headed out, to make way for a bike lane. This puts a bit of a crimp on the evening traffic that used to head out of downtown using Leavenworth, but I'm sure the bicyclists love it. The new bike lane appears around 53rd Street and continues all the way to 60th Street, where most of the automobile traffic turns south, but I believe the bike lane continues down the steep hill into the park. I suppose people might be willing to take their bikes into the park, but why/how did they all congregate at 53rd Street?

These bike lanes I've mentioned are one-way, headed west. I have not yet seen any bike lanes headed east. Is that a hidden message, like, "Go west, young bikers?" So, I suppose he's doing something during those 40 hours a week he supposedly is working. But it has been several months. I don't spend all my time driving around Omaha looking for bike lanes, but … how hard can it be to decide to put a bike lane here for 3 blocks, and another here for 6 or 7 blocks … and not bother to connect them up?

I don't know how much longer his 'grant' job is going to last, but I certainly hope Omaha sees more out of his office than this little bit of nonsense.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Make Way for Bicycles

Some months back, well after the City of Omaha admitted it was having Dire Financial Difficulties, the city officials were thrilled to announce that they had hired a 'bicycle czar', someone to decide where and how bicycle lanes would be created so that people could use these devices to travel about town, thereby saving gasoline costs and lowering the smog emissions, since there would be fewer cars on the streets. I believe the local paper even stated what that person would be paid, and it certainly seemed an exorbitant salary, considering how many city employees were facing lay-off at the time. The paper went on to say, however, that the position had been created and was being paid for by a federal grant the city had received. So that made it okay, was the implication, because the city wasn't actually paying for this person to do his job.

Really? I keep wondering if that reporter really is that simple, or if s/he thinks the readers are.

Perhaps nobody explained to the reporter that when the federal government hands out a grant that creates a new position, that grant has strings attached. It's my understanding that one of those strings is that after the duration of the grant, the entity (city) must continue the position, at the same salary, for a certain period of time, perhaps 5 years. I'd love to know how long the grant will pay this person's salary, because after that point, the city certainly will be paying for this person to do his job! And since the current poor economic times seems to be long-term, I expect the city will still be in Dire Financial Difficulties when that bill comes due.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

American Dream

Is the American Dream dead? Or just ill?

In my parent's day, the American Dream was to own their own home, for the kids to have a better life than they'd had. They did own a house, at various times while I was growing up. At other times, they rented. My husband and I have owned this particular house for 20 years this month, so in that respect, we're doing pretty well. Other families, and especially younger families, are having a much tougher time these last few years in getting and keeping ownership of a home. I don't know exact figures, but that aspect of the American Dream seems to be slipping away.

As for the kids having a better life than the parents – my parents imagined the correct route for that was to see that we all went to college. So far, out of 3 children, 1 ½ of us have finished college. I still have a ways to go to get any kind of degree, but I've made it through over half the required credit hours towards that degree. The youngest of us has never started college. But since neither of my parents ever had any college classes – and lately, there's been some confusion over whether or not one of them even graduated high school – then it seems that my generation did better than they did.

In my husband's family, both parents were professionals, with all the schooling that that entails … some kind of degree, I'm sure. Of their 3 children, all of them have at least two master's degrees, and one also has a doctorate. So far as 'better education' goes, they definitely all have their parents beat, but that has not necessarily meant 'better off financially'.

Which brings us to our kids. Ours are still young, just out of high school a year or so. They have both taken some classes at the local community college. One signed up at a private junior college, and went deep into hock to do so. The junior college promptly lost its accreditation, but he still has to pay those loans back. A lot money down the drain for nothing. It'll be a long time before he can get back to school, if he every makes it.

I think that's why these types of economic times are called depressions. Everybody gets depressed. Everybody gives up. Welcome to the American Dream on Life Support.