View allAll Photos Tagged JobLoss

Evergreen Papermill in Canton NC was the backbone of the town's economy for 115 years, but management closed the mill in May 2023. Photographed with a Graflex Crown Graphic with a Wollensak 135mm f/4.7 lens on 4x5 Fomapan 100 film.

An ominous cloud rises above a sawmill during a blue week in the Colville Valley.

Jenners, the iconic department store on Edinburgh’s Princes Street is to close in May after 183 years of trading with a loss of 200 jobs. It was known as “Harrods of the North" and was for many years a family business until sold to House of Fraser in 2005. House of Fraser failed to reach agreement on terms of extension of lease with the owner of the building, the Danish fashion billionaire and major Scottish landowner Anders Holch Povlsen.

Evergreen Papermill in Canton NC was the backbone of the town's economy for 115 years, but management closed the mill in May 2023. Photographed with a Graflex Crown Graphic with a Wollensak 135mm f/4.7 lens on 4x5 Fomapan 100 film.

Signs of gentrification, job loss soon to be ultra expensive lofts for trust fund babies

We have a way to go

to recover from the pandemic's job loss effect.

General Electric manufactures turbines for power applications at the Schenectady plant. This week the company announced 250 lay-offs at the Schenectady location. I hope that the persons being laid off can cope with this change, get through it successfully, and have a brighter future.

At a Walmart in Oklahoma City, USA

The Fire Brigades Union (FBU) battle wagon is in town.

 

H853 XYF is a Volvo FL6.14/Carmichael Rescue unit now owned and operated by the FBU for its campaigning work.

 

It's reason for being parked in the Birstall Etap budget hotel's car park is simple...

 

"Loughborough could be left with just one fire engine and lose 24 firefighters under major money saving plans due to be finalised tomorrow.

 

The Fire Brigades Union (FBU) says that if the cuts are approved it will mean that “Leicestershire will be the first fire service in post war history to sack firefighters on a compulsive basis.”

 

The fate of Loughborough’s cuts now lie in the hands of The Combined Fire Authority (CFA) – the governing body of Leicestershire’s Fire and Rescue Service.

 

A decision will be made tomorrow (Wednesday) in Birstall (the location of the Leicestershire Fire & Rescue headquarters).

 

The FBU says this week marks one of the most critical points in Leicestershire Fire and Rescue Service’s history as the counties fire authority try to make £7.5m worth of cuts that firefighters fear will put the public at greater risk and drastically compromise the safety of firefighters.

 

www.loughboroughecho.net/news/local-news/loughborough-fir...

 

www.leicestershire-fire.gov.uk/

 

Note the other Emergency vehicles in the car park are private contractors working for East Midlands Ambulance Service as they can't deliver the response times required (seems a bit pointless when they are delivered to A&E and simply join the queue is it?).

 

Is this Government attempting to turn the clock back to the period after the Great Fire of London (1666)?

 

Prior to this fire, London had no organized fire protection system. Afterwards, insurance companies formed private fire brigades to protect their clients’ property. Insurance brigades would only fight fires at buildings the company insured.

 

These buildings were identified by fire insurance marks (these were metal plaques marked with the emblem of the insurance company which were affixed to the front of insured buildings as a guide to the insurance company's fire brigade).

I suppose this picture kind of represents my mood today...I just found out that my husband lost his job. He has been working at Circuit City since June and survived the last round of layoffs. Today we got word that the company is shutting its doors, so he won't be going to work next week.

 

I am not working right now, but that may change because of the situation. Although I'm a bit sad/stressed, we have been through this before. My husband is highly employable and I have faith that where one door closes, another will open.

Anxiety lingered about a global slowdown and we lost jobs. Many large companies would rather make job cuts than reduce bonus payments. How many jobs will go down? Fears of another financial crisis refused to go away. Father has sleepless and mother feels restless. What you really have is what you grip in your hand.

 

The Fire Brigades Union (FBU) battle wagon is in town.

 

H853 XYF is a Volvo FL6.14/Carmichael Rescue unit now owned and operated by the FBU for its campaigning work.

 

It's reason for being parked in the Etap budget hotels car park is simple...

 

"Loughborough could be left with just one fire engine and lose 24 firefighters under major money saving plans due to be finalised tomorrow.

 

The Fire Brigades Union (FBU) says that if the cuts are approved it will mean that “Leicestershire will be the first fire service in post war history to sack firefighters on a compulsive basis.”

 

The fate of Loughborough’s cuts now lie in the hands of The Combined Fire Authority (CFA) – the governing body of Leicestershire’s Fire and Rescue Service.

 

A decision will be made tomorrow (Wednesday) in Birstall (the location of the Leicestershire Fire & Rescue headquarters).

 

The FBU says this week marks one of the most critical points in Leicestershire Fire and Rescue Service’s history as the counties fire authority try to make £7.5m worth of cuts that firefighters fear will put the public at greater risk and drastically compromise the safety of firefighters.

 

www.loughboroughecho.net/news/local-news/loughborough-fir...

 

www.leicestershire-fire.gov.uk/

 

Note the other Emergency vehicles in the car park are private contractors working for East Midlands Ambulance Service as they can't deliver the response times required (seems a bit pointless when they are delivered to A&E and simply join the queue is it?).

 

Is this Government attempting to turn the clock back to the period after the Great Fire of London (1666)?

 

Prior to this fire, London had no organized fire protection system. Afterwards, insurance companies formed private fire brigades to protect their clients’ property. Insurance brigades would only fight fires at buildings the company insured.

 

These buildings were identified by fire insurance marks (these were metal plaques marked with the emblem of the insurance company which were affixed to the front of insured buildings as a guide to the insurance company's fire brigade).

At a Walmart in Oklahoma City, USA

Miscellaneous Composition; Middle America Cash Poor; ©2012 DianaLee Photo Designs

The Fire Brigades Union (FBU) battle wagon is in town.

 

H853 XYF is a Volvo FL6.14/Carmichael Rescue unit now owned and operated by the FBU for its campaigning work.

 

It's reason for being parked in the Etap budget hotels car park is simple...

 

"Loughborough could be left with just one fire engine and lose 24 firefighters under major money saving plans due to be finalised tomorrow.

 

The Fire Brigades Union (FBU) says that if the cuts are approved it will mean that “Leicestershire will be the first fire service in post war history to sack firefighters on a compulsive basis.”

 

The fate of Loughborough’s cuts now lie in the hands of The Combined Fire Authority (CFA) – the governing body of Leicestershire’s Fire and Rescue Service.

 

A decision will be made tomorrow (Wednesday) in Birstall (the location of the Leicestershire Fire & Rescue headquarters).

 

The FBU says this week marks one of the most critical points in Leicestershire Fire and Rescue Service’s history as the counties fire authority try to make £7.5m worth of cuts that firefighters fear will put the public at greater risk and drastically compromise the safety of firefighters.

 

www.loughboroughecho.net/news/local-news/loughborough-fir...

 

www.leicestershire-fire.gov.uk/

 

Note the other Emergency vehicles in the car park are private contractors working for East Midlands Ambulance Service as they can't deliver the response times required (seems a bit pointless when they are delivered to A&E and simply join the queue is it?).

 

Is this Government attempting to turn the clock back to the period after the Great Fire of London (1666)?

 

Prior to this fire, London had no organized fire protection system. Afterwards, insurance companies formed private fire brigades to protect their clients’ property. Insurance brigades would only fight fires at buildings the company insured.

 

These buildings were identified by fire insurance marks (these were metal plaques marked with the emblem of the insurance company which were affixed to the front of insured buildings as a guide to the insurance company's fire brigade).

In the last decade the city of San Francisco has succeeded in moving 19,500 homeless people off its streets. But despite that major effort, the homeless population hasn’t budged. As one homeless person is helped, another takes his place.

 

Losing a job is the biggest cause of homelessness in San Francisco. Though public services provide free food, a warm shower and clean clothes, it's still common to see people panhandling or scavenging to get needed cash. This man is seen pushing a shopping trolley filled with cans and bottles. He can redeem them at a recycling center and make about $30-40 per day working six hours. He says, it's better than panhandling or standing on the side of the road.

...let's blame the waves.

(Portland) 20% of the office got laid off the Thurs b4 Thanksgiving, 2008. That really sucked! here i am handing over my badge to the IT guy.

wish me luck.

 

this pic has been published at NowPublic: US Job Losses Reach 34-Year High, Canada Close Behind

  

Arranged by the Coalition to End Money Bond. Outside the James R. Thompson Center in downtown Chicago.

 

Quoting from their press release: Every year the state of Illinois incarcerates more than a quarter of a million people who are awaiting trial. The current system treats people who cannot afford money bonds as if they are guilty until proven innocent. Just a few days in jail can cause someone to lose their housing, job, government benefits, and even custody of their children.

 

Cook County has made great progress towards ending money bond and pretrial incarceration. Approximately 2,000 people remain locked up in Cook County Jail simply because they cannot afford to pay a money bond. It's time to end wealth based pretrial incarceration and dramatically reduce the number of people jailed in Illinois.

 

This is not just an issue in Illinois. It is a common practice in many other areas of the country as well.

 

As job losses rise, growing numbers of American homeowners with once solid credit are falling behind on their mortgages, amplifying a wave of foreclosures.

 

In the latest phase of the nation’s real estate disaster, the locus of trouble has shifted from subprime loans - those extended to home buyers with troubled credit - to the far more numerous prime loans issued to those with decent financial histories.

 

From: NY Times, May 24, 2009

At a Walmart in Oklahoma City, USA

Yashica 12 AGFA Optima 100 Processing and Scanning by Severn Graphics, Leveling, Dodging and Burning with Photoshop 7

Two events of interest in Dublin today. [1] Clerys workers protest against the sudden loss of jobs when the oldest department store in Dublin closed. [2] A large number of people celebrate Bloomsday.

 

Clerys was a long-established department store on O'Connell Street in Dublin, Ireland, a focal point of the street.

 

The business dates from 1853, however the current building dates from 1922, having been completely destroyed in the 1916 Easter Rising. Clerys completed a five-year restoration programme in 2004 at a cost of €24 million.

 

Kieran Wallace and Eamonn Richardson were appointed joint provisional liquidators to OSC Operations Limited (the “Company”) trading as Clerys, on 12 June 2015. The company ceased to trade with immediate effect. Staff were given 30 minutes notice to pack up and leave - some had worked there for over 40 years.

The simple inability to pay bond often has severe negative consequences on the very things that help someone charged with a crime succeed: employment, stable housing, and strong family and community connections. Pre-trial detention can cause loss of housing and/or jobs, separation of families, and lost custody of children. It also results in higher rates of conviction, as people are forced to plead guilty in order to go home rather than fight their charges. With the stakes so high, CCBF hopes to alleviate the harm for as many people as possible by assisting them in paying their bonds, allowing them to remain free while fighting their cases.

 

Please check out our Resources page to read more about how bond harms individuals, families, and entire communities. Contact us to get involved in the fight to end cash bond in Chicago.

Can you bee-lieve that?

Research shows that the primary cause of homelessness, particularly among families, is lack of affordable housing. Surveys of homeless families have identified the following major immediate, triggering causes of homelessness: eviction; doubled-up or severely overcrowded housing; domestic violence; job loss; and hazardous housing conditions.

Research shows that, compared to homeless families, homeless single adults have much higher rates of serious mental illness, addiction disorders, and other severe health problems.

 

Coalition for the homeless:

www.coalitionforthehomeless.org/

Arranged by the Coalition to End Money Bond. Outside the James R. Thompson Center in downtown Chicago.

 

Quoting from their press release: Every year the state of Illinois incarcerates more than a quarter of a million people who are awaiting trial. The current system treats people who cannot afford money bonds as if they are guilty until proven innocent. Just a few days in jail can cause someone to lose their housing, job, government benefits, and even custody of their children.

 

Cook County has made great progress towards ending money bond and pretrial incarceration. Approximately 2,000 people remain locked up in Cook County Jail simply because they cannot afford to pay a money bond. It's time to end wealth based pretrial incarceration and dramatically reduce the number of people jailed in Illinois.

 

This is not just an issue in Illinois. It is a common practice in many other areas of the country as well.

 

Calabasas, CA - The company was being liquidated; everyone knew their number was going to be up. For two years the company slowly laid off workers. He was one of the last of them. From a nationwide insurance company to just a handful closing it’s doors in two short years

Former B.F. Goodrich plant in Akron, Ohio. The plant stands empty now, a tribute to America's declining manufacturing base.

HAMILTON — U.S. Steel Canada, formerly known as Stelco, is temporarily shutting down its Hamilton mill and closing most of its Lake Erie operations, affecting up to 2,100 jobs, the Hamilton Spectator reported Tuesday

www.cp24.com/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20090303/090303_int...

 

Two events of interest in Dublin today. [1] Clerys workers protest against the sudden loss of jobs when the oldest department store in Dublin closed. [2] A large number of people celebrate Bloomsday.

 

Clerys was a long-established department store on O'Connell Street in Dublin, Ireland, a focal point of the street.

 

The business dates from 1853, however the current building dates from 1922, having been completely destroyed in the 1916 Easter Rising. Clerys completed a five-year restoration programme in 2004 at a cost of €24 million.

 

Kieran Wallace and Eamonn Richardson were appointed joint provisional liquidators to OSC Operations Limited (the “Company”) trading as Clerys, on 12 June 2015. The company ceased to trade with immediate effect. Staff were given 30 minutes notice to pack up and leave - some had worked there for over 40 years.

Two events of interest in Dublin today. [1] Clerys workers protest against the sudden loss of jobs when the oldest department store in Dublin closed. [2] A large number of people celebrate Bloomsday.

 

Clerys was a long-established department store on O'Connell Street in Dublin, Ireland, a focal point of the street.

 

The business dates from 1853, however the current building dates from 1922, having been completely destroyed in the 1916 Easter Rising. Clerys completed a five-year restoration programme in 2004 at a cost of €24 million.

 

Kieran Wallace and Eamonn Richardson were appointed joint provisional liquidators to OSC Operations Limited (the “Company”) trading as Clerys, on 12 June 2015. The company ceased to trade with immediate effect. Staff were given 30 minutes notice to pack up and leave - some had worked there for over 40 years.

Two events of interest in Dublin today. [1] Clerys workers protest against the sudden loss of jobs when the oldest department store in Dublin closed. [2] A large number of people celebrate Bloomsday.

 

Clerys was a long-established department store on O'Connell Street in Dublin, Ireland, a focal point of the street.

 

The business dates from 1853, however the current building dates from 1922, having been completely destroyed in the 1916 Easter Rising. Clerys completed a five-year restoration programme in 2004 at a cost of €24 million.

 

Kieran Wallace and Eamonn Richardson were appointed joint provisional liquidators to OSC Operations Limited (the “Company”) trading as Clerys, on 12 June 2015. The company ceased to trade with immediate effect. Staff were given 30 minutes notice to pack up and leave - some had worked there for over 40 years.

Two events of interest in Dublin today. [1] Clerys workers protest against the sudden loss of jobs when the oldest department store in Dublin closed. [2] A large number of people celebrate Bloomsday.

 

Clerys was a long-established department store on O'Connell Street in Dublin, Ireland, a focal point of the street.

 

The business dates from 1853, however the current building dates from 1922, having been completely destroyed in the 1916 Easter Rising. Clerys completed a five-year restoration programme in 2004 at a cost of €24 million.

 

Kieran Wallace and Eamonn Richardson were appointed joint provisional liquidators to OSC Operations Limited (the “Company”) trading as Clerys, on 12 June 2015. The company ceased to trade with immediate effect. Staff were given 30 minutes notice to pack up and leave - some had worked there for over 40 years.

Two events of interest in Dublin today. [1] Clerys workers protest against the sudden loss of jobs when the oldest department store in Dublin closed. [2] A large number of people celebrate Bloomsday.

 

Clerys was a long-established department store on O'Connell Street in Dublin, Ireland, a focal point of the street.

 

The business dates from 1853, however the current building dates from 1922, having been completely destroyed in the 1916 Easter Rising. Clerys completed a five-year restoration programme in 2004 at a cost of €24 million.

 

Kieran Wallace and Eamonn Richardson were appointed joint provisional liquidators to OSC Operations Limited (the “Company”) trading as Clerys, on 12 June 2015. The company ceased to trade with immediate effect. Staff were given 30 minutes notice to pack up and leave - some had worked there for over 40 years.

The simple inability to pay bond often has severe negative consequences on the very things that help someone charged with a crime succeed: employment, stable housing, and strong family and community connections. Pre-trial detention can cause loss of housing and/or jobs, separation of families, and lost custody of children. It also results in higher rates of conviction, as people are forced to plead guilty in order to go home rather than fight their charges. With the stakes so high, CCBF hopes to alleviate the harm for as many people as possible by assisting them in paying their bonds, allowing them to remain free while fighting their cases.

 

Please check out our Resources page to read more about how bond harms individuals, families, and entire communities. Contact us to get involved in the fight to end cash bond in Chicago.

Two events of interest in Dublin today. [1] Clerys workers protest against the sudden loss of jobs when the oldest department store in Dublin closed. [2] A large number of people celebrate Bloomsday.

 

Clerys was a long-established department store on O'Connell Street in Dublin, Ireland, a focal point of the street.

 

The business dates from 1853, however the current building dates from 1922, having been completely destroyed in the 1916 Easter Rising. Clerys completed a five-year restoration programme in 2004 at a cost of €24 million.

 

Kieran Wallace and Eamonn Richardson were appointed joint provisional liquidators to OSC Operations Limited (the “Company”) trading as Clerys, on 12 June 2015. The company ceased to trade with immediate effect. Staff were given 30 minutes notice to pack up and leave - some had worked there for over 40 years.

Two events of interest in Dublin today. [1] Clerys workers protest against the sudden loss of jobs when the oldest department store in Dublin closed. [2] A large number of people celebrate Bloomsday.

 

Clerys was a long-established department store on O'Connell Street in Dublin, Ireland, a focal point of the street.

 

The business dates from 1853, however the current building dates from 1922, having been completely destroyed in the 1916 Easter Rising. Clerys completed a five-year restoration programme in 2004 at a cost of €24 million.

 

Kieran Wallace and Eamonn Richardson were appointed joint provisional liquidators to OSC Operations Limited (the “Company”) trading as Clerys, on 12 June 2015. The company ceased to trade with immediate effect. Staff were given 30 minutes notice to pack up and leave - some had worked there for over 40 years.

Two events of interest in Dublin today. [1] Clerys workers protest against the sudden loss of jobs when the oldest department store in Dublin closed. [2] A large number of people celebrate Bloomsday.

 

Clerys was a long-established department store on O'Connell Street in Dublin, Ireland, a focal point of the street.

 

The business dates from 1853, however the current building dates from 1922, having been completely destroyed in the 1916 Easter Rising. Clerys completed a five-year restoration programme in 2004 at a cost of €24 million.

 

Kieran Wallace and Eamonn Richardson were appointed joint provisional liquidators to OSC Operations Limited (the “Company”) trading as Clerys, on 12 June 2015. The company ceased to trade with immediate effect. Staff were given 30 minutes notice to pack up and leave - some had worked there for over 40 years.

Two events of interest in Dublin today. [1] Clerys workers protest against the sudden loss of jobs when the oldest department store in Dublin closed. [2] A large number of people celebrate Bloomsday.

 

Clerys was a long-established department store on O'Connell Street in Dublin, Ireland, a focal point of the street.

 

The business dates from 1853, however the current building dates from 1922, having been completely destroyed in the 1916 Easter Rising. Clerys completed a five-year restoration programme in 2004 at a cost of €24 million.

 

Kieran Wallace and Eamonn Richardson were appointed joint provisional liquidators to OSC Operations Limited (the “Company”) trading as Clerys, on 12 June 2015. The company ceased to trade with immediate effect. Staff were given 30 minutes notice to pack up and leave - some had worked there for over 40 years.

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