ChiTownScion
Call Me a Cab
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I had an interesting conversation this weekend with one of the kids. She followed the Accepted Script, graduated at the top of her class from high school, went to college, got her degree, and is working full time as a children's librarian, for $12 an hour. She has to work at the theatre part time to make ends meet. She is 28 years old.
$12/hour is more than a lot of fulltime workers make around here, so that part of it doesn't bother her so much. Except that the library a couple years back hired an ex-convict right out of prison with no background in libraries at all and no degree of any kind as a tech director -- at $15 an hour. "Why'd I bother to go to college?" she asks. "I should have embezzeled $25,000 from my parents like that guy did, except they've never had $25,000 in their lives."
This month's Consumer Reports has a very compelling article about the current-day college finance racket. Well worth reading if you're a millennial or have millennials that you care about.
There was a time when very few who had other employment options wanted to go to work for the public defender's office (or, contra, the prosecutor's office) and make a career of it. The game plan for most was to put in a few years, get trial experience, and then market it to a firm (or hang out the shingle and go solo) after a few years. And yes: the horror stories abounded when I hit the bricks decades ago as well about no jobs and licensed attorneys driving cabs, etc. I stuck with it because, against all impulse, I became a True Believer and actually derived a lot of satisfaction from what I was doing. It didn't happen regularly, or often, but every now and then a victory was garnered for a client who was essentially a god and decent person.
Times have changed. Now, if a person sticks for ten years they can have their law school student debt washed away nearly as much as the sins of a Baptist at a revival meeting. Kids coming out now are routinely carrying more than five times the debt that I faced on the mortgage of my first home. Student loan forgiveness - even partial- pays off better than marrying the boss's daughter, apparently.