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Time for another BART strike? (Contract rejected)

$28-30/hr. with benefits That's how much BART workers should be getting paid. That's a middle class wage. You never know. You might want that available in case you lose your white collar job.

From Graduate School to Welfare
http://chronicle.com/article/From-Graduate-School-to/131795/

Middle class wages are being decimated while the top 1% are taking a higher and higher percentage of the revenue

The case for $22-an-hour minimum wage
Sen. Elizabeth Warren makes it, citing a study that shows we'd all be earning at least that much if wages kept up with gains in productivity
http://theweek.com/article/index/241530/the-case-for-22-an-hour-minimum-wage


"I am not a welfare queen," says Melissa Bruninga-Matteau.

That's how she feels compelled to start a conversation about how she, a white woman with a Ph.D. in medieval history and an adjunct professor, came to rely on food stamps and Medicaid. Ms. Bruninga-Matteau, a 43-year-old single mother who teaches two humanities courses at Yavapai College, in Prescott, Ariz., says the stereotype of the people receiving such aid does not reflect reality. Recipients include growing numbers of people like her, the highly educated, whose advanced degrees have not insulated them from financial hardship.

Sounds like a degree with a *GREAT* ROI. :laughing

From an academic perspective, the source in the second article about the $20 minimum wage is uh... sub-par to say the least. That kind of analysis would start to get meaningful if one looked at the wage and productivity gap across various industries. I highly suspect that the phenomenon is most pronounced in the services sector and not in industries that require skilled labor. http://www.cepr.net/documents/publications/min-wage1-2012-03.pdf

The logical sniff test is easy, "Has the productivity of retail sales associates grown substantially over time?"

Should a minimum wage job net you enough income to be above the poverty line? I think so.
Should the minimum wage account for inflation/cost of living and be adjusted over time? It's only fair--in reasonable increments (once every few years at most) to minimize the administrative burden.
Should people be paid significantly more than their actual value added? That's just silly. :laughing
 
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There's also this unforseen side-effect.

With BART’s contract with workers in dispute and a third strike still considered a possibility, a less talked about group of Mid-Market entrepreneurs would be adversely affected by a strike’s resulting gridlock and transit jams: Tenderloin drug dealers.

According to officials, during the two recent BART strikes, street-level drug sales within the Tenderloin’s boundaries dropped noticeably, largely because the region’s clogged transit arteries prevented those interested in selling and buying narcotics from reaching the Tenderloin — a neighborhood long known as one of the most popular open-air drug markets in the region.

Precise data regarding the drop in narcotics sales is challenging to obtain, as illicit activities are notoriously difficult to monitor, law enforcement officials said. And the available SFPD crime data for July and October, when the first and second strikes occurred, only lists incident reports, and arrests, both of which showed little deviation from the norm.

However, community members, law enforcement officials on the ground, and the drug dealers themselves all observed the same thing: Sales were down, buyers were scarce. Much like what other, more legitimate businesses reported the strike did to their their operations.

“The BART strike was very interruptive to the cash flow,” said a crack-cocaine dealer who spoke to The Appeal on the condition of anonymity. Most of the wealthy buyers from outside the city stayed away from the neighborhood, the dealer said, noting that those customers probably thought fighting traffic was too much of a hassle.

Members of the community noticed a “tangible” difference on the street during the strike as well. “I couldn’t believe it at first, but day after day, the drug dealers weren’t there like they usually were,” said Dina Hilliard of the North of Market Tenderloin Community Benefit District, “And the buyers weren’t there either.”

The SFPD too had anecdotal evidence that supported the BART strike’s impact on illegal narcotics sales. “A number of community members have informed me that there were noticeably fewer dealers operating in the open-air drug markets in the Tenderloin for the duration of the BART strike,” Capt. Jason Cherniss told The Appeal.

While some dealers and users apparently prefer BART for their commute, it isn’t the only option. Many who live outside city limits rely on Caltrain, buses, and their cars to get to the Tenderloin, Capt. Cherniss has told this reporter in the past.

“I lived in the Tenderloin during the strike,” the dealer said, “It took me like two and a half or three hours to get there the first day. And I only live in East Oakland.” The dealer noted that the car was the preferred mode of transportation for the daily commute.

Cars are popular among dealers that have higher day-to-day sales, said law enforcement officials. That’s because most dealers only want to carry a certain amount of their drug of choice. They stash the remainder of their product in a vehicle, so they can “re-up” during the day, and to limit their liability in case of an encounter with police, officials said.

The reason dealers are persistent is because that unlike other jobs, there is no vacation time, sick days, health insurance, dental or child care, “You gotta come out there every single day and get your money,” the dealer said. “There is no vacation time.”

The Tenderloin’s continued existence as a drug haven of sorts confounds experts who study narcotics trafficking and sales. There was a huge change when technologies like the cell phone and the Internet became popular — and those technologies make selling drugs easier, according to drug historian Dr. Paul Gootenberg. “An open air drug market must have a specialized clientele.” Law enforcement’s recent attempt to shut down the Silk Road is only one such example.

Even in an age where technology has made tracking human behavior more and more commonplace, for the most part drug trafficking experts still struggle to construct an accurate picture of the black market. Most rely on a hodgepodge of information cobbled together from various government and NGO sources, said Gootenberg. Government sources that are, he says, often incorrect.

“The government tries to pretend it has all the indicators,” Gootenberg said, “In reality, it’s much more difficult to research drug consumption trends.”

The same is true for the Tenderloin. According to police data there have been 240 drug related arrests since October 1, the majority of which are for the most popular drugs in the neighborhood — crack, heroin, methamphetamine, cannabis, and prescription drugs.

The Tenderloin drug market’s apparent popularity is likely the confluence of several factors — one of which is the fact that narcotic sales aren’t controlled or taxed by gangs. And there are likely other, historical factors at work — a neighborhood with a reputation that proceeds many of the hard-working city residents, hoping for a better life.

“I don’t know how to explain the Tenderloin,” the dealer speaking anonymously said, “It’s like the universal bridge. I’ve been to a lot of places… Miami, L.A., from here to Louisiana. But, there’s no Tenderloin like this.”

One thing is clear: the dealers and addicts were not missed during the strike. “It was kind of nice for a change,” Hilliard said.

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I work in the TL at night and the BART strike was AWESOME. The neighborhood went from a 24hour psychotic dope circus to just a regular shitty neighborhood in like less than a day.

Most the worst degenerates come from Oaklamd and Hayweird on BART to fuck up the neighborhood and then go home on the last train at night or the first train in the morning.
 
I used to live in Tenderloin in '99-'02. And I used to walk there at night. I don't think I'd do it now. Even with a gun.
 
I used to live in Tenderloin in '99-'02. And I used to walk there at night. I don't think I'd do it now. Even with a gun.

I do it all the time at 2, 3 and 4am on Weekends in the Turk & Taylor area and I'm usually not carrying. :dunno
 
I'm told you're fucking huge. That *may* have something to do with it.

I'm also a clean white guy with a recent haircut. :laughing Everyone down there that doesn't know me is convinced I'm either a cop or a serial killer looking for easy prey when I walk by.


Honestly though, there isn't very much predatory behavior down there. The TL is almost EXCLUSIVELY an open air drug market. EVERYBODY is playing the dope game and nobody wants heat brought down, because that fucks with their money. As long as you don't get in anybodies business transactions they largely ignore you. From what I can tell, 95% of all the robberies, assaults and similar crime that happen down there are ALL from dope game bullshit. If you don't buy drugs, use drugs or sell drugs down there, nobody is going to bother you and everybody is going to wonder what the fuck you're doing down there. It's an absolute zombieland of a skid row. The real gangsters who just rob you for shit are in other neighborhoods. The neighborhood is too strung out and defeated for even BVHP scum to hang out in. Down there it's just dope zombies and their overlords.
 
I used to walk through there a lot, and at first the bums would harass me until they realized I wouldn't scare. After a while, if anybody messed with me, they'd be like, "Leave Lil blondie alone, She cool". I guess the bums get used to you if you get restless and walk around the city late at night.
 
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The logical sniff test is easy, "Has the productivity of retail sales associates grown substantially over time?"

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I don't know. Has it? So the test for logical accuracy is simply done by posing a rhetorical question with no requirement for examining the factual basis?
 
I used to walk through there a lot, and at first the bums would harass me until they realized I wouldn't scare. After a while, if anybody messed with me, they'd be like, "Leave Lil blondie alone, She cool". I guess the bums get used to you if you get restless and walk around the city late at night.

Well, they also don't fuck with the locals much. Once they know you from seeing you around, they tend to leave you be for the most part and give you a nickname. It's mainly people who look like they are scared and have something worth taking that get fucked with at all and even then, not that much.
 
I don't know. Has it? So the test for logical accuracy is simply done by posing a rhetorical question with no requirement for examining the factual basis?

Kinda like offering an arbitrary amount for "work" with little to no emphasis the level of technical expertise required to do such "work".
 
Kinda like offering an arbitrary amount for "work" with little to no emphasis the level of technical expertise required to do such "work".

Exactly. Just like quoting "work" and implying that the wage doesn't match without knowing exactly what said "work" actually entails.
 
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