Dayton Daily News, Ohio, Mary McCarty column [Dayton Daily News, Ohio]
| Source: | McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
| Wordcount: | 879 |
One year after her forced retirement in 2008, however, Miller and 20,000 other retired Delphi salaried employees in 46 states lost health benefits and much of their pensions.
"I was very loyal and dedicated and responsible," Miller said. "Delphi workers did our part and we did it well. We were betrayed."
The bailout of GM has been praised for keeping the American auto industry alive, but Miller and other local Delphi retirees often feel like the forgotten casualties.
Many are working post-retirement jobs, asking their spouses to defer retirement, or even being forced to sell their homes.
Instead of the comfortable retirement she had planned for, Miller feels near-constant stress about finances. She feels guilty she can no longer help her children with their medical benefits or college expenses. "Your kids are still your kids, and you want to help provide the basics," she said.
The
Turner's own father worked for GM for 44 years. "I come from a GM family and this is something that has affected my family personally," Turner said.
Turner said he agrees with the
Concurred Turner, "the fact that the administration picked winners and losers doesn't mean everyone should have lost. I can't speculate why that has happened."
In September, Turner sent a letter to Treasury Secretary
Turner became involved after
U.S. Rep.
Turner said he's impressed with the organizational ability of the
Rose added: "The hearing is one more step as we try to get the answers that have been denied us. We were working for the same company, in the same situation, yet how can we be treated so distinctly differently? We're not asking for an entitlement or a handout; we're asking for the deferred compensation that we earned."
Rose, 65, suspects Delphi salaried retirees were singled out "because we don't have the same political clout as the union members. We're not saying they don't deserve it, but we do, too."
Rose worked for GM for 30 years and another nine with Delphi. He and his wife, Jaci, are now paying three times more for their health care -- and doing it with 40 percent fewer pension dollars. They're dipping into their retirement savings much earlier than expected, and Jaci waited extra years before retiring from her job at a frame shop. They haven't done the kind of traveling they had planned.
They feel lucky compared with other retirees. Their three children are grown; they planned carefully for their future. "The biggest emotion is betrayal," Rose confessed. "I fielded all those middle-of-the-night calls dealing with a plant problem or an employee problem. And then to have the company turn their backs on us and our own government take part in the decision that we'll be the losers in this -- it's hard to take."
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(c)2011 the Dayton Daily News (Dayton, Ohio)
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