OPINION
Published on April 29, 2010 By Big Fat Daddy In Misc

In December of 1971 I got out of the Army after seven years active duty and three months Reserve. The "New Action Army" was to be made up of all volunteers. And a lot of the traditional controls and routines were being cast aside in favor of a more comfortable Army...comfortable for the pogues that drifted into it...not for those responsible for herding them. But that is grist for another mill. We left Fort Hood, Texas and moved to Phoenix, AZ. I am not sure what I expected, but it sure wasn't what I got.

My first job was as an instructor at the Arizona School of Driving. The school offered a 15-hour course of instruction. But not contracted; a student could quit at any time. It was the instructor's responsibility to keep selling the course so the student got the "full benefit" of it. Most people can pass a driving test after six or seven hours and see no need to do more. The school kept the first 23 1/2 hours of each week's take and the instructor got the rest. When you consider the scheduling difficulties, cancellations, and drop-outs, you could spend sixty or seventy hours trying to get your 23.5 hours in...and not earn a dime, either. Instructors learned to overbook and double-up and other techniques the school strictly forbade. It sucked. Inside of six months I became a senior instructor...a trainer...and the recipient of all the hard cases no one else wanted to train. I gave the school forty hours a week for nothing but kept everything I made on students beyond forty. Some deal, huh? It was like I was earning my living in my spare time.

I left there and went to work at Associated Grocers...a Co-Op warehouse operation that serviced Fry's, Lucky's, Smitty's and several other food sellers in the Valley of the Sun. I was a loading dock worker; a "temporary" non-union filler. I could only work three weeks out of a month without joining the Union, and only a select few were allowed to join. The pay was only about 3/4s of the union scale but it was still better than the driving school. It was beyond measure the hardest work I ever did in my life.

Every morning the boxcars would roll in on the railroad spur. Usually all but three or four of them would fit inside the warehouse. The rest would sit out in the sun. The dock extended out far enough that we could have easy access to them, but by nine o'clock the outside temperature would be closing in on triple digits and inside the boxcars that were out there the temperatures were unbelievable. Guess which cars the temporary dock workers got? We got on the clock at 7:00 am and almost ran to the outside cars in order to get them unloaded before the sun did its nasty work.

The job consisted of placing a pallet on the ground in front of the door of the boxcar, then stacking the boxes or bags that were in the boxcar onto the pallet. No space was wasted. Everything was packed tight. We had to pry the first row of boxes out; after that it usually went pretty smoothly. Kraft and Morton Salt cars were the absolute worst. The Kraft boxes were filled with commercial-sized jars of mayonaise, ketchup, and mustard. Or relish or pickles. The boxes were HEAVY... and in them days the jars were all glass...no dropsies. The Morton Salt cars were...well...heavy bags of salt. A bag of salt a little larger than your old-fashioned brown paper bag from the grocery store would weigh about fifty pounds. You had to start by reaching up high to grab a heavy box or bag, then bend over and place it on the pallet. And not just any old way, either. Each product had to be stacked a specific way...arranged on the pallet so as to "lock" the stack in place. You couldn't go above a certain height on each pallet. So learning to lock five bags and stacking them in four layers translates into a "five-tie four high"...or "eight-tie three high"...etc, etc, etc. Each layer had to be laid out the opposite of the layer below; that is how they "tied" together. Most of the products you could stack as many as three pallets high. So we started off lifting product from the top; after a little bit we were lifting and shifting at about the same level. Then as we worked to the bottom we were lifting from the floor of the boxcar and stacking above shoulder level on the pallet. We usually put two pallets next to each other and built them both up to the start of the second pallet, then used one as a step up to the other. When that one got to its full level a forklift would take it inside and we put another in its place, building one and then another that way until the car was empty. Every five minutes or so some jerk came by and yelled at us to go faster...threatening to fire us if we didn't step it up.

This was real "man's" work. I never heard OSHA mentioned in those days; there was no such thing as a "two-man lift" or "70 lbs max". I never saw a back-brace belt. If you couldn't lift a hundred-pound bag of salt or rice over your head, you need not apply. We could get into a rhythm and shuffle product pretty quickly once we got warmed up. And warming up didn't take long in those outside boxcars. If we were still working on the outside cars after nine am, life became a real misery...the inside temperature could reach 150 degrees.

My first day on the job wore me down pretty hard. I had salt-rime all over my shirt; and my boots, stylish Easy-Rider boots with the cool straps and rings and all, were not ideal for working on your feet all day. I barely made it through a shower and dinner before flopping on the bed. The next morning was unbelievable hell. Every joint and muscle was on fire. My feet were swollen and painful and I was barely able to get my boots on. I could hardly walk. But I went to work. It took an hour or more to work the aches and kinks out of the muscles and joints but the feet were not getting better. Walking was pure misery and lifting and shifting caused the fire to spread up my legs. That night I was even slower to the shower and bed. The third day I wasn't sure I would be able to get up at all. The boots were the worst part; the wrestling match to get them on caused so much pain I was afraid I would pass out. But they were the only hard shoes I owned and we weren't allowed to wear "tennies". The heat was unbearable; the days went on forever. The breaks - fifteen minutes in the morning and afternoon - were too short, lunchtime too long in coming and too soon over, and driving home too little of a relief.

Monday of the second week was almost like starting all over again, but by noon I was feeling pretty good. My feet hadn't started off swollen; the weekend had calmed that down and I was actually able to jump around on the pallets without tears. Surprisingly, Tuesday I was able to get up and get going without the moans and groans. On Wednesday I actually took part in the lunchtime discussion of the Summer Olympics, got curious enough to watch that night, and my family got hooked on the coverage. The third week I was finally getting in condition...feet, joints, muscles. I still came home sweated-out and sore. I still woke up hurting and tight. But not like the first week. The end of the third week they let me go. "Term Limits" for non-union temps. They told me I did okay, but they would not hire me back on for at least three weeks. So I went in search of something new.

I think that the job at Associated Grocers would qualify today as one of those that sympathizers would say "white people" won't do...so we need an illegal to do it. Funny thing was, there wasn't a single Hispanic person on that crew. In those days, Phoenix was not covered on every corner with a dozen off-the-books "day workers" (illegals). Every time ICE raids a company and runs off a dozen or a hundred or three hundred illegals, the jobs are almost immediately filled by legal Americans who want to work. RoseinArizona's post about the cost of illegals has some sobering dollar amounts, especially in the area of labor. I don't think there are any jobs Americans won't do...I know I have had my share of jobs that I really didn't want to do but all those littlies were addicted to food. I would dare to say that I have had a few jobs the illegals wouldn't do. The argument is not valid.

 


Comments (Page 4)
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on May 13, 2010

p.s AD good to see you

Thanks.


We've been busy as you know.  Pushing over 15 now weekly.

on May 14, 2010

Hmm?  Did I parachute into a previous post?  Ahhh...Tamales are a subject all on their own.  Doc, didn't we have a conversation about tamales once before?  I grew up on tamales from Rosarita's restaurant on Guyamaca in El Cajon...they always put a whole black olive in them and I thought EVERYONE did that.  Imagine my disappointment upon reaching the end of a tamale to find no olive had been in there!

PP:  That is an excellent comparison.  Gotta have borders and ya gotta have laws.

on May 14, 2010

Ahhh...Tamales are a subject all on their own. Doc, didn't we have a conversation about tamales once before?

Indeed, but PP probably missed it.  Besides, I am still lamenting the fact I cannot get decent Tamales here (unless made by my wife or the mother of my friends).  I miss them so!  My wife hates making them.

on May 14, 2010

Dr Guy

Ahhh...Tamales are a subject all on their own. Doc, didn't we have a conversation about tamales once before?
Indeed, but PP probably missed it.  Besides, I am still lamenting the fact I cannot get decent Tamales here (unless made by my wife or the mother of my friends).  I miss them so!  My wife hates making them.

You guys can relive the conversation by writing about it and I can read it :->  Huh? Then I will be filled in and not have missed it!

Doc, your wife is right though tamales are a pain in the butt to make ESPECIALLY to make some really good ones.  I did know there were several different types of tamales.  And as stated not all Tamales are created equal.

Thanks BFD, for the compliment!

BFD and Doc, I know you guys are friends.  You can see this throughout both of your articles and comments.  Also, I know that one of you guys knows the others son fairly well because of the military (I think DOC you know BFD's son).  You both should write a separate articles recollecting your first encounter of one another and your first impressions.

Since there is so much tamale talk, you both (DOC and BFD) can give a state by state of where the best Tamales can be purchased!  Because I know in my state I'm not sure of that/or I haven't found a good place that has them :-< And now I really could go for one (who can stop at one? Maybe a dozen?)

on May 14, 2010

AD, that is fantastic news to hear! Are you guys do all the prayers/canters?  I guess this should be a PM, so PM me in filling in the details of how it is going!

on May 15, 2010

PP:  Doc and I met online right here at JU about three years ago.  To our knowledge, we have never met in the real world.  Doc was familiar with my oldest son who is in the Army and wrote on JU under the name "Hyperborean Wanderer".  Through the threads and comments, he has become familiar with most of the rest of the clan.  HBW is my oldest, my second son comments as "Humbordt", my third son is "Toothache's Revenge" and my oldest daughter posts as "MamieLady".  I have another daughter who we refer to as "Boogie"...but she doesn't participate.  There are a number of very fine articles posted by my wife, CharlieMama.  That is us.

As far as tamales are concerned:  I have mentioned the Bean Bandit, a local restaurant here in Colorado Springs...Margie's tamales are world class.  There are a number of fine tamale sources here...alas...none with black olives in them...sigh.  I agree that making them is a hassle.  I have done it a time or two and do a fine job of it but find it too labor and time intensive...I can buy a reasonable tamale for a couple of bucks that doesn't need me to clean up five pots and pans.  

Doc:  search the web...if someone figured out how to ship frozen salmon from Alaska to your door overnight, I am certain some enterprising Hispanic fella has come up with a way to send you an authentic tamale.  Failing that, give me an address and I will figure out a way to tighten you up.

on May 17, 2010

Doc: search the web...if someone figured out how to ship frozen salmon from Alaska to your door overnight, I am certain some enterprising Hispanic fella has come up with a way to send you an authentic tamale. Failing that, give me an address and I will figure out a way to tighten you up.

Sometimes, you cannot see the forest for the trees.  What an excellent suggestion!  I feel so stupid for not seeing the obvious, but will get on it tonight!

Thanks!

on May 17, 2010

AD, that is fantastic news to hear! Are you guys do all the prayers/canters? I guess this should be a PM, so PM me in filling in the details of how it is going!

Will, do.  Maybe after Shavuot.  Work is crazy busy due to convention this week.

 

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