Theo Keith has more from Columbia.
Four months ago, Linda Barnes got sick.
Actuality: BARNES8.WAV |
Run Time: 00:15 |
Description: I came down with congestive heart failure not once but twice. And then they found out that I had COPD and emphasima, and all sorts of health issues. And I couldn't work while I was in the hospital so, therefore, I lost my job. |
Actuality: BARNES3.WAV |
Run Time: 00:14 |
Description: The job that I lost was the first job I've ever lost in my life. So I was pretty down, I was real down. My kids had moved out, empty nest syndrome, lost my job, all of a sudden I've got heart failure and I'm sick. I mean, I was down. |
Actuality: BARNES10.WAV |
Run Time: 00:11 |
Description: I slept in the park, but I'm a city girl and I'm not real good about camping, so I chose a nice leafy area and found out the leaves were poison ivy. |
Actuality: MATT7.WAV |
Run Time: 00:15 |
Description: We're trying to nurture them, take them out of - from the guttermost to the uttermost, from the negative to the positive, from the dark to the light, from the unhopeful to the hopeful. |
Actuality: MATT6.WAV |
Run Time: 00:11 |
Description: People want to know that there's still hope in the midst of a difficult situation. They want to still know that somebody out there is still waving the flag of hope. |
Actuality: MATT5.WAV |
Run Time: 00:19 |
Description: For me, coming up, our neighborhood was filled with children. Our neighborhood - there was no abandoned homes. There were people in those homes, families in those homes. And I think our housing market really is a reflection on how our neighborhoods are doing. |
Actuality: JOHNSON.WAV |
Run Time: 00:16 |
Description: We've got a nice facade out here, because we've all drive pretty cars and have beautiful homes and have enjoyed a standard of living far in excess of what folks did in the 1930s. So it doesn't look like there's suffering going on. But there is. |
Actuality: JOHNSON1.WAV |
Run Time: 00:03 |
Description: People who are losing their employment now never thought they ever would. |
Actuality: BARNES7.WAV |
Run Time: 00:13 |
Description: Just, you know, keep your head up. Keep putting one foot in front of the other. It's going to be bad, it's going to be good, but you're going to enjoy the journey. You know? That's about it. That's all I'm trying to do. |
Theo Keith has more from Jefferson City.
More than a quarter of a million Missourians are out of work, the most since the federal government began keeping track of the numbers.
Missouri AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Herb Johnson says the recession is worse than the early 1980s, when the state's unemployment rate hit its peak.
Actuality: JOHNSON2.WAV |
Run Time: 00:14 |
Description: I just think it's a terrible shame that it's come to this. But here we are. There won't be anyone coming to assist us. You won't see any nation in the world come to help us out. You can count on it. |
And Johnson says he doesn't know how they will get back to work.
Reporting from the State Capitol, I'm Theo Keith, Newsradio 1120 KMOX.
Theo Keith has more from Jefferson City.
Major Kendall Matthews is busy these days.
The Salvation Army's regional coordinator says the organization's Harbor House in Columbia is full.
There are 25 percent more jobless, homeless, and hungry residents than a year ago.
But Matthews says he has not lost hope.
Actuality: MATT3.WAV |
Run Time: 00:08 |
Description: My father told me a long time ago that big ships are hard to turn, but they turn in time. The same thing with our economy. |
And nearly 85,000 more Missourians are out of work compared to a year ago.
Reporting from the State Capitol, I'm Theo Keith, Newsradio 1120 KMOX.