The Nation: Author and Journalist Amy Goldstein
On Newshub Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Author and Journalist Amy Goldstein
Lisa Owen: What happens to a community when good work goes away? That’s the question Washington Post reporter Amy Goldstein set out to answer with her book Janesville: An American Story. The Wisconsin city was the home of America’s oldest General Motors assembly plant. That’s until it closed down in 2008. In a city of 63,000 people, it had directly employed almost 5000 of them. I spoke to Miss Goldstein ahead of her visit here for the upcoming Writers Festival and started by asking her if the plant’s closure had destroyed Janesville.
Amy
Goldstein: Well, General Motors doesn’t destroy
Janesville, but it certainly was a big economic blow.
Janesville, Wisconsin was a city that had a long, proud
industrial past. It had the oldest operating General Motors
plant in the whole company, starting just after World War I
until it closed down two days before Christmas of 2008. And
thousands of people who had very good working-class jobs –
wages of $28 an hour if they worked for General Motors –
lost that work during this time, and this was the kind of
blow that Janesville had never had
before.
What did that do socially to the
structure of the families, to the city
itself?
Well, Janesville turns out to be a
pretty resilient place. This was not a community that I knew
when I decided I wanted to find a place to write about to
illustrate close up what really happens to people and
families and the texture of a community when good work goes
away. But over the years that I spent getting to know
Janesville, I found that people had very, very hard
decisions to face. People made different kinds of choices.
Some people recovered; some people had a harder time getting
back up. The community itself, as I said, is very resilient.
All kinds of local non-profits were trying to help people
who were suddenly falling out of the middle class and kind
of shell-shocked that that happened to them. But the town is
still going.
The thing is – some people
would argue that the demise of cities like Janesville is
what handed Donald Trump the Presidency. Do you think that
is too simple an explanation?
I think it is
a little bit too facile an explanation. Janesville is an old
union town, and it leans democratic in its voting. It’s
the home town of Paul Ryan, who now is the speaker of the US
House of Representative, and he’s obviously a Republican,
Conservative guy who has been Janesville’s congressman
since he was 28 years old – it’s 20 years by now. But
the town itself has held onto its Democratic identity longer
than its union jobs have lasted. So in the 2016 presidential
election that brought Donald Trump into office – while
Wisconsin as a state voted Republican, voted for Trump for
the first time since the 1980s – Janesville itself voted
narrowly for Hillary Clinton, the Democrat.
Do
you think, though, it’s an example of what some people
have called the evisceration of America’s working class
– within this city, this town?
Well, I can
tell you that the industry in this town has not recovered.
It’s been nearly a decade. And while the unemployment rate
has fallen dramatically from its height of over 13% in early
2009, just after thousands of these well-paid working class
jobs vanished; while the unemployment rate has come down,
industry has not come back, and wages are a lot lower. So,
you know, people are making do, but they are not making do
as well as they used to for the most part.
How
prepared were they for other jobs when they were forced to
look for other jobs?
One of the reasons I
chose Janesville, among many reasons, was that it has a
small technical college that let me look at job retraining,
one of the things I was very interested in. You know, when
working-class jobs, good jobs go away, what do people of the
United States and what does the government recommend people
do to recover? And training for a new job is a very popular
idea. So I was really interested in how well this worked in
Janesville.
And does it work well or
not?
Well, I found that a lot of people went
back to school; not all of them finished. And I did a little
statistical analysis with some academics who helped me,
looking at who had and had not gone back to retrain after
they had lost work in this part of Wisconsin. And it turned
out to be very sobering findings – that people who had not
gone back to school actually did better than those who
did.
We have a pretty well-known economist
here in New Zealand who talks about a thing called ‘zombie
towns’ – towns whose economic glory days are over. And
he believes that basically some things can’t be saved. You
should just turn out the lights on some towns and walk away.
What are your thoughts, having spent a lot of time with
these people from Janesville?
Well, I know
that that is a school of thought and that may be true of
some communities. I can also tell you that the people of
Janesville would very much resent being told that they’re
a zombie town. They have been trying incredibly hard in two
ways – one, to try and rebuild their local economy, and
secondly, there are a lot of home-grown non-profits that
have done a lot of fundraising, especially when this job
loss was so new, to provide various kinds of help for people
whose livelihoods have just disappeared. So, Janesville has
been really trying not to become a zombie town. Very, very
recently, General Motors sold this huge tract of land on
which the factory sat, and a new company is trying to clean
it up environmentally and is hoping to redevelop it. What
ultimately happens with that property is completely unknown.
There’s no specific redevelopment plan yet, but people in
Janesville are hoping that something will come along that
will prevent them from becoming a zombie
town.
Well, Janesville, as you mentioned,
it’s the hometown of Paul Ryan, who is now the retiring
Speaker of the House. Both he and President Obama, well,
they talked quite a big game around resurrecting the auto
industry in places like Janesville. Did they give people
false hope, do you think?
Well, I think that
one of the lessons that I learned by spending several years
getting to know people in Janesville and looking at both the
local and state and federal policies – both Democratic and
Republican – in the United States that are meant to help
communities when work goes away is that rebuilding a local
economy is really hard to do. So President Obama, in fact,
gave a very important economic speech right inside the
Janesville assembly plant when he wasn’t yet President,
when he was Senator Obama from Illinois running for
President for the first time, trying to win the Wisconsin
primary in the winter of 2008. And he said in this speech,
in which he’s laying out his economic agenda for his
campaign, ‘The promise of Janesville is the promise of
America.’ And he said in this speech that if the country
basically agreed with his economic policies and supported
him, he said, ‘This plant is going to last for another
hundred years.’ It closed that winter, that
December.
Well, is President Trump continuing
to give false hope to these kind of workers and these kinds
of industries? He’s talking about making America great
again; he’s introducing tariffs; he’s saying he’s
going bring back jobs from Mexico. But can you actually go
backwards? Do you need to look at going
forwards?
Well, I think it’s too soon to
know what the current administration’s policies are going
to yield. President Trump has been in office for a year,
he’s talking now about tariffs or not tariffs, and time
will tell. I think it’s completely impossible that the
Janesville assembly plant is going to reopen. It’s been
sold. How other parts of the country fare is yet to be
seen.
Some people here would argue that we
could be on the cusp of a Janesville moment. Some of our
regions rely on coal and gas businesses for their wealth.
Now, our government is phasing out those industries over 20
to 30 years, maybe even longer. But knowing what you know,
what advice would you give us?
Well, let me
say first of all that I wrote this book so that it would be
relevant to people who knew nothing about the US auto
industry and nothing about Wisconsin or the American Midwest
– new communities like Janesville that have suffered hard
times or the older Rust Belt parts of the American Midwest
– but really to show what happens when work goes away in
any community in any part of the globe. So the kinds of
things that people in Janesville went through, I think, are
very relevant lessons for people in your country. So I’m
delighted that I’m going to be coming to Auckland to talk
about this book at a writers festival, because I think that
it’s got, you know, broad meaning. You know, I think that
for the communities of yours that are about to lose coal
jobs or other kinds of coal jobs, people should be prepared
that it takes a lot of resilience – both personally and at
the community level – to figure out – as I came to think
of it while doing this work – what kinds of choices people
make when there are no good choices left, because
eventually, people do have to figure out something. And it
may not be the same level of income; it might not be the
same kind of work. There are people in my story who took
auto jobs within the General Motors firmament hundreds of
miles away from Janesville in order to keep their family’s
income up and commute just great distances every week or
every month to keep their lives in Janesville, but they work
somewhere they can keep their old General Motors pay. So
there are lots of choices that could be made, but they’re
all hard ones.
And you can see Amy Goldstein
at the Auckland Writers Festival on May
18th.
Transcript provided by Able. www.able.co.nz