By
Samantha Gross, Associated Press
July
26, 2007
When
Mort Sheinman retired in his mid-60s, he was managing editor of a major
trade publication, and he'd spent more than four decades earning some
well-deserved rest.
Instead, the former Women's Wear Daily manager went right back to work,
ultimately taking a job that used all his professional expertise and paid
him just $10 an hour.
New York City
is hoping to find more ex-professionals like the 73-year-old people who
are either unable or unwilling to return to full-time work but who want to
use their skills and stay in touch with the workaday world.
The city's Department for the Aging is launching a program to bring at
least 100 such participants to work on short-term projects for city
agencies. With a growing number of baby boomers approaching retirement
with decades of active, healthy life ahead of them, organizers say the
program could serve as a model for cities around the country.
The effort is to be operated by ReServe, an organization that has been
matching seniors with part-time jobs in the
New York
metro area since 2005. Participants, called ReServists, work about 10-15
hours a week for $10 an hour.
"The No. 1 benefit for any retiree is to do something that gets you
out of the house," said Sheinman, who's been writing and networking
for the Flatiron/23rd Street Partnership Business Improvement District.
"I see it as an opportunity for me to go learn, for me to keep
learning things."
The city hopes to spend $1 million a year to bring at least 100 ReServists
to work for its agencies. Organizers envision asking retired marketers to
help the Health Department plan outreach campaigns on health risks, while
ex-educational advocates could work guiding juvenile detainees back into
the school system.
The success of the program will depend on the interest of the city's
agencies, which will have to propose projects in order to receive workers.
For some of the seniors, the stipend is more than a token sum. One
participant, an architect's assistant who lost her job when her boss
retired, found it impossible to find new employment at her age, recounted
ReServe's executive director, Claire Haaga Altman. Her paycheck from the
program allowed her to buy necessities.
The story underscores the difficulty many older professionals have finding
new full-time work once they approach or pass retirement age. For those
people, ReServe's compensation offered after so many years of experience
may seem paltry.
But Altman says the money, though minimal, serves an important purpose by
sending the message to employers and ReServists alike that their work is
both valued and valuable.
"It dignifies the work," she said. "Volunteers often get
shunted to stuffing envelopes."
And, Altman said, about 80 percent of participants have no acute need for
the stipend. Many are pleased to work on a project that goes beyond
volunteering but still allows them to have a flexible schedule and escape
the pressures of a full-time job.
For many ReServists, their assignments allow them to explore new facets of
old skills.
Leo D. Johnson, an ex-field engineer who was once responsible for training
others, now teaches computer skills to 2- to 12-year-olds at a
neighborhood center. After spending the first decade of his retirement
mostly sitting at home puttering on his computer, the experience is a
revelation.
"I didn't get to see my kids grow because I was out working,"
the 75-year-old said. But now, he adds, smiling, "I just see the
little kids, 2-year-olds, developing their motor skills all those primary
things I'm sure my wife was doing at home while I was out at work."
Johnson says even his doctor is pleased with the program. Getting out of
the house more has helped him lose weight and improve the results of his
bloodwork, he said.
With the nation's population aging rapidly, such programs could help fight
what some fear could become a baby boomer brain drain. By 2030, 1 in 5
U.S.
residents are expected to be 65 or older.
In
New York City
especially, there are many older residents who are ready to leave behind
the rat race but who like Sheinman are still interested in keeping up.
"I was never comfortable in a rocking chair," he said. "I
always fell out."
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