
Susie Grimes, Latisha, Elisha, and Josh Lidsey Missing Zac and Isaih Lidsey
The RV lifestyle is not for everyone but I love it. Today we visited Sue and Josh and Latisha Lidsey in Campbellsville, KY. They are working the Amazon seasonal jobs. Sue started in Sept and Josh in November. They did this last year.
We all worked together (volunteer) at Wolfe Creek Fish Hatchery near Lake Cumberland Damn, last year.
Josh treated us to lunch. Thanks Josh. What a great day.
If interested check out this article written by some idiot on the journal newspaper in Louisville, KY. Talk is that someone has a problem with Amazon not paying union wages. Don't know nothing about that but they did take tid bits of the interview's and put them together to make RVing and working seem like desperate and deprived people.
This is long and the video on the web site is worth watching.
Holidays: a job.
Hard-up retirees and unemployed workers with children have converged on this rural town in RVs and campers to spend a few months earning $10 per hour filling orders at an Amazon warehouse.
Amazon offers a free place to park and plug in. When work ends Christmas Eve, the campers pull out.
Many have lost their homes and live on the road, home schooling their children along the way. Others are retirees who had planned to see the country but now work along the way to supplement depleted investments. Those not old enough for Medicare typically lack insurance.
We are among the economic refugees. We are lucky to earn enough to get our laundry done and eat macaroni and cheese,” said April McFail, 52. “I think it says America needs something different. This is supposed to be freedom and a good life. Now it is a sad note.”
McFail's husband, Terry, lost his job last year at Dow Chemical earning $18 hourly in southern Michigan. They lost their home to foreclosure in May. Pooling $8,000 in savings, they purchased a 1987 Winnebago and hit the road. They worked as campground hosts in South Dakota for the summer, arriving in September to begin work at Amazon.
A short time later, April McFail's diabetes forced her to quit the Amazon job. She could not manage 10-hour shifts four days a week lifting packages up to 30 pounds each. Health-care benefits left over from her husband's job at Dow expire Tuesday.
'Amazon Gypsies'
Lunchboxes in hand, “Amazon Gypsies” walk down the hill to work from the company camp built on a gravel parking lot next to an auto junkyard. A nearby state park extended its hours through Christmas at Amazon's request.
Amazon pays campsite rental, water, sewer and electric. Some campers choose to save their propane and rely on electric blankets and heaters to stay warm at night.
Blankets cover the windows of the Wicklane family's 1997 Fleetwood ca
mper. An electric space heater whirrs on the worn linoleum floor. After losing an electrician's job and a house in Florida last year, Kurt Wicklane found work unloading Amazon trucks in Kentucky to feed two daughters, ages 3 and 9, and a son, 5
Courier-journalCAMPBELLSVILLE, Ky. — Amazon.com has what many migrant workers want for the h