RAW STORY
WILLISTON, N.D.—From the looks of it, the nation’s boomtown is still
booming. Big rigs, cement mixers and oil tankers still clog streets
built for lighter loads. The air still smells like diesel fuel and looks
like a dust bowl— all that traffic — and natural gas flares, wasted
byproducts of the oil wells, still glare out at the night sky like
bonfires.
Not to mention that Walmart, still the main game in town, can’t seem
to get a handle on its very long lines and half empty shelves.
But life at the center of the country’s largest hydraulic fracturing,
or fracking, boom has definitely changed. The jobs that brought
thousands of recession-weary employment-seekers to this once peaceful
corner of western North Dakota over the last five years have been drying
up, even as the unemployed keep coming.
Downtown, clutches of men pass their time at the Salvation Army,
watching movies or trolling Craigslist ads on desktop computers. The
main branch of the public library is full, all day, every day, with
unemployed men in cubbyholes. And when the Command Center, a private
temporary jobs agency, opens every morning at 6am, between two and three
dozen people are waiting to get in the door.
Some of these job seekers are sleeping in their trucks, in utility
sheds, behind piles of garbage by the railroad tracks, wherever they can
curl up.
Only a year ago, Williston’s shale oil explosion was still gushing
jobs. From 2010 to 2014, thanks to the Bakken shale oil patch, it was
the fastest growing small city in the nation. Williston nearly tripled
in size, from 12,000 to 35,000 people. But the number of active rigs
used to drill new wells in the Bakken dropped to 111 in March, the
lowest number since April 2010, according to state figures. Low oil
prices have prompted drilling to slow down, and companies big and small
have been laying off workers and cutting hours.
City officials paint a rosy picture. They cite North Dakota Job
Service reports that maintain there are 116 jobs in Williston for every
100 residents, point to North Dakota’s ranking among oil-producing
states (number two, after Texas), call the oil production slowdown a
blip and say the oil patch is still growing.
But the city’s job numbers do not match the reality on the ground. At
the Command Center, oil jobs have dropped by 10 percent since last
Fall, said Kyle Tennessen, the branch manager. Compounding the job
shortage, laid-off oil workers were competing with others for
construction jobs and everything else, Tennessen added.
Some migrants have already left, or are planning to, according to the
local UHaul companies. They report fewer people renting vans and
trucks to move into town and more laid-off workers renting vehicles to
move out.
The rest are becoming Williston’s version of day laborers. They
compete for low-paying jobs such as picking up trash, doing laundry and
mopping floors, that make enough for them to eat, but not enough to
afford a place to live. (The average one-bedroom apartment in Williston
costs $2,395 a month.)
Some live in one room with several other men, pooling resources and
splitting costs. Others don’t know where they’ll sleep from one night to
the next.
The Salvation Army has offered stranded workers a one-way ticket
back home. But many job seekers seem unwilling to leave—at least not
until they can make a success out of their sacrificial move to a place
with six months of winter, the worst traffic they’ve ever seen, and a
disgruntled, if not miserable, populace.
“You just have to cowboy up and expect things to get better,” said
Terry Ray Cover, a 56-year-old farmer and jack-of-all-trades who
came from southeast Iowa on a Greyhound bus in November. He’d heard
North Dakota was raining jobs.
“They don’t tell you it’s all a lie,” he said, sipping coffee in the
Salvation Army on a frigid day in early March. “Places advertise jobs
and then tell you they’re not hiring.”
The jobs he sees ads for, Cover said, require certifications and
degrees, “like engineering.” He had found odd jobs, one at a cattle
ranch, since he arrived in Williston. But he hadn’t worked in four
weeks, despite daily treks to the Command Center.
Cover, bundled in a ski suit, had spent the most frigid nights of
winter (20 Fahrenheit) in a tin shelter he discovered within walking
distance of the Command Center, his best hope for work. He was relying
on the Salvation Army for his daily bread and new friends for his daily
smokes.
The men—they are all men—hanging out at the Salvation Army for
coffee, bread and whatever donated goods there might be on a given day
(from 9am to 3pm) have come from all over, including Iowa, Minnesota,
Montana, Louisiana, New Jersey and Washington, D.C. They include a
number of African immigrants originally from Liberia, Sierra Leone,
Nigeria and Senegal.
But their stories are close to the same. They heard Williston had
jobs, and they weren’t having any luck back home. So they hopped in
their truck, or a Greyhound bus, and hopped off to a rude awakening.
Most of the men, who range in age from their early 30s to late 50s,
have spent 10 nights, the maximum allowed, at a 10-bed emergency
shelter the Salvation Army and a local church set up, leasing 10 beds at
a camp for oil workers (a so-called man camp). More than 100 men
applied to stay at the emergency shelter since it resumed operating for
the second year in November. (It was set to close March 31 but has
extended its season due to demand.)
Although there is camaraderie among the migrants, they are openly
frustrated, and the room where they hang out at the Salvation Army is
often tense and gloomy. Men who have been sleeping outside in the
elements, or trying to, fold themselves into corners to get real sleep.
The African immigrants tend to hang together, but a lot of loners fill
the room.
Ali Singa, who moved to North Dakota from Nashville nine months ago,
started out in Fargo, making $11 an hour the day after he arrived in
shipping. He stayed for three months before heading to Williston, where
he heard he could make more money, enough to send to his wife and three
children in Sierra Leone.
He found work in a nearby oil patch town, Watford City, hauling
water, but he was laid off in December and has not been able to land
another job.
“A lack of a job has trapped me here,” Singa said. “Right
now, I’m staying with friends. I’m in a very bad situation. You must put
this down in your report: At the same time that they’re advertising
jobs, they’re laying people off, and people keep coming and keep
coming.”
Singa, a high school French teacher in his native country, moved to
Washington, D.C. from the Sierra Leone 10 years ago, seeking a better
life for his family back home. But after being laid off from a baggage
handler job, he has not had much luck with his relocations.
“Had I stayed home I would’ve been better off by now,” he said. “But
hope has kept me here, because hope is the poor man’s bread. Why can’t I
get a job? I don’t have any felonies, no arrests. I am a good person.
It’s the strangest thing. Is it because of the color of my skin? I tell
people back home to not come here.”
Singa leaves to find work every morning at 5:30, and is usually the
first one to arrive at the Command Center. But jobs are not doled out on
a first-come basis. They are handed out based on qualifications, and
rankings workers have received from employers, Kyle Tennessen said. That
works against the newest workers, without a hiring history.
On a recent typical morning, Tennessen doled out seven day
jobs—restaurant work, construction site cleanup, maintenance—leaving
22 people who’d arrived before daybreak with no work for another day.
One of them happened to be a woman. Louise Provus, 50, moved from
Spokane to Williston two years ago with her husband, Randy Fleming, 57.
“For the first two years,” she said, “I had a job at the local dry
cleaners. In April, I started working for a cleaning company as a
domestic. But that’s just once a week now, so I’m still looking.”
Fleming, who lost an automotive shop in Spokane to fire, has been
looking for work doing anything. But he has not landed a permanent job.
“I’ve got like 40 applications out there,” he said. “I’ve been in here
all week. And some days, I’ve been in here all day, just in case. We’ll
come here at six and I’ll stay till two or three in the afternoon. Then
I’ll take the heeltoe express home.”
He and his wife are among the luckier regulars at the Command Center.
They found an apartment in subsidized senior housing for $600 a month.
Even so, Provus said, they struggle to pay the rent. “I think I’ll go to
the library after this and put in an application at Walmart,” she said.
Walmart has had the same sign out front advertising jobs at $17 an hour for three years, despite hiring freezes.
“I know it’s a long shot,” Provus said. “Make sure you tell people
that if you get any job out here, no matter how bad, you’d better take
it, because it’s the best you’re going to get.”
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