Obama asks CEOs for help with hiring long-term jobless

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Confronting the persistent joblessness that has marred the economic recovery, President Barack Obama won commitments Friday from more than 300 companies to reach out in their hiring to the nearly 4 million Americans who have been unemployed for half a year or more.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Confronting the persistent joblessness that has marred the economic recovery, President Barack Obama won commitments Friday from more than 300 companies to reach out in their hiring to the nearly 4 million Americans who have been unemployed for half a year or more.

“It’s a cruel Catch-22,” Obama said at a White House event with CEOs, job training groups and advocates for the unemployed. “The longer you’re unemployed, the more unemployable you may seem.”

Obama called that “an illusion” because, he said, such workers are often better qualified and better educated than workers who just recently lost their jobs.

In addition to convening CEOs and getting their hiring pledges, Obama also signed a presidential memo directing federal agencies not to discriminate against those long-term unemployed workers in their own hiring practices.

As a percentage of the total labor force, the number of people unemployed for more than 27 weeks — 3.9 million — is the highest in four decades. The number doesn’t include Americans who have been looking for so long they have given up. For policymakers, the number of such workers is particularly troublesome when it persists even as the economy grows.

Behind the numbers are the faces of unemployed machinists such as Vincent Gates in Cincinnati or cashier Bill Paci in Philadelphia or Barbara Greene of Colorado Springs, Colo., who worked for decades as a medical receptionist before becoming jobless.

“At this point, at 44, I’m trying to get a skilled trade,” Gates said. “I feel like they don’t look at me as a good long-term investment” for training.

Paci, who was laid off in September from a cashier job, thinks a higher minimum wage or federal spending on civic improvement and infrastructure projects would better help the unemployed and wonders why any CEO would feel any obligation to Obama to hire the long-term unemployed.

“He could say that, but there’s no pressure on these people to do that,” he said.

Greene, 59, who has been out of work for almost a year, said the president’s push doesn’t make up for the looming expiration of her unemployment benefits because of congressional gridlock.

“I think he’s blowing smoke,” she said. “I don’t see anybody, Congress or anybody, who wants to do anything about it.”

Obama’s event and his memo-signing illustrated the types of targeted, non-legislative measures he promised to undertake to expand economic opportunity during his State of the Union address this week.

Obama declared 2014 a year of action for his administration, but his chances of winning legislative victories are slim in an election year and with a divided Congress.