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Pay in new era of factory jobs falls short

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"Let one of the politicians work on (our) wage," Alig said. "There is extreme disconnect."

Alig said he doesn't believe that either the Republican or Democratic party is working to fix the economy. He is disheartened by a president who, he said, didn't strengthen labor law or promote good relations between unions and corporations. And while his federal income tax hasn't increased, Alig said he is paying more state and local taxes.

In addition, his cost of living has increased while his pay has lagged. Gasoline, for example, is more than $2 per gallon higher than before the recession, he said. Yet his last raise, the first since 2009, increased his pay by 34 cents per hour, he said.

Alig said his goal of climbing to the top tier at the factory, where workers make about $25 per hour, was shattered when fellow members of UAW Local 974 approved the last contract. That tier is now unreachable.

"My dream was to have a career and a lots of kids in the house and a vacation and spend time at home," Alig said. "The American dream doesn't exist for people like us anymore."

As Alig's pay hasn't improved, he and his wife decided to invest in her education. She quit her night laundry job at a nursing home making $8.25 an hour to enroll in school full time and become a nurse, which she thinks will pay between $18 and $24 an hour. To pay for her start-up costs and supplement his income, Alig took a $6,000 loan against his 401(k), which he needs to repay over four years.

"Why do people like us have to suffer when there is excess?" Alig said. "We are not asking for a free handout or entitlement. We are asking for a share of what we helped create."

Dave Hendricks works longer hours at age 58 than he did nearly four decades ago when he started at Caterpillar. He is one of the lucky ones, he said, because he makes almost $25 per hour repairing tractor parts and will retire with a pension of about $2,800 a month.

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