The following is a letter written to the Hartford Courant this morning by a reader who was reacting to news that Foxwood Casino is planning to lay off 700 workers. His answer to the problem is to "share the pain". Foxwood would then keep 700 workers who really wouldn't be working, otherwise they would be needed. The retained workers would be working for less money. I am sure most workers need the amount of money in their paychecks. Would you be willing to give a percentage of your pay to retain all of the workers in your company? Your thoughts.
One of our state's casinos summarily fired 700 people on Tuesday [CTNews, Oct. 1, "Foxwoods Planning To Cut 700 Workers"]. Surely, as the nation's financial crisis deepens, thousands more will lose their jobs.
Evidently, the people who run our corporations are incapable of finding another way to meet the challenge of declining revenues. In every recession, their response has always been to fire hundreds and sometimes thousands of their fellow employees. Apparently, most business leaders lack the imagination and the creativity to find a better way to reduce costs.
But there is a better way.
The fairest and most humane way to reduce costs would be to make a temporary salary reduction for every employee in the company from the CEO down to the people at the bottom of the pay scale. Everyone would sacrifice equally.
Everyone would suffer somewhat. But everyone would keep their jobs. Then, when the economy revives, salaries could be increased to their former levels.
I wonder if there is any business leader with the vision and the courage to take such action. I doubt it.
.Granby
One of our state's casinos summarily fired 700 people on Tuesday [CTNews, Oct. 1, "Foxwoods Planning To Cut 700 Workers"]. Surely, as the nation's financial crisis deepens, thousands more will lose their jobs.
Evidently, the people who run our corporations are incapable of finding another way to meet the challenge of declining revenues. In every recession, their response has always been to fire hundreds and sometimes thousands of their fellow employees. Apparently, most business leaders lack the imagination and the creativity to find a better way to reduce costs.
But there is a better way.
The fairest and most humane way to reduce costs would be to make a temporary salary reduction for every employee in the company from the CEO down to the people at the bottom of the pay scale. Everyone would sacrifice equally.
Everyone would suffer somewhat. But everyone would keep their jobs. Then, when the economy revives, salaries could be increased to their former levels.
I wonder if there is any business leader with the vision and the courage to take such action. I doubt it.
.Granby
