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She Lost Her Job In The Shutdown. Now She Has A Message For Trump.

Trisha Pesiri-Dybvik,  Sen. Kamala Harris  ' guest for Tuesday's State of the Union address, has survived two American tragedi...


Trisha Pesiri-Dybvik, Sen. Kamala Harris ' guest for Tuesday's State of the Union address, has survived two American tragedies.
In 2017, the air traffic control specialist and her husband Jed, who have three children, lost their home in Ventura, CA, in the Thomas Fire. This year, she was furloughed during the 35-day government shutdown. Her husband, a Navy veteran who is also an air traffic controller, worked without pay.
Since losing what Pesiri-Dybvik calls their "dream" home — historic, perched on a hill with a gorgeous ocean view — they moved to a rental property in nearby Camarillo, which they were also recently forced to evacuate as a result of floods and mudslides after the Woolsey and Hill fires. The rebuilding process has been "beyond cumbersome," said Pesiri-Dybvik, but at least it has kept her busy.
"Keeping busy helps me to keep going," Pesiri-Dybvik told Refinery29 in an interview. "I'm trying to secure a stable environment for my children. That's my driving force. I kind of want to get to the other side and get things to a sense of the normalcy we've been missing. It's been a lot of change for us. I'm just working my tail off trying to get things back to normal."
Pesiri-Dybvik and her husband were both at work in December 2017 when they heard that the wildfire was spreading toward their home. Their nanny was home with the two youngest kids — Brynlie, 5, and Johnnie, 3 — and had to pull them out of bed to evacuate.
I'm trying to secure a stable environment for my children. That's my driving force. It's been a lot of change for us. I'm just working my tail off trying to get things back to normal.
"For our 5-year-old, it's been the hardest," Pesiri-Dybvik said. "She is old enough to remember the trauma of the fire. Her and my youngest son were at home. They got pulled out of bed in their pajamas, without any shoes. I met them in an outlet parking lot. She often tells the story of that night. Recently, the Woolsey Fire [which Pesiri-Dybvik's parents had to evacuate; their home is safe] brought up a lot of those fearful feelings again. She's at a really good preschool and doing well, but as a mom, I worry all the time about her little heart. We lost everything. She lost all the things that were important to her."
Pesiri-Dybvik said the ordeal has brought her and the couple's oldest daughter Mackenzie, 13, closer together. "She's studying government in school and has been interested in the kind of work she sees me doing. I've enjoyed that changed relationship."
With her husband, she said, experiencing the tragedies has helped her communicate on a "much more profound level" than they have in the past. But, she added, "We don't have a lot of time for us. We long for the days when we could talk about something simple. We miss that."

But now, as an active National Air Traffic Controllers' Union member, Pesiri-Dybvik said she's deeply honored to be able to speak up on her colleagues' behalf. During the shutdown, her job was deemed non-essential, and her husband's workload increased to make up for the furloughed staff. Neither of them were receiving paychecks.
Because of the nature of air traffic controllers' jobs, shutdown-related stress had the added layer of being a risk to people's safety. "Every single day the shutdown continued, the system was a lot less safe than the day before," Pesiri-Dybvik said. "And the last thing you want is your air traffic controller to work another shift before their job."
Now, after having visited with Sen. Harris' staff to advocate for her colleagues, she looks forward to meeting the senator in person. Sen. Harris says she hopes hearing from workers like Pesiri-Dybvik will help Washington avoid another government shutdown.
"Since the tragic loss of their home, Trisha, Jed, and their three children have worked diligently to bounce back and reestablish a sense of normalcy in their lives, even amidst an unnecessary government shutdown that caused both of them to miss their paychecks for over a month," Sen. Harris, who has made a speech about Pesiri-Dybvik on the Senate floor, said in a statement. "Trisha’s story is just one of many stories I heard during the shutdown of Americans whose lives were upended and who faced those difficult days with strength and resilience."

4 comments

  1. I could see how getting things back to normal, when "normal" means having a "dream" home — historic, perched on a hill with a gorgeous ocean view, could present its problems to a young couple with three children. Especially when that home is in California. Must be worth over a million, at least. If this is the best Kamala could come up with for those facing hardship due to the government shutdown, then I'm all for it! The shutdown, that is. Would it be an overstatement to say these people sure have high expectations and are, perhaps, spoiled? Maybe they should change their priorities and learn to live within more modest means so they can put some money away for a rainy day or the next firestorm.

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  2. BOOOOO Hooooo
    Between the two of them they were making over $300,000/year and all that "rebuilding" was done by contractors, not their hands ... just babbling "Look at POOR POOR ME" Bull SHIT.
    There was a time when Government employee salaries were well below their private sector counterparts. To compensate, they were provided with generous benefit packages; including the retirement plans that are sinking so many cities today. Give us twenty years and we will take care of you for life. In the mid-80's Reagan increased salaries to be competitive with the private sector; his argument was that good people were leaving the public sector for better paying private sector jobs. This "conservative" did NOTHING to adjust the benefit packages to bring them in line with the private sector.
    http://www.rationalrevolution.net/articles/recession_cause.htm

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    https://www.investmentwatchblog.com/why-should-people-who-work-for-the-government-make-more-than-those-who-pay-them/
    Why should people who work for the government make more than those who pay them?
    January 12, 2019 by IWB
    Why should people who work for the government make more than those who pay them? Almost sounds like a conspiracy.
    Federal employees are paid out of tax dollars, which begin by taking them from the private sector.
    To recap, people who are paid through the private taking of taxes, make 50% more than those paying them.

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  3. They were pulling in well over $300,000/year between them .... full perks/benefits.
    Guess how much I sympathize with them.

    ReplyDelete