For a couple
of weeks there, in the summer when I was 10 or 11, I was a paper girl.
My brother
Tommy R, then 8 or 9, agreed to take over the route of his friend Tommy Mac,
whose family was heading off on vacation. (There were, at this time, at least
four Tommy’s on our block, including two Tommy C’s. We didn’t have a ton of
name diversity, that’s for sure. If memory is serving here, there were four
Jimmy’s, four Patty’s (if I include my sister Trish, who was never called
Patty, and was then called Po), and three Kathy’s. Street-wise, I was the only
Maureen; neighborhood-wise, there were plenty of us.)
Anyway, my
parents decided that “our” Tommy needed help on his route, which covered a
fairly extensive bit of territory. I’m guessing that, on his regular route, Tommy
Mac was assisted by one of his brothers – probably Jimmy Mac – or his sister
Patty Mac.
So I was
enlisted.
Being a
paper girl had its pros and cons.
I hated to
get up that early. And I wasn’t wild about starting the day covered in
newsprint. But, much as on Halloween when it was fun to be out marauding around
after dark, it was kind of fun being out so early in the morning, before most
people were up and about. Plus there was the money angle…
The
highlight of the week was “collecting”, which was done on a Saturday. I took
the collecting lead, as our Tommy and I believed that having a paper girl would
elicit more tips than a paper boy. This strategy worked, although I did argue
with our Tommy that, if someone explicitly gave me something extra for being a girl – as did happen once: thank
you, kindly Mrs. G up on Wildwood for that quarter - I deserved that extra in
its entirety.
The worst
part of being a paper girl was delivering the paper to the local Friendly’s. It
would not yet have been open for the day, but the vents in the back were
already spewing noxious, greasy, cloyingly sweet fumes. The Friendly’s manager
liked his paper tucked in the door handle (just under the noxious-spewing vent)
just so, and it took a while to do the job right. I can still remember exactly
what those fumes smelled like. My Rosebud! My madeleine!
As luck
would have it, our first day on the job coincided with a monsoon. My mother
didn’t want us drowned-ratting around, delivering soggy newspapers, so she had
my father drive us. He got a kick out of it, probably because it gave him the
opportunity to rag on what candy-arses (not his words) we were to get chauffeured
around on our paper route. Why when he was a boy… (He had a route with his
sister, which covered an even wider swath than ours, as it extended down to the
Brookline/Seminole area, where one of his customers was space pioneer Dr.
Robert Goddard. Mrs. Goddard was still alive when we were kids, but she was
blocks away and not in our territory.)
Of course,
by the time my father was 11, he was a half-orphan and had graduated from the
child’s play of a paper route, to a more substantial after school job as a
candy butcher in a knitting mill. Since the Irish and French-Canadian “girls”
who worked the looms couldn’t take any time out to grab a bite, they relied on
the candy butcher, who went loom to loom selling candy bars and sandwiches.
(Pronounced “sang-witches”.) Ever industrious, my father was soon promoted from
candy butcher to bobbin boy, delivering giant yarn bobbins to the “girls”. He
soon learned to spot the bobbins that had the fewest knots in their yarn, and
delivered them to the “girls” who tipped him. (If this all sounds like
something straight out of Charles Dickens, I do want to point out that this was
the 1920’s, not the 1840’s.)
During my
short-duration stint as a paper girl, we delivered the morning paper – The Worcester Telegram. The afternoon
edition (The Evening Gazette) was
delivered by an older, somewhat intellectually-challenged kid named Skipper,
who was eventually replaced by a grownup, an even more intellectually-challenged
guy named Roland. (Most Sunday papers, by the way, weren’t delivered. They were
purchased from a news cart outside of church. Ours was manned by my cousin
Jimmy, who, I believe, managed to put himself through Holy Cross on what he
earned there. In addition to the Worcester paper, my father always bought a
couple of the Boston papers for the sports coverage.)
Anyway, even
in a neighborhood fully stocked with characters – Banana Joe, The Blue Jay,
Elmer, The Runner, Mister Mur-fay - Rolie was enough of an oddball that he
would have stuck out, even if he wasn’t an oddity by way of being an adult who
delivered newspapers. That was strictly for kids! (Rolie also worked as a “swamper”,
doing odd jobs.)
But, over
recent decades, as paper readership has declined, paper routes have expanded.
In many areas, they require a car, so adults have replaced kids as paper boys
and girls.
I once
worked with a woman whose husband had a paper route. L was the main support of
her family. J worked on his novel, and brought in a bit of extra delivering
newspapers. I remember L telling me that one time, when they were having a
what-do-you-want-to-do-when-you-grow-up conversation with their kids, their
young son very sweetly asked, “Daddy, did you always want to be a paper boy?”
I suspect
that no one grows up wanting to be a professional paper boy or girl.
And, after
reading an account in The
Boston Globe on just what it’s like – and just how poorly it’s paid – I can
fully understand why.
The job, once the bastion of neighborhood
kids looking to make a few extra bucks on their bikes, has evolved into a
grueling nocturnal marathon for low-income workers who toil almost invisibly on
the edge of the economy.
Like many other newspaper delivery drivers, [Tony]
Juliani works 365 days a year and gets no vacation, overtime pay, or workers’
compensation. He said he has not taken a day off in six years.
He delivers papers from 2 to 7 a.m., heads to a
second job some days slinging weekly papers, and then a third dropping off
Amazon packages until 8 p.m.
During
delivery hours, most of the time it’s dark out. Plenty of times it’s cold. Or
sleety. Or snowy. Or rainy. Or monsoony. And there’s no Dad to drive you around
on your route.
Juliani, by
the way, is 75.
It almost
goes without saying that paper delivery drivers are considered independent
contractors. So there are no guarantees. And no minimum wage. Few (if any)
benefits. No vacation.
Welcome to
the everyone’s-an-entrepreneur economy. All part or the sharing economy where
us consumers get to share the benefits, and those who deliver the goods get to
grub for a living. Let’s race to the bottom! Whee!!!!!
Of course,
for many of the latter-day paper boys, delivering the news is just one of
several temporary and/or marginal jobs being strung together to eke out a
living. Many are immigrants. If they can pile on the crappy jobs and create the
opportunity for their kids to get their feet up on a higher rung, good for
them. But I sure wouldn’t want to be 75, up at 2 a.m., driving around tossing
papers on front stoops.
Even without
the ghastly fumes from the Friendly’s vent, a paper boy’s life is not a very
happy one.
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