COMMENTARY | The Horseshoe Casino in Cleveland is begging for workers. A second call for untrained gaming table dealers, security guards, bakers, seamstresses and locksmiths went out this week, according to NewsNet 5. Since Gov. John Kasich took office Ohio's unemployment rate has dropped dramatically, but there are still thousands of folks looking for works. Could it be possible that the Cleveland area does not have at least 700 displaced workers seeking a new way to earn a paycheck?
Even in this struggling economy, job fairs continue around the state. While there are probably not enough jobs to go around, there surely seem to be enough to vastly decrease the number of Ohioans waiting for a monthly unemployment check. Other than those with a religious objection to gambling, anyone without a criminal record living in northern Ohio searching for a job should be running to fill out an application at the Cleveland Horseshoe Casino.
Have Americans become so coddled that we are above any legal opportunity to pay our bills and put food on the table? A good friend of mine fell temporarily on hard times. Instead of sitting around whining about the lack of a raise at work, she got a second job at McDonald's on the weekends. She drove 60 miles to and from her office job each day, ran three kids to all of their activities, cooked dinner, helped with homework and then put on a horribly ugly uniform each weekend to earn extra money. Asking teenagers pulling through the drive-thru window if the "wanted fries with that" was demeaning, but she did it with a smile every single weekend for months until she had all of the family's bills caught up.
Potential workers applying for jobs at the Cleveland casino do not even need to be non-smokers, like job hunters at the Columbus casino. Smoking is a very unhealthy habit, but it is hard to believe that discriminating against tobacco users is legal. According to News Net 5, the casino owners created the non-smoking employees only rule to prevent large healthcare costs down the road. Oddly enough, functional alcoholics and obese people can apply even though they may be equally at risk for expensive health problems. The Columbus casino is going to test employees for nicotine and refuse to hire anyone with residue of a nicotine patch in their system, according to NewsNet 5.




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