These retirement-age nomads find work wherever the road takes them - YouTube

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JUDY WOODRUFF: The pandemic has spurred a surge in camping and R.V. travel, as social
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distancing has become one of the catchphrases of COVID-19.
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But it's not all fun and vacations. One group of Americans has long since adopted a self-sufficient
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lifestyle, living full-time in motor homes and working seasonal jobs to support themselves.
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Our economics correspondent, Paul Solman, has the story.
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It's part of our Making Sense series Unfinished Business.
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And a note: Some of this story was shot before the pandemic began.
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DARLA MCLAIN, Workamper: This is the couch that turns into a bed.
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PAUL SOLMAN: To Darla McLain, 64, and husband Bill, also 64, a former biker and hell-raiser,
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this is home sweet home.
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BILL MCLAIN, Workamper: Our whole bedroom is done all in Levi's. These are all my old
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pants.
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PAUL SOLMAN: The McLains have been living in an R.V. since 2010, after the Great Recession
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sank their L.A. motorcycle repair shop and their home.
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BILL MCLAIN: We had a $700,000 house that we owed about $200,000 on that sold for $131,000.
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DARLA MCLAIN: On the auction block.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Broke, the McLains sold what was left and hit the road.
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DARLA MCLAIN: It was that or rent an apartment and get jobs locally. But there were no jobs.
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PAUL SOLMAN: So, they drove to where the work was.
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BILL MCLAIN: Our first job was Amazon in Coffeyville, Kansas.
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PAUL SOLMAN: A two-month stint in the warehouse, holiday rush.
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DARLA MCLAIN: It was pretty rough. They expect certain numbers, and you have to hustle.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Bill over-hustled.
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DARLA MCLAIN: He blew his knee out.
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BILL MCLAIN: I don't normally walk at 60 miles an hour pushing a heavy cart going around
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90-degree turns.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Amazon was the first of some 20 seasonal gigs. When we first met them last
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fall, the McLains were parked across from a Las Vegas Ikea to peddle pumpkins and then
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Christmas trees.
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BILL MCLAIN: With us, we have what we call wheel estate. We just we just take the covers
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off, lift the levelers, fire it up, and we go where the economy is good.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Tens of thousands of retirement-age Americans are migrant laborers, or workampers,
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driven by economic necessity and wanderlust.
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This is Judy Arnold's fourth year workamping. She's been tending a store in Yellowstone
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National Park since June.
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JUDY ARNOLD, Workamper: It wasn't very busy at first, but, as time went on, it got busier
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and busier, until we have more people now than we have had in regular seasons.
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People are just tired of being cooped up at home, and they thought, let's go to the parks.
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PAUL SOLMAN: More sightseers, drawn away from COVID and back to nature, means a lot more
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work for a workamper like Arnold.
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JUDY ARNOLD: I'm doing the work of three people right now.
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PAUL SOLMAN: The pandemic has driven an awful lot of Americans onto the road, but the number
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of mobile-living, gig-hopping workampers has been growing for years.
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Every January, hordes convene in Quartzsite, Arizona, the site of an annual R.V. show.
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That's where we met 66-year-old Susan Otteros.
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SUSAN OTTEROS, Workamper: You end up in these really neat places, like Yosemite.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Otteros works as a camp host. Main tasks? Checking in campers and, if you're
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up for it, cleaning.
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SUSAN OTTEROS: I don't do the bathrooms.
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(LAUGHTER)
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SUSAN OTTEROS: My boyfriend does the bathrooms. I collect the money.
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(LAUGHTER)
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PAUL SOLMAN: Mitch Craighead drafts camp hosts for Thousand Trails campsites.
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How many 75-year-olds do you recruit?
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MITCH CRAIGHEAD, Thousand Trails Campgrounds: More than you would expect. Baby boomers are
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retiring. The pool of workers that we're hiring for is growing dramatically.
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PAUL SOLMAN: That was in January. The company declined to give us specifics, but Mitchell
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says campgrounds are busier than these days.
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MITCH CRAIGHEAD: We have always looked at ourselves in the camping industry as the original
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social distancing. And a lot of our new customers are telling us just that.
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We have seen a significant spike in reservations for the remainder of the camping year this
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year.
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PAUL SOLMAN: At the R.V. show, workamping veterans Rick and Tammie Wommack moved into
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their motor home nine years ago, after their son died by suicide.
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TAMMIE WOMMACK, Workamper: We started out with what we call our Journey for Joshua,
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which was to honor our son.
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But the reality after that three years was, it's expensive to live on the road. You need
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new tires. Maintenance costs are high.
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PAUL SOLMAN: And big campers get just seven miles a gallon. So, for the past seven years,
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they have worked the North Dakota sugar beet harvest.
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TAMMIE WOMMACK: I didn't even know what a sugar beet was. I thought sugar came from
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sugarcane, because where I come from, it does, you know, Dixie Crystal.
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But, instead, 55 percent of our sugar comes from sugar beets, instead of sugarcane, in
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the country.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Muddy 12-hour shifts at $14 an hour, plus overtime, until the beets run out.
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Some nomad gigs pay a lot more than that.
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Ms. J. transports R.V.s from manufacturer to dealer, and sees the country.
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MS. J., Workamper: I can pick the jobs I want to take to go see various destinations. So,
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if there's an R.V. that needs to go to Florida, which I have done this, delivered in Miami,
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I went on over to Key West
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PAUL SOLMAN: And how much do you get paid for that?
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MS. J.: I would say somewhere between $60,000 and $75,000.
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PAUL SOLMAN: That's $60,000 to $75,000 a year, driving four days a week.
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These days, R.V.s are selling like hot cakes, but Ms. J. is sitting out the pandemic in
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a tiny house in Georgia until next year.
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MS. J.: The cases are up, especially for certain communities, communities of color.
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And I'm -- I know quite a few of people who have been affected. And so I just kind of
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choose to lay low until things kind of simmer down a little bit.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Can you afford to?
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MS. J.: I can.
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I have been doing this pattern over a number of years, where I was able to financially
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prepare myself for the what-ifs. And this is one of those what-ifs.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Back in January, in the big tent, there were hawkers of tire pressure monitors,
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R.V. window-cleaners, orthotics.
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We reconnected with Bill and Darla McLain, who'd driven here from Mexico, where they
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go for affordable health care.
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BILL MCLAIN: Shrimp tacos are killer.
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(LAUGHTER)
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BILL MCLAIN: We have a great pharmacist down there. We get glasses and our teeth worked
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on. I don't know why -- how they can charge so much for stuff here that you can go right
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down there and get the same thing for a fraction of the price.
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PAUL SOLMAN: But the McLains were at the R.V. show for a gig, to sign up other workampers
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as oil field gate guards.
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BILL MCLAIN: You have to man the gate 24 hours a day. They pay $150 a day for that.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Now, look, workamping obviously isn't for everyone.
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Does this interest you?
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MAN: No, not at all.
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PAUL SOLMAN: And why is that?
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MAN: Because I retired for a reason. I don't want to go back to work.
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PAUL SOLMAN: But Bill and Sandy Collins liked what they heard. They workamp, helping fund
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their wanderings.
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SANDY COLLINS, Workamper: We work Adventureland. Then we go to J.C. Penney and then...
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PAUL SOLMAN: Doing what?
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SANDY COLLINS: Working in the warehouse at J.C. Penney's.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Even in bankruptcy, J.C. Penney's warehouse is still running. And as, at Amazon,
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you have to step lively.
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BILL COLLINS, Workamper: On Thursday, I walked 23,355 steps.
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PAUL SOLMAN: According to 72-year-old Bill's smartphone, that is.
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BILL COLLINS: And as long as I keep doing it, then I think my health is going to stay
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a lot better than I would if I sat down.
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PAUL SOLMAN: That's one of the appeals of workamping to George Stoutenburgh.
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GEORGE STOUTENBURGH, Workamper: I can't see myself stopping work. I can't do nothing.
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What is nothing? You sit around and, what, wait to die? That's not me.
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PAUL SOLMAN: But he also needs the money.
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GEORGE STOUTENBURGH, It's not like we're broke, but we're certainly not millionaires. We can't
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afford to just travel the world and do whatever we want to do. That would be a wonderful thing,
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but it's not my life.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Judy Arnold's current Yellowstone gig has kept her more than busy, but, when
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it ends in October, she isn't sure what she will do.
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JUDY ARNOLD: There's a huge population of us that are still in limbo, wondering if there
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is a next job to go to. And a lot of my co-workers, where they normally go, the places aren't
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open. So, I'm definitely worried, because I definitely need an income.
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PAUL SOLMAN: As for Bill and Darla McLain, they have been parked outside their daughter's
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house in Arkansas for several months, making repairs to the R.V.
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BILL MCLAIN: I think, for the most part, we have been surviving and trying to get through
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this, like most people are. It is a little weird for R.V.ers. I know that for a fact.
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It's not the easiest thing in the world to find a place.
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DARLA MCLAIN: It's not really that we can't travel. It's just once you get where you're
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going...
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BILL MCLAIN: Where do you stay?
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PAUL SOLMAN: But, this weekend, they're getting back on the road, headed to a new job, working
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and hoping to find places to camp.
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For the "PBS NewsHour," this is Paul Solman.