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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, August 20, 2007

Working past retirement

By John Christoffersen
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Pete Perillo, 92, right, at work in Stamford, Conn. Perillo works as a marshal at the Stamford Courthouse. “I come in every day. ... These people, they keep me alive,” he said. About 6.4 percent of Americans 75 or older, slightly more than 1 million, worked last year.

DOUGLAS HEALEY | Associated Press

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

At 98, Sally Gordon is the Nebraska Legislature's assistant sergeant-at-arms. She said she enjoys the work, which lets her pay her ever-increasing bills.

NATI HARNIK | Associated Press

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Irene Olsen, 85, works 20 hours a week at the Milford, Conn., Senior Center. It helps her pay her utility bills and property taxes. “They doubled the value of my house, which doubles my taxes. That’s why I work. I can’t live on my Social Security and own a house,” she said.

DOUGLAS HEALEY | Associated Press

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STAMFORD, Conn. — At 92, Pete Perillo still has a workday routine. He says a prayer and then heads off in uniform to guard the city courthouse.

"In the morning, I talk to St. Anthony and I come in," Perillo said. "I come in every day. ... These people, they keep me alive."

Perillo works as a judicial marshal in Stamford Superior Civil Court Division. He carries no gun.

He is one of a growing number of people for whom retirement age has lost its meaning. They're staying on the job longer and longer past that point — some for personal satisfaction, others out of necessity.

And Perillo's not the only one working away into his 90s and beyond: In Maryland, Grace Wiles, 97, works about 25 hours a week at a shoe repair store. In Nebraska, 98-year-old Sally Gordon is the Legislature's assistant sergeant-at-arms.

They're all younger than Waldo McBurney, a 104-year-old beekeeper in Kansas who was recently declared America's oldest worker.

About 6.4 percent of Americans 75 or older, or slightly more than 1 million, were working last year. That's up from 4.7 percent, or 634,000, a decade earlier, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.

About 3.4 percent of Americans 80 or older, or 318,000, were in the workforce last year, up from 2.7 percent or 188,000 a decade earlier, officials said.

"For the first time in history, four generations are working together," said Melanie Holmes, vice president of corporate affairs for Manpower Inc., an employment services company.

With the first wave of Baby Boomers reaching the traditional retirement age, Manpower has urged companies to start thinking about ways to retain and recruit older workers, through flexible scheduling, for example. This will help them fill positions as the labor pool shrinks.

According to Holmes, companies need to extend their diversity training to include age as well as race and gender. Older workers often bring experience and a strong work ethic, but may have a different style of work: They may be better at face-to-face contact than electronic communications, and may adhere more strictly to company rules, Manpower officials said.

Some companies are reluctant to hire older workers. A survey last year by Manpower found that 24 percent of employers viewed expectations for higher salary or stature as one of the top roadblocks to hiring older workers, while 21 percent cited healthcare costs.

Still, after decades of decline, the number of workers 55 and older began to rise about a decade ago, and that trend has accelerated since 2000, labor officials said.

Experts cite several factors for the growth, including people living longer and the Senior Citizens Freedom to Work Act in 2000, which allowed workers 65 through 69 to earn as much money as they want without losing Social Security benefits. Other reasons include the gradual increase in the age for receiving full Social Security benefits to 67 and a decline in traditional pensions and retiree health benefits.

The number of older workers is likely to continue to rise as Americans live longer and are unable to make ends meet on Social Security and savings in 401(k) plans, said Alicia Munnell, director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

"It's a concern to me they will end up having to (work)," Munnell said.

Irene Olsen, 95, works 20 hours a week at a Senior Center in Milford, Conn., to pay for rising taxes and utilities.

Otherwise, she says, she couldn't stay in her house.

Olsen, who used to run a hat shop in Milford, now oversees the travel department at the senior center. She spoke out recently against a property revaluation.

"They doubled the value of my house, which doubles my taxes," Olsen said. "That's why I work. I can't live on my Social Security and own a house."

Olsen, whose husband died about 20 years ago, drives to work but worries she'll lose her license because of her age if she has an accident. But she doesn't mind working and goes on the trips she coordinates.

"It seems normal to me," she said. "I've worked all my life."

She's not out of place at the senior center. The tap dance instructor is 90, while, at 95, Art White directs the band and runs the bowling league.

"I found him in his office standing on a stool fixing something," said Mary Steinmetz, the center's program director. "He doesn't know why we buy new things when things can be fixed. He always thinks there's a little more life left in everything."

White was not available to talk. He was out of town line dancing.

Steinmetz says the older workers are part of a generation that believes in hard work. They also want to remain independent, especially White, a retired engineer.

"He's just a real Yankee, fiercely independent, hard-working," Steinmetz said. "Doesn't know why the weather keeps anyone from doing anything."

Gordon, the assistant sergeant-at-arms in Nebraska, said she works both because she enjoys it and because it pay the bills.

"I like to meet the public," she said. "My house needs a lot of work. Everything is expensive. Medication is out of sight. I don't want to rely on anyone else."

Perillo, who has worked as a marshal since 1978, has been talking about retiring for the past decade.

"I don't think he ever will," said Chief Marshal Victor Corley.