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- <text id=93TT1128>
- <title>
- Mar. 08, 1993: Nice Work If You Can Get It
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 08, 1993 The Search for the Tower Bomber
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- JOBS, Page 57
- Nice Work If You Can Get It
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Fly-by-night job agencies are promising--but not delivering--fat paychecks in faraway places
- </p>
- <p>By CATHY BOOTH/HOLLYWOOD
- </p>
- <p> Kirk Smets thought that the classified ad sounded too good
- to be true. But with no job, three kids and a fourth baby on
- the way last summer, the 28-year-old plasterer from Palmdale,
- California, was willing to try anything. The ad from a Florida
- company called Roblan Inc. described a spectacular offering:
- a tax-free $70,000-a-year job working on a construction crew
- overseas. Food, housing and medical expenses were all paid for.
- The lady at Roblan was enthusiastic. "They said I'd be working
- on hotels in the Caribbean, the Bahamas," says Smets. "They
- said I'd be leaving in three to four weeks."
- </p>
- <p> With visions of palm trees and large paychecks dancing in his
- head, he sent Roblan a $295 fee, told his landlord he'd be moving
- soon, sold the family furniture and even parted with his cherished
- dirt bike. He was so confident of a job that he got an out-of-work
- electrician friend, Roy Allen, and Roy's father to sign up.
- As soon as the three had paid their fees, however, the trouble
- started. They say Roblan began evading their phone calls and
- later reneged on the promises made by the phone-sales staff.
- Only Roy got a job offer--which he figured would pay him $5
- an hour after expenses--to work at the North Pole. Repeated
- demands for a refund went unanswered. "I feel like a stupid
- idiot," says Roy. "When somebody tells you to get ready and
- go in a month, you start tying up loose ends."
- </p>
- <p> The Smetses and Allens aren't alone. With jobless rates still
- at recession levels, unemployed workers from Delaware to Oregon
- are easy pickings for employment agencies requiring initial
- fees of $188 to $295--and some more than $1,000--for access
- to the "hidden market" of overseas jobs. Many are mere resume
- services, mailing stacks of unsolicited resumes from their "clients"
- to companies, often with no openings. Others offer listings
- available in any public library. In one case, a company promising
- jobs in Australia collected $164.95 from customers who got a
- 1989 booklet on jobs, want ads from a Sydney newspaper and a
- Rand McNally travel video.
- </p>
- <p> Consumer watchdogs say overseas-job scams rake in at least $100
- million a year. No one, not even the Federal Trade Commission
- (FTC), knows for sure. But the trade is so lucrative that even
- a small-time boiler-room operation with just three phones can
- take in $5,000 a day. Fly-by-night operators flourish in Florida,
- where policing is spotty at best. In the past year about 100
- employment agencies have sprung up in the state to peddle overseas
- jobs. Half have already closed.
- </p>
- <p> Although most overseas-job firms operate legally, few deliver
- on their promises of $70,000-plus jobs in exotic locales. Only
- an estimated 2% of their customers ever get a job. Police say
- refunds are rare. "I'd like to see these guys rot in hell,"
- says Bill Dwyer, a 43-year-old New Jersey electrician who scrounged
- together $295 after a Florida job agency told him he would have
- a choice of assignments in Israel, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Australia
- and Acapulco, Mexico. Out of work for three years, he dreamed
- of sending his kids to college. "It was all wonderful, wonderful,
- wonderful, until they got my money. Then, nothing," he says.
- </p>
- <p> To get people to sign up, phone salesmen literally promise callers
- the world. This year it's the sunny Caribbean. Eastern Europe,
- Kuwait and Australia were last year's come-on. One man was told
- his credit-card debt would be paid off; another was assured
- his employer would fly his dog overseas. A Chicago woman believed
- an agency that told her Iran was hiring female construction
- workers. Three construction workers in Decatur, Illinois, thought
- they had got a real deal with a "buddy package" to work on hotels
- and casinos in Aruba in the Netherlands Antilles. "What suckers
- we were," says Alan Berry, a 34-year-old laborer out of work
- for a year. "It's not like we had the $299 to spare."
- </p>
- <p> Consumer advocate Stuart Rado, a Miami Beach businessman who
- lost $3,500 to an overseas-job firm in 1981, blames the government
- for lax policing. "The FTC is impotent to do anything. People
- don't know where to complain," he says. In the past six months,
- however, the state attorney general's office has filed civil
- suit against four companies, including the now defunct Roblan,
- and is investigating four more firms for deceptive trade practices.
- Last month the FTC filed a complaint against another Florida
- operator, the Douglas Co., for allegedly deceiving clients about
- jobs in sunny foreign climes.
- </p>
- <p> Overseas job agencies deny any wrongdoing, saying they make
- no promises. "Roblan emphatically does not guarantee jobs,"
- says Roblan's attorney Andrew Cove. Universal Placement Inc.,
- one of the firms sued by Florida, says it provides an honest
- resume and referral service and claims that job-scam artists
- are hurting legitimate companies. "We all get painted with the
- same black brush as companies that run job scams," says Jack
- Thav, the company's executive vice president.
- </p>
- <p> Although the FTC warns consumers to beware of any company seeking
- advance fees, even skepticism is sometimes no protection. Randall
- Deaver, 25, an unemployed sheet-metal worker in Fort Worth,
- Texas, was leery of promises that he would have a job in Cancun,
- Mexico, in three months. When he could find no complaints on
- file with the Better Business Bureau, he and a friend sent a
- $295 joint fee. All they got for it was the runaround. "I figured
- it was scam, but I took a chance," says Deaver with a sigh.
- "The moral is, of course, if it sounds too good to be true,
- it probably is."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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