April 23, 2017

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From Risking His Life To Saving Lives, Ex-Coal Miner Is Happy To Take The Paycut

After David Wiley was laid off from the grueling day to day of the coal mining industry, he found a new livelihood working for STAT EMS in Pineville, W.V.

Alexi Horowitz-Ghazi/NPR

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Alexi Horowitz-Ghazi/NPR

Growing up the son of a coal miner in southern West Virginia, David Wiley saw the downside of the profession up close. His father had been injured in the mines, lost several fingers and damaged his knees and back. “He was just really beat up,” Wiley says.

So when it came to find his own line of work, Wiley says he had no desire to work in the coal mines. For a couple of years after high school, Wiley tried his hand at manufacturing and welding jobs in the neighboring state of North Carolina.

But when Wiley decided to return to West Virginia in his early 20s, the job opportunities were few and far between, and when he received a job offer to work in the mines for a starting wage of $22 an hour, the pay was too good to pass up.

“I was excited,” says Wiley, “that’s really good money for anybody. A young kid like me, I’d never made that kind of money.”

Wiley worked the overnight shift, beginning at 11 p.m. and clocking out at 7 a.m. and spent his nights scooping up spilled coal, helping to install structural supports in the tunnel ceilings, and cleaning and maintaining the mine for the next shift. Much of the work was in the dark and it usually involved heavy manual labor.

“Everything in the mines is heavy,” Wiley says. “The lightest thing is a 50-pound bag of rock dust.”

Wiley says that for a while, the high pay made up for difficulty of the work, but he says that he soon began to develop pain in his knees and back, and a falling rock injured his foot. Wiley also notes that the grueling hours meant he had little time to spend with his wife and children.

“You’d come home and sleep all day. You really didn’t have no life,” says Wiley. “You’re just a walking zombie.”

The final straw, Wiley says, was the instability of working in the mines.

“You can tell when the coal market is up, then you can tell when the bottom drops,” he says, “because they start laying people off.”

For more than five years, Wiley says he shuffled between different mining operations in southern West Virginia, as they opened and closed, riding out the off-periods with savings and by signing up for unemployment.

“One mine might work good for a year, then it might shut down,” he says. “Then you go somewhere else and it could work for two years, then it might shut down. I worked at one mine, we had over 500 men there at one time and they shut the doors. Five-hundred people lost their jobs … The last time that I got laid off, the coal market was so down that you couldn’t buy a job.”

Wiley says that the last time he was laid off, he began applying to every minimum wage he could find in the area.

“I was willing to take anything and everything,” Wiley says.

One day, he came across an online job posting for an ambulance driver with STAT Emergency Medical Services in Pineville, W.V. Though he’d never worked in the medical field, Wiley says he was desperate, and decided to apply.

He remembers speaking with the company’s hiring manager on the telephone, “basically crying because my unemployment was getting ready to run out. I had two babies at the time. I couldn’t figure out how I was going to feed them, and he gave me a shot.”

I was a shock at first, he says, going from having made around $30 an hour to minimum wage work at $8.75. But he needed a way to help support his family, and the constant demand for healthcare in the area meant plenty of opportunities to work overtime.

“I’ve come in at 3:00 in the morning and not gotten off until 3:00 in the morning,” Wiley says.

He says he knew within his first month that he’d made the right decision in picking his new line of work.

“I fell in love,” Wiley says. “It’s a steady job. You don’t have to worry about losing your job, because it’s always here.”

In the two years since he was hired on at STAT EMS, Wiley has graduated from ambulance driver to become an Emergency Medical Technician, and he’s currently enrolled in a paramedic science course at a local community college. Wiley plans to continue in the medical field as far as he can. And, despite lower pay, the meaning he derives from his interactions with his patients has made a huge difference in his life.

“You pick up somebody, and they’re on the verge of death. And you drop them off and they’re shaking your hand, saying, ‘You meant a lot to me.’ ” Wiley says, “It makes you feel you’re somebody — that’s enough payment.”

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Trump, The Golfer In Chief

Donald Trump plays a round of golf after the opening of The Trump International Golf Links Course on July 10, 2012, in Balmedie, Scotland.

Ian MacNicol/Getty Images

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Not long ago, both the Economist and the New Yorker magazines featured unflattering cover portraits of President Trump holding a golf club. Both seemed to suggest the president had found himself in a rough patch. While that may be true politically, Trump is very much at home on the golf course — which is not surprising, since he owns 17 of them.

Whatever historians ultimately write on his presidential scorecard, Trump may be the best golfer ever to occupy the Oval Office.

“He’s won club championships. Of course, they’ve all been at his clubs,” says Jaime Diaz, a senior writer at Golf Digest and editor in chief at Golf World.

Diaz, who’s played with Trump on a couple of occasions, says the president golfs the way he governs: largely by instinct. But his swing is not as reckless as it might appear.

“He has this sort of bombastic image, obviously. Well-earned. And you’d expect someone who probably has kind of a sort of a show-offy, ego-driven kind of game. But in fact, it’s a game of control,” Diaz says.

At age 70, Trump typically shoots in the 70s or low 80s. Plaques at his golf clubs say Trump has even hit a couple of holes-in-one. (And that’s not counting his long-shot drive for the White House.)

John F. Kennedy was probably the second-best golfing president, though he didn’t play much in public. Kennedy tried to distance himself from his golf-crazy predecessor, Dwight Eisenhower. The first time Kennedy walked into the Oval Office, he was surprised to find cleat marks on the battered hardwood floor.

“President Eisenhower would pace back and forth with his golf spikes on before he went out to the putting green to chip and putt a little bit in the morning,” says historian Mike Trostel of the United States Golf Association.

Nowadays, that hardwood floor is covered. And that’s not the only way modern presidents try to sweep their golfing habits under the rug.

While Trump spends hours at his own golf courses, aides rarely reveal whom he’s playing with or even confirm that he’s playing at all. Before he was president himself, Trump often criticized President Obama’s time on the links — though he recently told a group of lawmakers that’s only because Obama didn’t use the time to cut deals.

“I always said about President Obama, it’s great to play golf. But play with heads of countries,” Trump said. “Don’t play with your friends that you play with every week.”

Trump recently bonded with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe over a round of golf. And he tried to sell an Obamcare replacement bill between holes to Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky.

“We had a great day with the president today,” Paul said afterwards. “We did talk about health care reform. I think the sides are getting closer and closer together. “

Donald Trump plays a round of golf after the opening of The Trump International Golf Links Course on July 10, 2012, in Balmedie, Scotland.

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Lyndon Johnson also used the golf course as one more venue for arm-twisting, whereas Obama rarely talked politics during a round, except maybe the one time he played with House Speaker John Boehner.

Historian Trostel says in the last century, all but three U.S. presidents have spent time on the golf course. (Herbert Hoover, Harry Truman and Jimmy Carter were the holdouts, although Trostel recently discovered that Carter played some in the military.)

Different presidents exhibit a wide variety of styles. George H.W. Bush raced around the course in less than two hours. A round with Bill Clinton could drag on half the day.

By far the most prolific presidential golfer was Woodrow Wilson, who played nearly every day but Sunday — some 1600 rounds — including all through World War I.

“In the winter time he had Secret Service agents paint golf balls red so he could practice in the snow,” Trostel says.

By comparison, Eisenhower played about 800 rounds during his two terms in office. And Obama played 333, according to Mark Knoller of CBS News, who keeps an unofficial but authoritative tally of all presidential statistics. Trump is on pace to exceed Obama’s golf total, and he could match Eisenhower’s. It’s doubtful, though, that he’ll come anywhere close to Wilson’s record.

For today’s presidents, the golf course is loaded with political sand traps, including accusations that they’re slacking off or isolating themselves in a ritzy country club.

But Golf Digest’s Diaz suspects there are real payoffs too: an opportunity to relax and clear one’s head, and for Trump, a chance to hit the pause button on the constant self-promotion.

“I didn’t sense he needed to tell you how good he was when he played golf,” Diaz says. “I think he was confident about it and he let his actions speak for themselves. In some ways, that might be his best self, out on the golf course.”

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