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Staff and Way Corps
living at The Way root locations at Camp
Gunnison and the New
Knoxville headquarters are expected to live on what the trustees have described
as a "genuine need basis."
An individual's
"genuine need" is established by the Personnel Director of the Way
International at the time of hiring and is reviewed annually.
Budget categories are set
up for the individual such as car maintenance, clothing, car insurance,
telephone bill, entertainment, personal grooming etc. and a fixed amount of
money is allocated for each category.
The Theory
In theory, the amount of
money to be allocated for each category is to be discussed with each individual
and their individual need is to be met within that category.
This is supposed to allow
for someone who has special needs in a category to get their need met - thus
the "genuine need basis" term came about.
The
Practice
In practice however, the
Personnel Director tells the individual what is the normal or typical amount
allocated for each category and then the individual either accepts that amount
or asks to be an "exception" to the norm.
The Way Corps are taught
from their first weeks in the in-residence training never to be exceptions.
Therefore most staff and Corps accept the amounts suggested to them by the
Personnel Director.
This "genuine need
basis" method of calculating an individual's pay leaves many staff and
Corps living at what most would consider poverty level.
The Way claims that its
staff don't need as much as it also provides all meals and housing.
Working
Hours at The Way
The Way International
Staff Handbook specifies a minimum work week for single people and all married
men of fifty hours.
Way followers are taught
from very early in their association with The Way to never be "minimum
minded" in their giving of time and talents and so the actual hours worked
by the Way Corps and staff of The Way International range between fifty-three
hours per week up to more than seventy hours per week for many, depending on
the department the person is assigned to. A large number of staff will fall
into the sixty hours per week bracket.
Pay scales
at The Way
The Way International
employs a unique method of paying its employees. It pays its staff a
"net" amount. That is, The Way figures out how much your
"genuine need" is and then back calculates that amount to determine
how much tax needs to be paid.
The Way International does
not pay social security for its employees which will result in great financial
hardship for its workers at retirement time. Some Way staff have been on
the payroll for more than twenty-five years.
The Way International has
no retirement benefits for its workers and Martindale has said on several
occasion that The Way is not responsible to help with retirement benefits.
Martindale on one
occasion (1998) in a Corps meeting said that he had dropped a couple from the
Way Corps because they had dared to bring up the subject. He then went on to
threaten that the next person to mention retirement benefits to him would be
fired and dropped from the Way Corps.
Way Pay is not related to
the amount of hours a person works or the amount of work produced.
Net salary for a single
person ranges between $60 dollars and $100 per week. $75 per week is the range
that most people would fall into. There are two pay periods in each month - the
10th and the 25th.
Way staff work fifty one
weeks per year and MUST work at least fifty hours per week.
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A Way worker who works only fifty hours
per week and is paid $60 per week will make $3060 per year.
Fifty hours per week for
fifty one weeks equals an annual total of 2550 hours. Being paid $3060 for that
work equates to a take home pay of $1.20 per hour.
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A Way worker who works only fifty hours
per week and is paid $75 per week will make $3825 per year.
Fifty hours per week for
fifty one weeks equals an annual total of 2550 hours. Being paid $3825 for that
work equates to a take home pay of $1.50 per hour.
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A Way worker who works only fifty hours
per week and is paid $100 per week will make $5100 per year.
Fifty hours per week for
fifty one weeks equals an annual total of 2550 hours. Being paid $5100 for that
work equates to a take home pay of $2.00 per hour.
If a staff person works
65 hours and receives a net weekly pay of $75 (which is very common at The Way)
then the take home pay check would equate to $1.15 cents per hour.
A couple will typically
be paid a little less than the above amount as they should only have one car
and therefore less gas money and maintenance money is needed.
The Way claims that these
low numbers taken on their own, misrepresent the real picture. A Way employee
after all has all of his meals and housing and medical expenses provided for
him.
As for Way meals, we will
write an article on that soon. We have already written an article on Way
housing. We will discuss medical expenses later in the article.
Having seen a W2 from a
Way staff couple who had worked a full year at The Way, the amount listed under
fringe benefits for food and housing was $900 per person. Adding that amount to
the Way salary makes almost no impact.
Housing and food that is
valued at $900 per year per person is either an incredible stewarding of
resources or food and housing that the average person would rather pass up on.
Many Way staff feel that the latter is the case.
Medical
Expenses
A provision of the
emergency cutbacks document was that Way staff had to take a 10% paycut and to
pay 20% of any medical expenses that they incurred (previously The Way paid
100%).
No budget category of income
was subsequently offered the staff to help them prepare for medical
expenditures. They were told to take any monies needed for medical expenses
from other budget categories.
This meant that the staff
had been asked to live at 10% below what had already been determined to be a
minimal salary.
Some Way staff are now
privately describing their salaries as being "below need" salaries.
Medical expenses for some
have already amounted to more than The Way gives them for their savings
categories for the entire year.
Several people have spent
more than $1000 on the staff portion of medical expenses in the first half of
this year alone, and yet they make about $3000 - $4000 per year.
These staff are left to
wonder where they can take their families on vacation in the summer seeing that
they have spent all of their vacation money category on needed medical care.
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A fact
not known to the Way Corps or Way staff is that The Way Trustees who claim that
they are setting the example with the belt-tightening measures are exempt from
the 20% of medical expenses clause.
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Way
Trustees and Trustee household members continue to be reimbursed at 100% on ALL
medical expenses.
The 100% reimbursement
for Trustees is fully utilized by Martindale and his family, whose
monthly medical expense bills often are in the neighborhood of $1000 - $1500.
This number is surprising as Martindale and his family give every appearance of
being healthy.
We do not know whether
Martindale is required to submit legitimate medical expense receipts in the
same way that other Way staffers do.
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