Peggy Byrne lost her most recent job as a human resources manager in March. Her unemployment benefits run out in February. Her health insurance expires in six weeks. She needs a job now.
While the clock ticks, Byrne, 59, a spunky former state legislator from the 1980s and a former state planner, isn't waiting around. She hops on the computer next to her bed each morning and scours websites for job leads.
But Byrne became so frustrated with the piecemeal, disjointed search engines she came across for laid-off workers that she decided to create one of her own.
"It's tough enough being unemployed without having people scrounge for the information they need. It shouldn't be a scavenger hunt," said Byrne, now one of 124,400 Minnesotans who have lost jobs since September 2008.
Determined to use her past experience to benefit others and get herself a job in the process, she developed a website that has scores of links to job search engines, food shelves, housing and heating assistance programs, free flu shot clinics, free legal clinics, cheap medical care, transportation, job retraining programs, bargains and news articles about grants, loans and thousands of other resources for the unemployed.
The site, which Byrne runs without pay, has won favorable reviews from foundations, job counselors and placement agencies around the state for its comprehensiveness and simplicity.
"I use Peggy's website a lot with [our program] participants," said Bruce Thayer, a computer lab coach for the Goodwill Easter Seals Dislocated Worker Program in St. Paul. Each week, Thayer helps dozens of clients search for work and tap resources using computers.
Last week, one unemployed client who is behind on his rent asked Thayer where he should go when he became homeless.