us ess Entering the workforce is difficult, yet necessary, for displaced homemakers. AARON ROBINSON SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS wenty years ago, Sharon May became a statistic. A difficult divorce left the young mother of four in the lurch. She had no job, no work experience, and an ex-husband she says took little responsi- bility for raising the chil- dren. "I came out of a time when our fathers took care of us, and then our husbands took care of us," says Ms. May, now 55. "I had no ambition to do anything other than volunteer work." Without training, she was unable to get a job that paid enough to sup- port her family, and made ends meet with odd jobs and some financial assistance from her rela- tives. Ms. May, who today holds a sales position with Meyer Jewelers at Twelve Oaks Mall, fell into the ranks of America's displaced homemakers, or women who have lost their hus- bands through divorce or death and have been thrust into the labor force to provide for their families. These former full-time housewives have come to represent a distinct and burgeoning labor resource in a nation that currently employs 4.2 million sin- gle working mothers. As defined by Michigan Public Act 594 (1978), which provides aid to recently separated parents, a displaced homemaker is any par- ent of a dependent child who has relied on the support of another indi- vidual, and who sudden- ly loses that support because of a divorce or death. Because the law further stipulates that Anita Gilbert is a relative newcomer to the workforce. PTA To Payroll the parent must have worked in the home for at least 10 years and held no permanent job outside the house, the overwhelming majority of people who fit the pro- file are women between the ages of 45 and 55, and their numbers have been growing steadily for the last 20 years. According to the 1990 census, the number of households headed by single women with chil- dren under 17 increased 230 percent in the last two decades, from 2.8 million in 1970 to 6.6 million in 1990. About 9 million women in America, or about 10 percent of the female population, are divorced or widowed (compared to 6.5 million men, or 7.5 percent of the nation's male population). Today, as many as 16 million Americans may qualify as displaced homemakers under the law, according to the Displaced Homemaker Network in Washington D.C. In the Jewish commu- nity, many of these women look to Jewish Family Service (JFS) and Jewish Vocational Ser- vice (JVS) for help. JFS provides counselling to 96 families headed by single women while JVS runs a program to help about 55 newly single women per year prepare for the hectic job market. According to JFS associ- ate director Margaret Weiner, the statistics are marginally better for the Jewish population than for the nation as a whole, with 35 to 40 percent of Jewish children growing up in single-parent fami- lies compared to about 50 percent of children in the general population. Ms. Weiner says there are generally two types of situations JFS encoun- ters: one where the dis- placed homemaker fami- ly experiences some problem and approaches the organization for help, and another where an outsider notices prob- lems in the family and asks JFS to intervene. "When a marriage goes down the tubes, a lot of dreams go down with it," says Ms. Weiner, who believes many women become overwhelmed by PTA TO PAYROLL page 52