Ms.
                                  Fixit Keeps 'Em Talking 
                                  Excerpt
                                  from It's A Living! Career News for Girls 
                                  by
                                  Ceel Publishing 
                                  
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                               Verelett
                                  Allen
                              
                               "Don’t
                                  give up on your dreams. Always seek out a mentor, someone
                                  who will help show you the way."
                                For 16 years Verelett Allen has worked as a radio
                                technician at Metropolitan Transit Authority
                                (Metro), the Washington, D.C.-area public transportation
                                company. She installs and repairs two-way radios
                                on buses, in police cars, and in subway tunnels.
                                Verelett is the only woman ever to hold this
                                job at Metro. 
                                "I
                                  always liked taking things apart and putting
                                  them back together," 
                                she says. "And I like fixing things." 
                                But the most satisfying part of her job at Metro
                                is the pay rate. "It’s the most money I’ve
                                ever made in my life. It’s allowed me to
                                put three daughters through school and pay for
                                one wedding." 
                                Verelett is now a grandmother. 
                                Many
                                  of the men at Metro are a little cool to Verelett,
                                  but she does have a friend who helped her learn
                                  the ropes. "I don’t let the men bother
                                  me. I know I’m good at what I do." 
                                Verelett
                                  grew up in Washington, D.C. She spent three
                                  years in Germany with her family when her father
                                  was stationed there, and she remembers getting
                                  a pink transistor radio as a present from her
                                  grandfather. "I took it apart. I had to see
                                  how it worked." 
                                When
                                  she returned to Washington at the age of 12,
                                  Verelett’s life changed. Her grandfather,
                                  who was a strong force in her life, died. Her
                                  parents divorced. She lived with her mother,
                                  but her mother was busy trying to make her
                                  own life work and had little time for Verelett. "I
                                  had complete freedom; I could do anything I
                                  wanted." 
                                She
                                  almost dropped out of school. "I quit going
                                  to classes, but I stayed connected with my
                                  old friends." 
                                A girlfriend, a homeroom teacher, and her mother
                                convinced Verlette to go back and get her high
                                school diploma. 
                                "Senior year was fun," she says. After graduation,
                                Verelett, who says she didn’t know what
                                she wanted to do with her life, had three children
                                - one each year the first three years after high
                                school. The father of her children was already
                                married, so Verelett had to raise them on her
                                own. 
                                Verelett
                                  took many jobs. She worked in a cup factory,
                                  she drove a city bus, she coordinated fashion
                                  shows for foreign diplomats, she worked as
                                  a waitress, and she cleaned offices. Eventually,
                                  she found a job as an intern at a television
                                  station, where she learned film editing. 
                                But
                                  she wasn’t making enough money to support
                                  her and her children. So Verelett’s mother
                                  took two of her kids and the youngest went
                                  to stay with a cousin while Verelett followed
                                  her friend who had found a job in radio in
                                  California. Verelett found a job selling advertising
                                  for radio stations. But she missed her kids,
                                  and after six months, she headed home. 
                                Verlette
                                  got her kids back and took welfare payments
                                  as she worked different jobs. She was determined
                                  to get back into TV or radio, but the rules
                                  on who could edit had changed—she needed
                                  more training and a license from the Federal
                                  Communications Commission (FCC). Verelett worked
                                  putting undercoating on cars and cleaning offices
                                  and planned to get her FCC license. During
                                  the next five years, she took electronic courses
                                  in her "spare" time. Once she had the license,
                                  she found that Metro paid better than broadcasting
                                  and that her license was the type the company
                                  required for the work of radio technician.
                                  So she applied to Metro every week, until the
                                  company finally called her for an interview. 
                                Verelett
                                  thought she had the job. She passed the test,
                                  she passed the physical, and the Metro representative
                                  told her to report to work. But when she showed
                                  up at Metro, she learned that she didn’t
                                  have the practical experience to get the job.
                                  The company didn’t believe she could
                                  do the work that only men had done before.
                                  A counselor at Metro suggested she enroll in
                                  Wider Opportunities for Women (WOW), a program
                                  to help women find these types of "nontraditional" 
                                jobs, usually held only by men. After graduating
                                from WOW’s electronics program in 1981,
                                Verelett finally landed the job at Metro. 
                                These
                                  days, Verelett starts her day at 7 a.m. and
                                  gets home about midnight. During the first
                                  part of the day, she goes to her job at the
                                  National Capital Area YWCA. There she runs
                                  a program to teach women who want nontraditional
                                  jobs how to get ready for training. She tells
                                  these women what to expect from apprenticeships
                                  and internships, what the work world is really
                                  like, and how to succeed in jobs where they
                                  will be working mostly with men. Then at 3
                                  p.m. Verlette starts her Metro job, where she
                                  works until 11:30 p.m. 
                                One
                                  Monday a month, Verelett runs a support group
                                  for women who are working in nontraditional
                                  jobs. The members of the group talk about any
                                  problems they are having and try to help each
                                  other to stay in the jobs. Verelett loves both
                                  her jobs—fixing things at Metro and teaching
                                  women at the YWCA. She has become so well known
                                  throughout the United States for her work in
                                  helping women get jobs that she’s been
                                  to the White House and met President and Mrs.
                                  Clinton. 
                                CAREER
                                    TRACK 
                                Gets
                                  pink transistor radio/ Graduates high school/
                                  Has 3 daughters/ Works fashion shows & TV station/
                                  Studies for FCC license & works undercoating
                                  cars/ Gets radio technician job/ Teaches at
                                  YWCA/ Honored at White House 
                                YOU'D
                                    LIKE THIS JOB IF YOU
                               
                                
                                  - Like
                                      to take equipment apart to see how it works & fix
                                      it. 
                                  
 - Like
                                      to solve puzzles and problems. 
                                  
 - Are
                                      interested in studying electronics and
                                      devices such as VCRs and radios. 
                                  
 - Can
                                      ignore putdowns by others because you will
                                      work hard and be confident in what you
                                      do. 
                                                              
  
                               
                               SALARY
                                    RANGE 
                                Apprentice
                                  wages $4.25 to $22 per hr (plus benefits) Source:
                                  Ferguson’s Guide to Apprenticeship Programs. 
                                STATISTICS
                               
                                
                                  - In
                                      the field Electronic Engineer Technician
                                      positions--women held 20.5% 
                                  
 - In
                                      Cable TV technician positions--women held
                                      5.3%
 
                                                    Source: Federal Communications
                                                    Commission. 
                                                                
                               
                              
                              Excerpted
                                    from It's
                                  a Living! Career News for Girls                               
                                |