Burned-out boomers retiring while 'on the job'
Times Colonist (Victoria)
October 3, 2007
Business
By: Paul Luke

Canadians stressed out by bloated work hours, runaway technology and mounting elder-care challenges are looking to retirement for relief -- on-the-job retirement.

Fifty per cent of baby boomers have effectively retired on the job, says Ottawa-based Carleton University business professor Linda Duxbury.

"Retiring on the job is how employees are dealing with health and safety and mental health," Duxbury recently told a conference on changing workplaces. "This is a huge issue for employers."…

Duxbury's research shows that people whose workload prevents them from finding a work-life-balance are more vulnerable to stress, depression and burnout.

Many organizations that undergo restructuring cut employees, but dump the same volume of work on the survivors, she said.

It's no wonder public- and private-sector employers face succession planning problems as bright people say "no thanks" to offers of promotion, she said.

"Middle management is absolutely the worst job to have in Canada," Duxbury said. "Your typical managers work 51 hours a week. Seventy per cent cannot get their work done in those 51 hours, and they work another 30 hours of unpaid overtime a month."

Elder care is becoming as big a problem, if not bigger, than child care, she said. Women delaying having children means they often have young children and older parents in the middle of their careers.

This sandwich generation has also given birth to the clubhouse sandwich, in which divorced children move back to the family home with their children, she said.

It has also yielded the open-face sandwich, in which a single working parent is squeezed between child and elder care.

The clubhouse-sandwichers comprise about eight per cent of Canada's workforce, and the open-facers about 12 per cent…

Duxbury said her 16-year-old daughter, who teaches swimming, recently heard a three-year-old student accuse her work-obsessed mother of loving her BlackBerry more than she loved her.

"Technology is out of control," she said. "There is no etiquette on how to use it. There are no acceptable limits."