The Columbus Dispatch

Do leaders understand everyday needs?

- Susan Tebben

A typical week for Amy Pache includes a trip to the golf course, a run to the airport, and maybe an event or a visit to Ohio Stadium. She gets invited backstage to a concert from time to time and politician­s talk to her regularly. But mostly, she stays in the car. She waits on the wealthy and connected people who are going to these places, because she was hired to drive them in whatever transporta­tion they’ve hired from the livery service for which she works.

But her life is no longer typical, and she lies awake at night in her Dublin apartment, wondering how she’ll pay the utility bills, and how much gas she can afford to put in her own car.

“It went from very fast-paced and completely booked to nothing, just immediatel­y and completely,” Pache said.

She’s now gone through “every bit” of her savings, and has had to make hard calls about electricit­y payment plans and needs over desires.

“You count every single penny,” Pache said of her life now. “How much do I need this? Can I go without it?”

She fears her workload won’t ever be the same, with some businesses seeing the long-term benefits of working from home. She has a steady list of clients who ask for her by name, some attorneys, doctors and even a few Ohio State alumni. But the work, for which she is paid per ride, is still just trickling in.

Losing the ability to do what she loves represents a loss of what kept her going, she said.

“I get to see a lot of the country, it’s kind of like therapy, I have a lot of time to think,” Pache said. “I get to meet different people, people that give me hope.”

Still, she finds herself lucky. Her boyfriend drives a bus for Central Ohio Transit Authority, which had its own struggles when the pandemic began. His hours are normalizin­g, she says, but their steady income is uncertain.

She also says she remains hopeful about the future of the state and the country. She plans to vote for President Donald Trump because she feels he’s

supported the country in ways she cares about: building up the military and talking about ending drug epidemics.

“If I’m on a train and we’re going where I want to go, and things are going in the right direction, why would I get off?” she said.

Pache voted for Barack Obama in the past because she values those who haven’t been in politics for a lifetime, and she feels disappoint­ed by state and federal politician­s who “focus on the wrong things.”

“I want so badly to go to [U.S. House Speaker] Nancy Pelosi, and [Ohio Gov. Mike] Dewine and ask what the price of milk is,” Pache said. “I want to know what they think my serious problems

are?”

But as she waits to see when her next paycheck will come, and hopes to hear from her steady client list to come back, more than anything she wants to feel less exhausted by the flow of “informatio­n and disinforma­tion.”

“I often wonder why I’m so tired, and I think it’s because we’re in a constant state of what’s next,” Pache said.

Susan Tebben was among seven journalist­s who participat­ed with Ohioans in October in Your Voice Ohio online dialogues to gain understand­ing of concerns people have in the 2020 election. She is a reporter for the Ohio Capital Journal and can be emailed at stebben@ohiocapita­ljournal.com.

“I want so badly to go to [U.S. House Speaker] Nancy

Pelosi, and [Ohio Gov. Mike]

Dewine and ask what the price of milk is. I want to know what they think my serious problems are?”

Amy Pache, Livery service driver

 ?? ADAM CAIRNS/THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Dublin resident Amy Pache, who voted for Barack Obama, now intends to vote for Donald Trump a second time. Pache, who is sitting inside the van she uses on the job as a livery driver, said she wishes leaders could relate to the concerns of everyday Americans, things like the price of a gallon of milk or a gallon of gas.
ADAM CAIRNS/THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH Dublin resident Amy Pache, who voted for Barack Obama, now intends to vote for Donald Trump a second time. Pache, who is sitting inside the van she uses on the job as a livery driver, said she wishes leaders could relate to the concerns of everyday Americans, things like the price of a gallon of milk or a gallon of gas.

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