Current:Home > StocksSummer job market proving strong for teens -前500条预览:
Summer job market proving strong for teens
View
Date:2025-04-16 11:16:16
Los Angeles — Once a coveted summer job, lifeguards are hard to come by this year, forcing some pools in Los Angeles to shut down.
"We're short about 200 lifeguards, I've never seen anything like it," Hugo Maldonado, regional operations manager for the Los Angeles County Parks and Recreation Department, told CBS News.
Maldonado said they are struggling to attract lifeguards at $20 per hour.
"We're now competing with supermarkets, we're now competing with fast food restaurants," Maldonado said. "All of those sectors have increased their wages."
On average, hourly wages for workers ages 16 to 24 were up nearly 12% from last summer, according to the Atlanta Fed's Wage Growth Tracker.
"Now if you're a prospective job seeker, you're looking around and you realize, wait, that job makes how much now?" said Nick Bunker, research director at Indeed Hiring Lab. "And you're starting to reconsider jobs you hadn't before."
"This is probably one of the more advantageous times," Bunker said of the job market for teens. "Strike now while the iron is hot."
Mashti Malone's ice cream shops in L.A. struggled to scoop up seasonal employees last year, but not this summer.
"I was very overwhelmed with all the applicants," co-owner Mehdi Shirvani said.
Shirvani says he now has to turn applicants away. The shops pays $17 per hour to start.
"They make an average $22 to $23 per hour, including tip," Shirvani said of his employees.
That is not a bad wage for 17-year-old Hadley Boggs' first summer job ever.
"I was shocked," Boggs said. "It's nice to have some financial freedom."
Boggs turned down a job at a grocery store that paid less.
"I hoped to save for college, and also have some fun money on the side that I can spend my senior year," Boggs said.
Just one of many who will head back to school with pockets full of cash.
- In:
- Employment
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- What happens when a director's camera is pointed at their own families?
- 'Saint Omer' is a complex courtroom drama about much more than the murder at hand
- Matt Butler has played concerts in more than 50 prisons and jails
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Anime broadens its reach — at conventions, at theaters, and streaming at home
- Malala Yousafzai on winning the Nobel Peace Prize while in chemistry class
- New MLK statue in Boston is greeted with a mix of open arms, consternation and laughs
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Ben Savage, star of '90s sitcom 'Boy Meets World,' is running for Congress
Ranking
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- K-pop superstars BLACKPINK become the most streamed female band on Spotify
- Curls and courage with Michaela Angela Davis and Rep. Cori Bush
- 'Still Pictures' offers one more glimpse of writer Janet Malcolm
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Matt Butler has played concerts in more than 50 prisons and jails
- A Wife of Bath 'biography' brings a modern woman out of the Middle Ages
- An older man grooms a teenage girl in this disturbing but vital film
Recommendation
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
Tom Sizemore, 'Saving Private Ryan' actor, has died at 61
How Black resistance has been depicted in films over the years
Is Mittens your muse? Share your pet-inspired artwork with NPR
Intellectuals vs. The Internet
Is the U.S. government designating too many documents as 'classified'?
This tender Irish drama proves the quietest films can have the most to say
How Stokely Carmichael and the Black Panthers changed the civil rights movement