Showing posts with label First jobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label First jobs. Show all posts

7.18.2012

On the value of "First Jobs"

Why Are Politicians Killing Off "First Jobs"?

Excerpts:

What was your first job?

I stuck pieces of plastic and metal together at an Evanston, Ill., assembly line. We produced photocopiers for a company called American Photocopy.

I hated the work. It was hot and boring. But it was useful. It taught me to get good grades in school so I might have other choices.

...

I write about this because I’m appalled watching politicians kill off “first” jobs. (They say it’s to protect us.)

First, they raise the minimum wage. Forcing employers to pay $7.25 an hour leaves them reluctant to give unskilled kids a chance—why pay more than a worker can produce? So they offer fewer “first” jobs.
Comment: My first job was working at a greenhouse making $ 1. per hour. I started in the Spring of 1967. That summer I worked 54 hours a week ... 6 days X 9 hours and made $ 54 hours a week.

What did I do?
  • I boxed plants into flats and carried them and loaded them into a delivery truck
  • I mulched plants with manure
  • I blended potting soil: dirt, manure, and some other stuff in a large grinder / blower
  • I wheeled old dirt out and new dirt into greenhouses
  • I occassionally drove the delivery truck
  • I cleaned out the boiler (had to crawl inside and scrape it)
  • I cut weeds and tall grass with a scythe
  • I hacked vines off from fence with a small axe
  • I burned a giant brush pile
  • I mowed the owner's home lawn
  • I weeded the owner's private garden
  • I picked weeds
  • I cut flowers
  • I walked along side of a bush hog and picked up rocks / sticks ahead of it
  • I repaired greenhouse glass
  • I bulked up, muscled up and tanned up. I sweated a lot!
  • There were no sick days, PTO, or vacation days!
The seminal events:
  • A childhood friend's father committed suicide in the early morning hours of July 5th
  • A guy I met at the greenhouse died in an auto accident - not that summer but later that year (I think Spring 1968)
  • Two guys I knew well in H.S. died just after graduation. One: VW bug accident / other: tractor rolled over on him
Some have asked me about the $ 1 wage and minimum wage. This chart details that the minimum wage was $ 1.40 back then. Scroll right and the chart shows that the minimum wage for farm labor was $ 1.00. I was considered farm labor. In February 1968 I received a 15% raise to $ 1.15! The following Summer (1968) I started working at Monsanto Chemical and made as I recollect about $ 3.00 per hour.