Current:Home > NewsSummer job market proving strong for teens -MarketLink
Summer job market proving strong for teens
View
Date:2025-04-15 23:25:51
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! (714)
Related
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Motor City Kwanzaa Kinara returns to downtown Detroit
- US land managers plan to round up thousands of wild horses across Nevada
- Tape reveals Donald Trump pressured Michigan officials not to certify 2020 vote, a new report says
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Old Dominion men's basketball coach Jeff Jones suffers heart attack during Hawaii trip
- Katy Perry Reveals the Smart Way She and Orlando Bloom Stay on Top of Their Date Nights
- No. 1 picks Victor Wembanyama and Connor Bedard meet: The long and short of it
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Pakistan’s top court orders Imran Khan released on bail in a corruption case. He won’t be freed yet
Ranking
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Derek Hough says wife Hayley Erbert's skull surgery was successful: 'Immense relief'
- Connecticut man gets 12 years in prison for failed plan to fight for Islamic State in Syria
- US land managers plan to round up thousands of wild horses across Nevada
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Connecticut police dog killed in shooting after state troopers tried to serve an arrest warrant
- Mentally disabled Indiana man wrongfully convicted in slaying reaches $11.7 million settlement
- Cristina Pacheco, foremost chronicler of street life in Mexico for half a century, has died at 82
Recommendation
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Man fatally shot by Detroit police during traffic stop; officer dragged 20 yards
Joint chiefs chairman holds first call with Chinese counterpart in over a year
China drafts new rules proposing restrictions on online gaming
Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
Cancer patients face frightening delays in treatment approvals
Pacific storm that unleashed flooding barreling down on southeastern California
Used car dealer sold wheelchair-accessible vans but took his disabled customers for a ride, feds say