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Why don't we have a youth program that trains teenagers to become lifeguards?
Clearly, we do not pay lifeguards enough given the shortage of US labor. |
Many of them are from Eastern Europe and need the money and language experience. Legit exchanges are wonderful - for our kids to go overseas as well. However, I fear there is some exploitation as there can be with au pairs and her types of legal, temporary worker programs. |
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Our lifeguards are both from the Ukraine. This is the 4th year we've had Ukrainian lifeguards.
One speaks very good English and the other's is good enough to get by, but he uses the translate app on his phone most of the time. They are both in university in the Ukraine and come from small towns with little employment opportunities. This is a "work study abroad" program at their university. So they are getting paid and university credits to be here. My neighbor is Ukrainian and likes to get their life stories each year. The one lifeguard from last year was actually able to remain in the US and is in the process of joining the USAF. From what they've told her, the pool management company rents the apartments and charges them a weekly fee to live there. The fee is deducted from their paychecks. Their apartment is a 3 room apartment that 8 people share. They have a mixture of blow up mattresses and used mattresses (no bed frames). Their apartment has a couch and some beanbag chairs, but their friend's apartment has the cheapo lawn chairs from Walmart as their furniture. They don't have a table, dressers, or TVs, but cable & WiFi are provided. They have some miss-matched dishes and a few pots and pans. The random furniture pieces, pots & pans, and dishes are all kept in storage by the pool management company after the season. I thought they gave them the bicycles, but apparently they either rent them from the pool management company or are responsible for purchasing their own, which the pool management company will graciously buy from them a the end of the season. It sounds like just godawful conditions to me, but they are loving it here. They love how we build out in the suburbs rather than up like they do where they're from. They always comment on how large our lawn areas are. |
Being a Lifeguard was THE summer job to have back when I was in HS from 1996-2000. Even after passing certification, we had to come in periodically to make sure were still in shape and able to rescue. I know the last summer I was a lifeguard in 2000, I was making $15/hr after doing it for 4 summers. That was crazy good money back then for a 17/18 year old! Especially when my friends were making $5-something/hr doing retail or fast food. Those that got jobs as waiters/waitresses (which was hard because of the whole alcohol thing) were the only ones who usually made more than us lifeguards when you factored in the tips. My neighbor's son is a lifeguard at our local rec center (indoor pool; no outdoor pool). He's been unable to find any summer lifeguarding work at an outside pool the past 2 summers. |
Actually, the J-1 program has a very low overstay rate. These are middle class college or grad school kids. They come here for three months, work, and then travel around for another month. Their parents are heavily subsidizing this experience. They go home because they have to go back to school. When they graduate, they are very employable. |
| We have had some of these Eastern European lifeguards at our pool over the years. I think our club prefers to employ children of members but when they don't apply for the jobs they have to fill them somehow. I've heard anecdotally that American high school and college kids are too busy with summer camps, travel, and internships to take jobs that aren't as "appealing" for a resume. Even the kids who like to swim and be at the pool go for the coaching jobs and teach swim lessons which pay better. |
I am poor. I live in a building with only one bedrooms and studios. A lot of the renters here are Mexican, and it's part of their culture to leave their front door open, for air (I assume). I have seen into a lot of apartments - they have two triple bunkbeds often. So six people sharing one studio. These are the dishwashers and busboys and cooks and fast food workers. It's totally normal when you come from a culture where three generations live together, to have 6-8 people in one small home. |
Same deal at Six Flags, Kings Dominion, and Busch Gardens too. Busch Gardens is divided up as the 'Old World' and I always giggle a little when an East Asian is running a ride in Scotland or a Russian is dipping ice cream cones in Germany. And I think all these kids are living the dream during their summer in America, especially the ones from Eastern Europe. American kids pay thousands to backpack all over Europe on a summer break, meanwhile these kids are getting paid to experience their own adventure in America and all that's asked of them is to stay out of trouble and to hang out by a pool 40 hours a week. Lucky I'd say. |
Wow, you are making equivalent backpacking across Europe on dollars a day, staying in fun hostels, trying new foods, zero responsibility, having sex, listening to music, visiting cathedrals and museums and having the adventure of a lifetime with sitting under the hot sun for 40 hours a week on watchful duty or working at a fast food stand, being isolated from locals, having half your salary taken midsummer to pay for travel over and accommodations? I don't think so. It's more like "semi-indentured servitude". I would love it to be the pleasant experience you imagine as many of these summer workers are very well educated/working on degrees back home - and if they left with a positive experience could be great ambassadors for inter-country relations. |
very true. Usually the DCUM crowd thinks they deserve low cost services and encourage this type of exploitation. and the other side of the issue is that these guest workers are taking jobs from local workers. |
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I've met a few and not all live in flop houses.
They do it just for the experience. Some are so broke they gladly go with you out of sheer bordom. I took this one 19 year old to the 9:30 club in D.C. and she totally loved it! Nice way to break the ice. |
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Perhaps this is a city thing especially? We are out in Burke and all the lifeguards sound like they are from here. I will say tho that based on how crowded the pools are I am surprised there seem to only ever be two in the chairs.
Our old hoa used the Europeans for a few summers and then switched to local kids including some from the neighborhood. The locals were much better since they seemed less shy about calling kids out when they were doing something dangerous at the pool. |
Ask them? |
You are assuming the lifeguards come from poor areas or poor families. |
[b] Join the USAF and from the Ukraine? She is probably a spy in training |