Anonymous wrote:My 16 year old has applied to at least 30 jobs and has gotten one interview at McDonalds. They didn't like his availability because he is in high school full time. He said he could work evenings and weekends and they said no. His group of friends the only one getting hired are lifeguards.
Many of the jobs teenagers got in past years are being done by recent immigrants or other adults. Most places want you to be over 18.
Anonymous wrote:My dd works at a chain coffee place and she has 1 shift a week right now. She can occasionally pick up one or two more. They have so many employees.
Anonymous wrote:I work retail as a second job; I am scheduled for about 10 hours a week. All of the part time employees work about 10-12 hours a week. It gets frustrating because management can’t go over payroll for the week and its influx if the week’s net sales are down.
Anonymous wrote:Why does it have to be retail? My kid started as a food-runner during his first semester while in community college making $19 an hour (Tyson's corner). He has been working 30+ hours a week, but the need is 40+ hours.
He is about to become a server and servers make $40-$45 an hour.
I invested only $6k in 2007-2010 into 529, which grew into $26k. The kid got 30 credits transferred and cc is cheap. In-state will cost only $40k in total for years 3-4. We are not taking out loans, and haven't even bothered with grants yet.
His workplace is hiring and so is mine if you are in DMV. He files his own taxes, no tax on tips, and gets a refund that pays for 2 of his classes.
I was an international student with no right to work everywhere, limited hours, no support from family, no loans, and I paid 2.5x what everyone else paid.
My employer also kept a lot of my money as they knew I couldn't speak up.
When I compare my life to my kid's life, he has it easy.
He has money left over to invest. I think he has saved up $7k already. 4k went into Roth for 2025. This year he will max out to $7500, the rest goes into investment account.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They keep their part timers well under full time hours so they don't have to pay them benefits. My manager would send me home if I was anywhere close to the cap.
20 years ago in college I literally cobbled together three different part time jobs, plus any other sources of income I could fine (psych studies). I had a scholarship and my parents helped some with tuition. Many of my classmates just had parental support.
1-2 days is becoming the norm unfortunately.
On a side note, UPS frequently delivers my packages to the wrong address. While attempting to locate my lost packages, I managed to become on a first name basis with one of their customer center employees and she informed she is scheduled 5 days a week but only 4 hours a day.
Anonymous wrote:They keep their part timers well under full time hours so they don't have to pay them benefits. My manager would send me home if I was anywhere close to the cap.
20 years ago in college I literally cobbled together three different part time jobs, plus any other sources of income I could fine (psych studies). I had a scholarship and my parents helped some with tuition. Many of my classmates just had parental support.