Posted on 08/27/2018 4:24:23 AM PDT by reaganaut1
Growing up my father had a business and would hire some older teens or young adults for help over the summers and I don’t recall him ever struggling to fill the jobs.
Now that Cindy McCain's in line to be the next Arizona Senator, I wonder if she'll continue to pay Paco slave wages to mow her estate's lawns - and Consuela to cook her meals?
Oh, who am I kidding! When has that ever made a difference to the constituents!
“How about high school kids?”
They would need a joystick to run a mower.
My point is that if you are the business owner, and find your own customers, you don’t need to take a salary. You get all the money after expenses.
My brother’s customers were loyal because he did the best job possible. They were very disappointed when he went off to college at RPI.
Too many teenagers are only good at snapchat and video games.
My own son, 18, lives at home and says it’s too hot to cut the grass. I then keep reminding that it’s not to late for me to cut the power cord for his Xbox.
It’s gonna be a struggle to get him a job, too. He just graduated high school. No plans for college. And here’s a skill he already knows!
I’m going to make him read this article!
She could always get a flock of sheep...
Tell the kids to earn the money for Fortnite by doing a real virtual job simulator with an actual lawmower.
I’ve noticed some of that, too.
Wages must be going up for a heavier white woman to have joined the trash pickup crew.
I’m 74 and I mow my own four acres of grass. I would run a mower for a landscaper if he will pay the inflation adjusted equivalent of what a dollar fifty an hour was in 1960. I do good work too, don’t drink or do drugs or even smoke and I come to work on time, have my own transportation and a valid driver’s license.
“Adjusting for inflation, he would be taking in $1400 a week in 2018.”
I think it takes more than $1400 to equal $300 in the seventies.
Fox Chapel, which this article cites, is one of the tony suburbs of Pittsburgh where John Kerry has one of his dozen or so homes. I, on the other hand, live in one of the working class suburbs. When our high school kid joined the Air Force, my wife found another high school kid in our neighborhood who was delighted to take over the lawn mowing chores. His Dad said it was nice to find someone who still paid for that kind of thing because just about everyone else either (a)mowed their own or (b)hired one of those professional services. Kids actually do enjoy earning money if you ask around. $25 for 45 minutes of work (plus the cost of gas and mower maintenance) isn
is not bad for a high school kid no matter how you slice it.
Yes, when I was in college a lot of guys worked landscaping, construction and moving in the summer.
Turn off the welfare ... adjust their attitudes.
You are being very naive.
I know when I hired American labor to build my house, Workmen's comp insurance demanded the ability to audit my cash bank withdrawals to see if I was paying anyone under the table, and the IRS looks at bank deposits to determine if people are cheating on taxes.
A cash payment to a landscape company goes directly into payroll, without any bank involvement, and allows cheating in both areas. Of course they will give a discount for that.
Baloney.
There are plenty of Americans to do these jobs.
We just aren’t going to do them for sh!t wages.
This piece is nothing but another WSJ backdoor plea for open borders.
Yeah it seems that immigrants take a lot of jobs that used to be held by teenagers and college students.
I just had no path forward, said Mr. Cafaro, 47. Its so frustrating.
Customers werent happy. Theresa Dozzi used Mr. Cafaro as her landscaper for 20 years. Ms. Dozzi, 64, watched this spring as the grass grew so high it became unsightly around her 10,000 square-foot brick home set on 3 acres in Fox Chapel outside Pittsburgh.
It was a nightmare, she said.
Please... I live in this area, there are no shortage of folks willing to cut grass.... sounds like a trust fund baby that doesn’t know how to get things done if it requires any real effort to me.
I got into hiring lawn care due to property line wars with the jerks next door.
He was sort of right but acted like a super spoiled child.
After that, I lost interest as I usually didn’t mind my own yard work. Paying someone else worked better.
A friend of mine who has several big medical problems finally had to start paying for lawn stuff. It was tough for him for a while since he kept a super meticulous yard.
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