Aissatou Royce-Diop started working behind the counter at the Dairy Queen on E. 38th Street in Minneapolis this week.
The freckled 14-year-old concentrated on flipping the curl at the top of a soft serve ice cream cone, which, according to her boss, Dairy Queen insists upon. "It's not as easy as it looks," she said Friday. "I almost have it."
Job prospects for Minnesota teenagers like Royce-Diop are getting better, new data show.
Estimated unemployment for teenagers over 15 has fallen by half since 2011 and is now at its lowest level since 2003. Most teens will get a pay bump from a higher state minimum wage in August. Shops, restaurants and amusement parks are starting to hire summer workers now, and they say competition for employees is growing.
"With the tightening labor market, teens are going to be a hotter commodity than they've been in a while," said Oriane Casale, a state labor market economist.
The share of teens looking for a job who couldn't find one skyrocketed in the 2008-09 recession, rising as high as 21 percent and then falling slowly. The speed of that drop picked up over the last 24 months, and the state's teen jobless rate was estimated at 10.8 percent in March.
Only Montana, Utah, North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska have lower teen jobless rates than Minnesota.
Valleyfair hires 1,600 workers each summer, about 1,000 of them teens. They take tickets, cook and serve food, operate rides, sell trinkets and run game booths. Jobs start at $9 an hour, and most workers get a 50-cent-an-hour bonus at the end of the season if they keep up their end of the bargain and work the whole way through.