Lauren Parr, 18, thought that finding a summer job would be a piece of cake. That's before she was rejected by Caribou Coffee -- three times. And Ben and Jerry's, Feed My Starving Children, Office Max and Scheels, a sporting-goods store in Eden Prairie.
Last week Parr, a Minnetonka High School graduate heading to the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va., in the fall, secured a day's work painting the deck of a house in Chanhassen for $10 an hour. Her boss? Parr's mom, Jeannette, who joked that if her daughter doesn't find real work soon, "she'll be washing my windows -- my list is long."
Hordes of teenagers and young adults are pounding the pavement in an increasingly desperate hunt for summer jobs. Parents, please resist rolling your eyes and pulling out your "just try harder" speech if they come home empty-handed. One recent survey found that 76 percent of hiring managers expected to fill their seasonal jobs by May -- if they even had seasonal jobs.
Joseph McLaughlin, a research associate with the Northeastern University Center for Labor Market Studies, says this is the toughest year on record for teens seeking summer work.
"We're at a 60-year low," he said, noting that an estimated 3 million U.S. youths want jobs they can't find.
Holy hamburgers!
Many factors make it so. Companies queasy about an uncertain economy are holding back on filling positions, or they're filling in with nontraditional workers, such as people 55 and older, whom they believe are more responsible. Immigrant groups, too, are happy to take less-appealing service jobs that were once a shoo-in for teens. It doesn't help that teens only want jobs for two or three months.
Steve Schumacher, director of STEP-UP, a summer employment program operated by Achieve! Minneapolis, remains bullish that his organization will still place 600 Minneapolis youths in jobs this summer, in everything from health care to financial services to custodial work.