BenedictGomez
Well-known member
Working at a private ski are would be a phenomenal gig.
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Eh. Sounds like a job that's fun the first few nights then quickly dulls out. I've heard that it can be pretty boring if you're grooming wide, not-so-steep slopes.
But at the same time I was told by a cat operator on a night after a rain/flash-freeze he started sliding down a steep trail...even with the tiller engaged...so that must've been pretty fun!
No lifties shouldn't be getting 30 per hour but heavy equipment operators should be getting a lot more than 15 and the same can be said about many other positionsThere's a few people on this forum that have been told that time after time and they still don't get it and think that lifties in Jackson and Aspen should make $30/hr so they can afford a nice one bedroom apartment 10 minutes from the mountain.
Who is forcing them to work for that rate against their will?No lifties shouldn't be getting 30 per hour but heavy equipment operators should be getting a lot more than 15 and the same can be said about many other positions
^ That doesn't apply in many jobs. What is the hourly pay to operate a 6 million dollar detachable? What was the pay for Gemini astronauts to orbit the earth in a 2.25 billion dollar rocket program? That said, I'd be shocked if a groomer with experience makes anything close to $15/hr, but I'll bet it's less than you'd make driving a D6 Dozer on a construction project.
Thank you captain obvious
Perhaps with the labor shortages the industry is facing, management might want to take a look at wages. Just a suggestion
My assumption was people would recognize a Snowcat operator as a highly specialized employee who can not only operate an expensive piece of equipment mostly unsupervised, but also do so during the dark of night with horrible scheduling consistency. There's not a lot of people out there right now looking to take that job at what the industry is paying.
You pay that guy lots when you find them. Especially when 70% of the market wants a perfect groom.
Well I can’t speak for everyone and let’s face it, broad generalizations are pretty dumb anyways but a lot of folks are desperate and have bills to pay so they get taken advantage of.Who is forcing them to work for that rate against their will?
If there’s no housing for the employees you won’t have any.There's a few people on this forum that have been told that time after time and they still don't get it and think that lifties in Jackson and Aspen should make $30/hr so they can afford a nice one bedroom apartment 10 minutes from the mountain.
Getting paid table scraps to risk your life isn’t fun. It’s stupid and it sucks.Eh. Sounds like a job that's fun the first few nights then quickly dulls out. I've heard that it can be pretty boring if you're grooming wide, not-so-steep slopes.
But at the same time I was told by a cat operator on a night after a rain/flash-freeze he started sliding down a steep trail...even with the tiller engaged...so that must've been pretty fun!
Huge shift in restaurants right now. A lot of skilled labor moved on...and now people are realizing you can't just throw a warm body in there and expect any kind of decent food/service. The ones that are left are fried and the word union is being brought up alot more. Expect the bill to get high soon...its been artificially low forever.If there’s no housing for the employees you won’t have any.
I was talking to a friend up in Jackson just a few days ago and some restaurants in town are so desperate for employees they are offering up to 40-50 bucks an hour to start. That’s quite the turning of tables and imho proof that employers can afford to treat their staff better.
Some of you sound like a bunch of crusty boomers with the whole “they don’t deserve better pay” BS but statistically there aren’t enough jobs out there that have good wages, especially in ski towns. So if you crusty boomers from the city want quality service on your vacations these resort business operators are going to have to rethink their programs. The traditional ski bum imho was the soul of the sport and is unfortunately an endangered species
I'm glad you qualified your "boomer" call out with "crusty".Some of you sound like a bunch of crusty boomers with the whole “they don’t deserve better pay” BS but statistically there aren’t enough jobs out there that have good wages, especially in ski towns. So if you crusty boomers from the city want quality service on your vacations these resort business operators are going to have to rethink their programs. The traditional ski bum imho was the soul of the sport and is unfortunately an endangered species
Fantastic reply! I’m going to use that for sure.I'm glad you qualified your "boomer" call out with "crusty".
I'm a boomer and I've been relishing the day that the labor crow comes home to roost and big business is forced to pony up. If you can't find people to work for the pennies you want to pay them it's time to pay them more or roll up your sleeves and do the dirty work.
So at least I'm not crusty.
Taking rich peoples money is going to make things worse, they'll hide it or stop spending it . Either action doesn't help overall , too much cash chasing to few assets is not good. Stop paying people to stay home the jobs are out there.Solving the West’s housing crisis - High Country News
We need to care for the priced-out average worker or something is bound to break.www.hcn.org