This is the ad I placed in craigslist. I'd rather hire someone who's enthusiastic about riding and cyclecommuting so if anyone out there has the stuff it takes (as listed below) e-mail me asap! I can get you an interview as soon as Monday!
Membership Concierge
Millennium Bike Station is looking for an outgoing, cycle-minded early riser to staff our bicycle commuter station. You will be the face of Chicago’s downtown biking community! Responsibilities will include organizing and updating membership information, recruiting and signing up new members, regular upkeep of facilities and promotions and other office duties as needed.
Qualified applicants should have previous clerical and health related work experience as well as excellent communication and phone skills.
Excel, Word, Power Point, and Outlook skills also a must.
Start time is 6am, Monday-Friday. Pay is 9/hr.
Please email resume to mark@bikechicago.com and include a paragraphs explaining why you want this job and why you would be good at it. Visit www.bikechicago.com . Thanks!
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9 an hour is better than an unpaid internship or volunteer only position. Is this any less than a bike shop employee starts at?
Any fool can get hired at a bike shop so no, they don't.
Vando said:
Do most bike shop positions require previous health related work experience and ms office proficiency and a written essay? Glad there's a job opening, but just seems like they are low-balling considering what they are asking for. It is an employer's market though right now...
For a VERY young adult with no other debt and no family this is hoovering at the livable wage line, but just barely.
I have often wondered why labor organizations are so hard on Walmart (who's pay and benefits are borderline livable) when hotels, grocery stores, big box stores and fast food offer much worse conditions for workers.
This is a small business and so I am not quite outraged at the wages offered, but really we should start expecting more from businesses. While employment is better than no income, paying workers more is one measure that has been shown to have a direct positive impact on the economy. For every dollar more earned it is another that person will dollar spend.
It isn't just retail. I'm in journalism and there is nothing at all uncommon about someone breaking into the field with a salary of less (often well less) than $30k, which given the 60 hour weeks a lot of people work can leave you at around $9 an hour or even below minimum wage.
One of the problems here is that businesses are essentially subsidizing operations with this cheap labor, which ends up locking a lot of people who can't count on support from their parents out of the kind of apprentice work you need to do to get a decent job as a reporter or at a non-profit or whatever.
Minimum wage is the going rate for clerical bike station jobs around the country. Some are staffed by volunteers.
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