Nikoli wrote: ↑Jan 9th, '22, 01:01
asher2789 wrote: ↑Jan 8th, '22, 23:31
throbster wrote: ↑Jan 7th, '22, 09:26
daytripper wrote: ↑Jan 7th, '22, 08:54
throbster wrote: ↑Jan 6th, '22, 23:03
Nah, this is what happens when Congress passes emergency spending bills that pay people not to work
I guess nobody told you that that all ended over the summer.
I think for VT, it was this fall. However, the consequences are still being felt.
It's tough for businesses to absorb labor cost doubling. Bernie followers have a tough time understanding economics.
the $300 extra benefit on top of maybe... $250-300 in normal benefits ended on september 4th in VT. wow, these "irresponsible" people are amazing at saving. other states ended their benefits months prior, and no change in the unemployment rate. funny how that works. what's the average rent in vermont? $1000 a month? so these unemployed people are
choosing to make so little money that half of it goes to rent? sounds like thats totally the problem! those damn entitled children wanting a fair wage how dare they! lazy millennials! participation trophies!!
f*** boomers.
Stop freaking out. The market place will find what the price of this type of work is worth. Nothing more
yeah, the FrEe MaRkEt is at work right now, cant you see? cascade? closed. highline? closed. downdraft? closed. ovation? closed. dreammaker? closed. and that's just the steep trails with snowmaking off the top of my head, there's many more trails im not thinking of. timberline (where the "peace park" goes)? closed, and IMO probably wont even be built at the rate we are going. same with the dreammaker park. and the stash.
unlike 2015/2016, despite having awful snow conditions and thaws we have had plenty of freezing conditions to make snow. it takes ~36 hours of continuous blowing to create a deep enough base for grooming to allow most trails to open. instead of opening new trails, they're running a skeleton crew who are only capable of resurfacing trails that are already open.
its not a lack of water, air compressors, or temperatures. its a lack of labor, caused by a
WAGE SHORTAGE. why the f*** would
anyone want to work for $15 an hour, overnight in the wet freezing cold doing strenuous hard physical labor walking up and down frozen icy slopes with snowmaking equipment, when down the road you can make coffee and donuts for $14 an hour in a nice warm space? its not like labor lives in wealthy killington - no - they live in rutland and other cheaper commuter towns where there's plenty of jobs much closer that pay roughly the same or even better for way better work. if they don't ski or snowboard they have absolutely no reason to want to work for killington, which pays the lowest possible wages the market will allow (actually lower, which is why there's no workers!), there's no benefits, and often there's no set schedule. the only thing that makes killington an attractive place to work for most of the seasonal labor is the expensive, out of reach for the working class season pass and 50% off F&B and 20-30% off retail and industry discounts. even so, a season pass doesnt pay the bills. and the discounts dont matter if you need to save every penny to pay the bills. and the season pass doesnt matter if you have no free time / energy to use it.
so entitled whiny skiers will continue to whine about lack of expert terrain yet also whine when labor wants its fair share. or worse, call us workers who make their lives of luxury possible entitled and lazy. f*** sick of the gaslighting. you want open trails?
pay for them! or better yet - apply to be a snowmaker - killington is hiring, $15 an hour!