Orlando Sentinel

Older lifeguards dive into jobs

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“There’s been an ‘age twist,’ ” said Paul Harrington, a professor of labor markets at Drexel University in Philadelph­ia. “There’s this idea out there among teens that work isn’t such a cool thing anymore — and so who’s replacing them in the workforce? Older Americans, 55 and up.”

Lifeguardi­ng isn’t seen as being as sexy or as glamorous as it once was.

“Back when ‘Baywatch’ was on the air, we had so many applicants that we had to turn people away,” said B.J. Fisher, a spokesman for the American Lifeguard Associatio­n.

As a result, the organizati­on is recruiting senior citizens — the oldest of whom is 86 — to make up for a lack of younger applicants. Pools and beach clubs across the country are also raising wages and lowering the physical requiremen­ts to attract more applicants.

“We’re starting to think outside the box: baby boomers, seniors, retired lawyers and accountant­s,” said Fisher, who, at 61, has been a certified lifeguard most of his life. “Employers are starting to look internally, too: Maybe that custodian who swims laps after work can get certified.”

At Lake Shore Country Club in Erie, Pa., swim coaches and teachers double as lifeguards. San Diego is looking to retired members of the military to watch over its pools. This year, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker began allowing 15year-olds to sign up as lifeguards, a year younger than the previous age requiremen­t.

And in Austin, where just 644 of 750 lifeguardi­ng slots have been filled so far this summer, city officials are recruiting older workers by placing ads in newspapers, employee retirement guides and utility bills.

“People say nobody gets paper bills anymore, and I say, ‘My mom does’ — and that’s who we’re trying to reach,” said Jodi Jay, aquatics division manager for the city’s parks department.

Botts, who trained for months to pass the lifeguardi­ng certificat­ion test, says managers have told her that they prefer older employees because they tend to be reliable. Plus they can drive themselves to work. These days, she says, they’re happy to have any worker they can get.

During Memorial Day weekend, the city was so short-staffed that instead of getting a break every 20 minutes, Botts worked for an hour at a time with five-minute breaks. Noticeably missing from the workforce, she says, are younger workers who return year after year.

“Practicall­y every shift I work, we are short employees,” Botts said. “You look around and think, ‘Why isn’t anybody else working here?’ ”

In South Dakota, where unemployme­nt is 3.3 percent, Jean Pearson splits full-time lifeguardi­ng jobs into part-time gigs that can more easily fit into workers’ schedules. But even when Pearson can recruit teenagers, she says, school schedules make it almost impossible for them to commit to a full season, from Memorial Day to Labor Day.

“It’s been extremely tough,” said Pearson, a program coordinato­r for Sioux Falls Parks and Recreation. “We used to be able to keep lifeguards for three or four years. Now we’re competing with every other employer in town.”

Pearson has expanded her search to local college students and retirees who frequent the city’s pools.

Meanwhile, Austin city officials now recruit from high schools, targeting students who may not even know how to swim. The city has pulled in 200 teens in two years for a semester of free swim classes and lifeguard training — along with guaranteed jobs that pay nearly double the minimum wage — in exchange for school credit. But Jay says it’s still a challenge to keep them coming back.

“High school students are thinking about two-aday football practice or drill team,” she said. “Convincing them to stay committed has become almost impossible.”

When lifeguards said icecold drinking water would keep them coming back, the city began delivering coolers of it to its 51 pools each morning. “It’s the little things that can help make this job more appealing,” Jay said.

Two years after retiring from his job as a math teacher, Bill Bower, 63, decided to become a lifeguard. He wanted to find a way to work with people — and the extra income didn’t hurt, either. But he was still nervous, he said, about having to show up to a training course alongside colleagues who were one-third his age.

“I was like, am I going to be that weird old guy in the room?” Bower said. It turned out he was the fastest swimmer there.

These days, Bower works about 50 hours a week for the Galveston Island Beach Patrol. Powerful rip currents hit the shore daily, requiring him to jump in and help guide swimmers to shore.

“It’s very tiring when I finally come home at night,” said Bower, who had both hips replaced seven years ago. “But I’m the best shape I’ve been in in decades.”

And he’s got the accolades to prove it: Last year, locals voted him the city’s best lifeguard.

 ?? AMANDA VOISARD/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Leslie Botts and her fellow lifeguards close the Balcones neighborho­od pool in Austin for the evening.
AMANDA VOISARD/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Leslie Botts and her fellow lifeguards close the Balcones neighborho­od pool in Austin for the evening.

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