The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Kids don’t work jobs the way they used to

- By Paul Wiseman

Once a teenage rite of passage, the summer job is vanishing as summer 2017 begins.

It was at Oregon’s Timberline Lodge, later known as a setting in the horror movie “The Shining,” where Patrick Doyle earned his first real paycheck.

He was a busboy. The job didn’t pay much. But Doyle quickly learned lessons that served him for years as he rose to become the CEO of Domino’s, the pizza delivery giant:

Show up on time, dress properly, treat customers well.

“I grew up a lot that summer,” he says.

As summer 2017 begins, America’s teenagers are far less likely to be acquiring the kinds of experience­s Doyle found so useful. Once a teenage rite of passage, the summer job is vanishing.

Instead of baling hay, scooping ice cream or stocking supermarke­t shelves in July and August, today’s teens are more likely to be enrolled in summer school, doing volunteer work to burnish their college credential­s or just hanging out with friends.

For many, not working is a choice. For some others, it reflects a lack of opportunit­ies where they live, often in lower-income urban areas: They sometimes find that older workers hold the low-skill jobs that once would have been available to them.

In July 1986, 57 percent of Americans ages 16 to 19 were employed. The proportion stayed over 50 percent until 2002 when it began dropping steadily. By last July, only 36 percent were working.

Economists and labor market observers worry that falling teen employment will deprive them of valuable work experience and of opportunit­ies to encounter people of different ethnic, social and cultural background­s.

But the longer-term trend for teen employment is down and likely to stay that way for several reasons:

— Teenagers and their parents are increasing­ly aware of the value of a college education. A result is that more kids are spending summers volunteeri­ng or studying, to prepare for college and compete for slots at competitiv­e schools.

In July 1986, just 12 percent of Americans ages 16 to 19 were taking summer classes. Thirty years later, the share had risen to 42 percent.

“Parental emphasis on the rewards of education has contribute­d to the decline in teen labor force participat­ion,” Teresa Morisi, a Labor Department economist, concluded in a February report on teen employment, which has been declining in the United States and other wealthy countries.

Nathan Miller, 19, of New Berlin, Wisconsin, didn’t work throughout high school, choosing instead to play baseball and spend time with his family. He’s forgoing summer employment again this year to play baseball and take a certified nursing assistant course at a high school.

Miller, who starts college in the fall, thinks the course may give him an edge in his quest to become a doctor.

“I’m going to try to get as much hours as I can as early as possible to get as much advantage as I can to get into a competitiv­e med school,” he says. “It’s a competitio­n out there.”

• Teens who do want to work can find that older workers are standing in the way. The summer jobs teens used to take — flipping burgers, unpacking produce at the grocery store, cashiering at the mall — are increasing­ly filled by older, often foreignbor­n, workers. In 2000-2001, teens accounted for 12 percent of retail workers, researcher­s at Drexel University found. Fifteen years later, it was just 7 percent. Over the same period, the teenage share of restaurant and hotel jobs fell from 21 percent to 16 percent. Find more of this story at www. MorrningJo­urnal.com/Business

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