Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

So now you understand his mindset of feeling like he is trapped in the town he currently lives in.



Yes, but one can save up $5000 in a summer working full time in food service. I did it as a prep cook when I was 19.


$5000 in three months working in food service?

Doing that in a year or even six months is plausible, depending on how lucky his circumstances are, but three months strikes me as a bit of a stretch. At $10/hr * 40 hr/week * 12 week = $4800, ignoring rent, food, incidentals, and taxes.


I worked 10am to midnight 6 days a week.


Based on my friends' experiences, you often have to fight tooth and nail to actually get overtime at some retail or fast food places. In other words, simply working more is not always an option.

If that were to become an obstacle, one solution may be to get a second job.

And yet the OP writes that he's having trouble getting even one of these jobs. It may be hard to believe, but some small towns have a vast, vast excess of people wanting these jobs.


I can believe it. I'm from somewhere which is in many ways worse off than Yakima. That's just the best idea I have. If he can't make any money at all, I don't know what to suggest other than join the military. But I'm not a military guy, so I wouldn't feel comfortable suggesting that.

I could also suggest he goes off to western north dakota to work in the oil field, but I don't know if that's such a great idea. I have some friends that have done that. It sounds horrible, and they look like they are about 15 years older than they actually are. Plus you need the money to get there, and need a car, all of which is probably $5K+ anyway.


No you can't. 40 * 8/hour = 320 @ 4 weeks (3) = $3,840.

How in the world could anyone save $5,000 in a summer when they're not even pulling in that amount?

EDIT: Even working 80 per week only brings in $7,680. Factor in bills and you're still not hitting 5k, guy.


Hacker News definitely attracts geniuses these days. You have to work more than 40 hours a week.

Edit: What bills does he have? Food is free, because you work in food service. Rent in a place like Yakima is < $400/m. Summer starts in May. Also, after 40 hours a week you get overtime.


One of the problems the poor have is shifting schedules that keep them from working multiple part-time jobs to get to 40 hours a week.

I've never heard of a food server job that hired fulltime workers or allowed those reaching 40 hours to go beyond that.


Assuming, of course, that you can actually get 40 hours...




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: