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This month:
• Summer & Seasonal Job Resources for Teens and Adults

• Keep Your Teen Safe While Seeking Summer Employment
• Teens Can Beat the Summer Blues!
• Holding On, Letting Go: Graduation Season Brings Risk and Reward

 

Upcoming SAT Dates

Saturday, October 14, 2006 - SAT & Subject Tests


 

Summer & Seasonal Job Resources for Teens and Adults

 
  1. www.backdoorjobs.com
    Adventure jobs, camp, ranch and resort jobs, nature-lover jobs & more.
  2. www.coolworks.com
    Interesting seasonal jobs in national parks and other recreational areas.
  3. www.groovejob.com
    Part-time jobs for teens and students.
  4. www.mysummers.com
    Summer jobs in summer camps for high school graduates 18 or older.
  5. www.seasonalemployment.com
    Simply pick a season, location or employer and review the info.
  6. www.summerjobs.com
    Summer job listings around the world.

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  Keep Your Teen Safe While Seeking Summer Employment  
 

Teens are protected by federal workplace laws. Parents should make their teenagers aware of their employment rights and, more importantly, ensure that their prospective employers are aware of child labor laws as they apply to teens. Here are a few rules:

Hours
First and foremost, federal law limits the number of hours a 14 and 15 year old may work. Beginning in June, a 14 and 15 year old may only work between the hours of 7AM and 9PM. If they are attending school, they cannot work more than 18 hours per week, 3 hours per day on a school day. They can never work more than 40 hours a week or 8 hours per day. Check with the department of labor in your state to see if your state has stricter requirements. Remember these are the maximum limits, not the recommended limits.

Banned Activities
All teens are prohibited from these, and other, activities: operating power equipment like meat slicers, baking machinery and power saws. Wrecking, demolition, excavating, tarring and roofingworking at any job where there is exposure to radiation or where explosives are stored or manufactured. Teens aged 14 or 15 are prohibited from these, and other, activities:

  • baking and cooking
  • operating lawnmowers and electrical hedge clippers
  • climbing ladders
  • working in warehouses or in manufacturing, building or construction
  • loading or unloading trucks, railroad cars, etc.
  • working in communications or public utilities
  • being public messengers

Teens who are 13 are generally prohibited from working. Exceptions are: they may baby sit, deliver newspapers, appear on TV, or in the movies. Teens who are 16 and older may work at any job that has not been deemed hazardous, like mining, using power bake machinery, roofing and driving.

“In sum, investigate and be proactive,” urges Ms Sedhom. “Summer jobs are a great way for teenagers to earn money and learn responsibility. But, parents can do a lot to ensure that these summer jobs will not turn out to be incubators for abuse."

Rania V. Sedhom, Esq., is an associate in the
Employement and Labor Practice at Meyer Suozzi English & Klein PC.
Ms Sedhom specializes in employee benefits and ERISA law,
employee benefit funds and has represented unions in all areas of litigations.
The Meyer Suozzi firm is a nationally respected leader in labor and
employment as well as in areas of law that include tax certiorari, employment,
zoning and real estate, trust and estates, litigation and appeals.

 

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Teens Can Beat the Summer Blues!

 
 

Is your teen looking for a way to beat the heat and summer boredom? If you’re teen is 11 to 17 years old they can join a free 6 week recreation program that is being offered at 2 Staten Island locations: Great Kills and St. George from July 5 to August 11.

Sponsored by the Project for Academic Student Success (PASS), the supervised program offers recreational activities, sports, games, arts and crafts and for the academically minded, math review and math tutoring. These activities are offered Monday to Thursday in the morning with Fridays reserved for a variety of trips.

This summer program will be held at both PASS locations:
3974 Amboy Road (South Shore) &
14 Slosson Terrace (North Shore off Bay Street in St. George).

Registration will be held at both locations on Tuesday, June 20 from 2:00-8:00pm. For more information call the Great Kills PASS office at 718-366-1296 or the St. George PASS office at 718-720-6727.

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  Holding On, Letting Go
Graduation Season Brings Risk and Reward
 
 

By Stephen Wallace, M.S. Ed.

High school seniors everywhere will soon embrace a graduation season marked by pomp and circumstance, risk and reward. Staying safe means balancing freedom with responsibility and communicating honestly with parents. For many teens, those aren’t easy assignments.

Young people venturing closer to true independence yearn for the freedom that parents extend based on assurances that nurture trust. But, something funny often happens on the way to commencement.

At graduation time, even clear-thinking teens may suddenly feel unburdened by the strictures of law and once open channels of communication between parent and child become clogged with issues of trust and truth.

A successful transformation of the parent-teen relationship from caretaker to caregiver, coach to consultant, requires confidence in the decisions young people will make. Unfortunately, a reality gap separating the behavior of teens from the perceptions of parents points to a “false trust” in many families, particularly at the intersection of decision-making about underage drinking and drug use.

False trust is perpetuated by ignorance and complacency on one side and, often, dishonesty on the other. Many adults are simply unaware of the choices that teens face every day and, more important, of the decisions they make. Others simply look the other way, unwilling to put a stake in a ground they neither understand nor seem particularly concerned about.

Either way, their children lose. Absent parents truly connected to their world, or with ones abdicating authority over it, teens are forced to traverse the path toward independence unaided by the communication, expectations, and consequences they say they want. The liberating milestone of graduation aside, parental responsibility ends neither at the end of high school nor at the beginning of college.

To be fair, teens don’t always make it easy for parents to keep up. For example, a new Teens Today report from SADD (Students Against Destructive Decisions) and Liberty Mutual Group, one of the nation's largest auto and home insurers, reveals that while almost all high school students say that it’s important that their parents trust them, less than half are completely honest about where they go and what they do. Staggeringly high rates of adolescent drinking and drug use often result.

Maintaining parental prerogatives when it comes to adolescent health and safety requires communicating with teens about important issues, establishing expectations for their behavior, and enforcing consequences when they violate the rules – even at graduation time.
In an Open Letter to Parents, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) and partners say, “Your teen may be graduating soon, but that doesn’t mean it’s time to let go.” These groups, including SADD, offer this advice to parents.

• Reinforce your expectations. Throughout their high school years, you’ve set rules and established the consequences for breaking them. Perhaps you’ve loosened up on a few rules, like curfew. But be clear – drinking or drug use remains unacceptable. Being an upperclassman has privileges, but it also has responsibilities.

• Encourage your teens to make each moment count. They only get one senior year. Let them know you don’t want them to miss out on things because of bad choices, like drinking or drug use. One bad choice could change their lives forever.

• Provide safe alternatives. Parties abound during senior year. Plan chaperoned alcohol-free parties around graduation. ONDCP also warns parents against allowing drinking at home, saying it sends the wrong message and may lead to other bad choices. In fact, according Teens Today, young people who drink at home are significantly more likely to drink with their friends.

For example:
• Among high school teens, those who tend to avoid alcohol are more than twice as likely as those who repeatedly use alcohol to say their parents never let them drink at home (84 percent vs. 40 percent).

• More than half (57 percent) of high school teens who report their parents allow them to drink at home, even just on special occasions, say they drink with their friends, as compared to just 14 percent of teens who say their parents don’t let them drink.

The fact is that teens don’t need – or want – their parents to be simply bigger versions of their friends. They need their parents to be parents – especially during the waning days of high school when opportunities to stray from well-established norms regarding personal behavior abound.

Bridging the reality gap by promoting dialogue, establishing parameters, and requiring accountability represents a meaningful step toward letting go.
Hold on.

Stephen Wallace, national chairman and chief executive officer of SADD, Inc. (Students Against Destructive Decisions). For more information about SADD, call toll-free 877-SADD-INC. The SADD/Liberty Mutual Teens Today research report can be found at www.sadd.org.

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