A young woman has amazed Australians by revealing how much she earns and how little work she should do for it.
She initially described her job as a 'School Supervision Crossing (Guard)' when she was interviewed in a Brisbane Street by Jobs App Getahead.
With a smile and a thumb up, she then used the more usual term.
The 'Lollipop Lady' earns '$ 32 per hour' and only works 90 minutes a day.
“We only do one o'clock in the morning and half an hour in the afternoon and only Monday to Friday during school terms,” she explained.
Those hours come up to $ 240 per week, or around $ 1,100 in an average month – and at that level she would not have to pay taxes.
The Queenslander has been a school cruiser for about eight years, after he had had the job after he had met a teacher who told her that a position was available.
“On my days off I went for a walk and this lady just loved my personality,” she said.
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A young woman (photo) has surprised Australians by revealing how much she earns and how little work she should do for it
Her favorite benefits about the work are the 'hours, the mornings, people meeting and greeting and being in the area'.
Viewers were surprised to hear how much she earns.
“I remember that when I was year 7, we could register to do the school transitions with the Lollipop plates,” said one.
While the Brisbane Local loves her work, NSW finds it difficult to play the role of the school crossing, with 311 vacancies for grabbing in recent months.
Of these, 86 roles were fulfilled by casuals or applicants who go through before the work.
That means that 225 schools were left without dedicated supervisors.
Although the school crossing does not earn much, she gets a lot of satisfaction and helps students to go to class safely.
That is in stark contrast with a trader who recently told Getahead that he is struggling financially despite earning $ 160,000 a year after tax.
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NSW finds it difficult to fulfill the roles of school about intersection (stock image)
Said the concrete patcher He earned between $ 2,500 and $ 3,000 a week after pulling 10 and a half hours days, five days a week and often works on Saturday, to increase his wages.
But still, he said he is'Working to survive at the moment '.
'I wish I could win the Lotto or something. This is good for the time being. '
The trading said that working as a concrete patcher can sometimes be very physically demanding, but also “one of the easiest jobs in construction.”
He advised school-leavers to try such jobs instead of hunting white-collar work that is often much less lucrative.