I love how so many people go on and on about "unskilled workers"... do you actually realize you're putting your life in the hands of the CM that's pushing that green button?? Not all rides are complicated or dangerous, but people do stupid stuff all the time and they're the ones that have to keep every one else safe.
.
That is interesting.
I'm not sure I believe that it requires special training meriting several dollars more an hour of pay...
But what *I* realize, being trained at something doesn't make it a skills required job which is what I am referring to when I say unskilled.
I was trained to clean properly and safely--but that doesn't mean I needed a special skill to be trained. For me--that is what I mean by unskilled laborer. Most everyone has to learn how to do a specific job. Some jobs require special skills before learning how to do that job.
The toilet scrubber or ticket taker will not be constructing the next theme park attraction.
The fry cook isn't going to be the one trouble shooting why Mt Everest isn't running properly (cousin married to someone who used to have one of the many jobs making sure it did run properly and he was salaried and he had an engineering degree).
Now, let's take it a step further.
When I worked as a daycare provider at my church, I had to take a CPR course to be able to get that job so that in the event of an emergency, I Could hopefully save the life of a child. It takes special training to be able to do CPR, but it doesn't require any special skill that would warrant me being paid several dollars an hour more than I did.
While the person operating the switch that makes an attraction vehicle move, and while they might have had special training to be able to discern when it is safe to make the vehicle move versus when it is hazardous...
I'm not convinced that it requires a special skill set to be able to perform that function that could not be learned on the job.
Throwing out that people's lives are in their hands--elevates the position to much more than it is. Someone who checks seatbelts, makes sure the track is clear and that arms and hands remain in the vehicle--doesn't require any special skill as a requisite for the position that I am aware of. Or does it?