While browsing industry job adverts I came across an open "landscape maintenance" position with the following details from a large national business;
They expect the candidate to have the following as a minimum;
- Knowledge and experience of all industry H&S issues and their implications, first class communication and organisation skills, team worker and ability to be a lone worker, along with pesticide qualifications (not mentioned, but assumed basic industry skills/experience).
Additionally they desire the following;
- Arboriculture qualifications (CS30, CS31, CS38 & CS39) with first aid, manual handling, woodchipper & grounds maint certifications, topped off by a trailer B+E driving license.
On offer from employer;
- Min Holidays, PPE gear & Salary band of £7.50 p/hr (ie just above min living wage) up to £9.00 p/hr.
This equates to a yearly salary of £15,600 to £18,720 (on a 40hr week?).
I assume the lower figure is for the minimum requirements, with the upper figure for a candidate with all of the additional qualifications. I am not interested, nor want to identify the business because that is not the point, but really .... do we value ourselves so low !
From recent monitoring , this is not a unique situation.
No wonder we have a resource/skills shortage in our industry, must be easier to stay in bed.
© The Grumpy Old One - Saturday Rants ;)
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Replies
I would think it is £80 per day 'as and when required' Helen, which would make his actual annual earnings are no more than 1/2 to 2/3 (if he was lucky)of a projection for a full year's work.
The whole arborist industry in F**ked put it this way i got offered a job to work on the railways for £80 a day before tax and nis on a self employed basis with as many days as i want work wise but must be minium of 5 days a week. not to mention they screwed you over by putting you on cis scheme so not only did you not get holidays also had to pay for PPE. I worked out to actually take the job you would need to spend £1500 on minium ppe pts drug and alcohol then your chainsaw courses. I looked the the MD in the face and said you have to be joking right and said i wouldn't work for that in the rain and snow. Then have to be in yard for 6:30 in morning no overtime so simple you finish when you get home so if you have to travel far and keep hitting traffic on way back .
I wouldn't confuse the entire arb industry with Utility work. It's like all the worst pits of the Forestry Sector with all the worse bits of the Arb sector run by people who either have never worked on the tools or it was so long ago they no longer fit into a harness.
Roughly I feel this advert is about right, maybe a touch on the low side. i.e if they want someone who has experience, can work alone and represent the company's standards then i think £8 is more reasonable. Equally I think around the 20k/year (£9.50) mark is what we should pay someone with licences/quals, great attitude/standards etc.
I agree with Helen that 21k is not be sniffed at.
I can't and don't agree with the fact we value ourselves so cheaply.
So, we are saying that just above the min living wage is all someone can/should expect ?
£18.7k is no where near enough for someone who has those qualifications.
A real slap in the face. Where's the incentive, where's the loyalty, where's the career progression ?
It's a mockery.