Why not become a coal miner in Alaska? Pay is insane for little experience: i feel like the reason you would deny this job is laziness.
>>84006495Wheres the pay information?
>>84006727it's insane, dude
That's a silver mine, not a coal mine. That particular mine sucks to work at because they have to commute from Juneau every day. Every day you ride a ferry to an island for an hour, ride a bus for half an hour to the mine site, work 10 hours, then ride the bus and the ferry back. It's a miserable schedule and their employee retention sucks. Also, construction is not an entry level job. Inexperienced miners get put on a haul truck. The pay is okay, but it's a mind numbing job. Most mines have about a 70% annual turnover rate for this job. You sit in a cramped chair for 10 hours a day driving about 4 miles per hour. It smells weird because the guy on the prior shift has swamp ass. Your diet consists of chips, cookies, and Monster, eaten intermittently between getting loaded. That's better than most of your coworkers, who eat crayons and Elmer's glue. Your daily target is only achievable if several factors outside of your control all go right. There's an electrical box around the corner you're backing around and if you touch it, you're fired. There are PSAs posted around site that say something along the lines of "if you work here, there's a 30% chance you want to kill yourself." Do this for a couple years and you will eventually get promoted to gofer, and now you get to run around all day long with a to-do list that will never, ever be finished. Get the picture? I'm not saying you shouldn't do this, but you should go into it expecting that every day you show up for work, your body and heart break down a little more.>>84006727These guys make somewhere around $30 an hour. Again, that's with some experience. Entry level is closer to $25.