Tuesday, September 4, 2018

when kevin mccaffrey suffolk county legislator

and president of teamster local 707 that people that bet horses are dead you know thst unions
are in collusion eith ny politicians and bag men to impair people that bet horses, race horses, work at racetracks etc

ny cannot even see that the  ticket of sny ny otb is cashable at any otb n the state


pocket pool in ny is supersized?



Bank tellers are thriving as wages soar after tax cuts


Bank tellers aren’t getting automated out of existence, after all.
The folks behind the glass at your local bank branch saw their wages grow by 8.1 percent last month — the most out of any job in New York City, according to a new survey by Glassdoor.
Banks started raising wages this year following President Donald Trump’s corporate tax cuts, which boosted profits for Wall Street by lowering the tax rate to 21 percent from 35 percent. While banks mostly use ATMs for basic services like taking deposits and cashing checks, they’re meanwhile training tellers to pitch loans and other financial products.
New York tellers are making $34,737 on average, according to Glassdoor. That’s far below the median US salary of $59,039, according to the most recent numbers from the Census Bureau. However, it is significantly higher than the median pay of $28,110 that bank tellers nationwide earned last year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Other jobs that saw large gains in wages are maintenance workers, whose salaries rose 7.6 percent, to $42,329, and bartenders, who made $38,960 — up 6.6 percent, according to Glassdoor.
“US workers in traditionally lower-wage jobs are among those seeing the biggest wage bumps in August,” said Andrew Chamberlain, Glassdoor’s chief economist.
Last month, the employment cost index, a measure of wage gains, rose by 2.8 percent on an annual basis — the highest level since the third quarter of 2008, according to the BLS.
The data comes as wage growth for most Americans has remained stubbornly low — even as the stock market has reached new highs this month.

–– ADVERTISEMENT ––


Workers across New York City saw their wages grow about 2.5 percent, to a median of $62,338, the survey said.

No comments:

Post a Comment