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- Oct 11, 2010
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- Pharmacy Student
Lucky Californians! 🙂 Plus the great labor laws.$62-75/hr CA
Lucky Californians! 🙂 Plus the great labor laws.
Well they get taxed quite a bit and the cost of living in CA is very high.
But the cheap housing makes up for it...so lucky
But the cheap housing makes up for it...so lucky
...sarcasmHousing isn't cheap in Cali.
...sarcasm
I'm making ~$53 an hour as a full time floater at a grocery chain in the Southeast. Most of the stores I float to are super easy with plenty of tech help, but I'm seriously thinking about switching to Walmart or elsewhere for better pay.
RetailHospital or retail?
I was told the job market is getting better in south FL... Is it getting better in other part of the country?
Are you a new grad? That's not bad at all if you are.66/hour overnight. 60 base + 6/hour (for each hour of the shift) = 66/hour
Are you a new grad? That's not bad at all if you are.
That's about what I should be making in 5 years if I get a 2% raise each year. I have a feeling we work for the same company.58. 40 per hr in an area with 2 pharmacy schools ( 40 miles) southeast florida. 5 YEARS experience under my belt.
By the way, do the chain store managers make more than the pharmacists?
I actually made 4 bucks lessBy the way, do the chain store managers make more than the pharmacists?
Hesitated to respond...hospital. FT range $62 - $80 per hour. Evening shift diff $3 to $5 per hour. Weekend $7. Median $71. I am starting new hire at $70+. PIC at $85 per hour. Per Diem 8% higher.
Excellent health benefits and 21 days of PTO to 35 day after 10 years.
This sounds like a dream job... do you consider new grads? 😀
Why is it a dream job? Because of pay?
Vacation time, hospital setting, and pay.
Personally, I'd like to work something hospital related but also make enough to blitz down loans and support traveling around the world. That's why it sounds like a dream job.
I try to explain this to my interns but most don't listen. They focus on a hourly number and have trouble considering quality of life, benefits, retirement and pto...Ok, that's fair.
Yes, I hire new grads. PGY1 in my experience pick up and assimilate quicker than non-pgy1, everything being equal, if that's possible. I have also hired from retail, LTC, etc.
Many hospital systems out west have great benefits. New grads get so caught up on the base hourly salary, they can't seem to evaluate shift differentials and PTO and how much that amount to improved salaries and quality of life.
Hesitated to respond...hospital. FT range $62 - $80 per hour. Evening shift diff $3 to $5 per hour. Weekend $7. Median $71. I am starting new hire at $70+. PIC at $85 per hour. Per Diem 8% higher.
Excellent health benefits and 21 days of PTO to 35 day after 10 years.
I try to explain this to my interns but most don't listen. They focus on a hourly number and have trouble considering quality of life, benefits, retirement and pto...
...their years count toward their seniority (3 weeks vacation when they get hired)...
Sort of. All the hours get compressed into the equivalence of 40 hour work weeks. You have to work a lot to get 3 weeks vacation immediately the first year. I worked for CVS for 4 years, working full time hours during all breaks, work some during the year and rotations, and still didn't end up with a full 3 weeks right off the bat (pretty close though). All your other points I mostly agree with (the hospital I interned with for the same 4 years didn't hire me after graduation obviously), although I still think it is possible to decide to intern with a hospital and "take the risk" as it were.
Edit: Also, not all CVS interns end up with jobs. Remember when they accidentally sent out the whole spreadsheet company wide of which interns were being offered jobs two years ago?
It's been that way since I started. It's what all the interns in my year were told. I should probably know this, but how do you know you will be at 4 weeks in January? Any way to check that?
It is based off years work (on your 4th year anniversary, you should you get 3 weeks)- so if you started as a P1... and was with the company for 4 years of pharmacy school, and when hired, have over 4 years (48 months), you should start with 3 weeks. Some people get screwed if they became a pharmacist at 3 years 11 months, etc...
I was no where near full time hours when I was an intern and got 3 weeks vacation when I graduated.
You can track how many years you work by going to myHr and viewing your history...
