I-90, near Buffalo WY |
It’s deceptive when you come here during the summer tourist season. You see people everywhere, especially around the big destinations like Yellowstone. Towns and highways are full of tourists in July and August. Restaurants and shops have lots of customers. But, it’s a seasonal illusion. Summer’s bubble of population shrinks dramatically after Labor Day.
Fence line along US 287, Cameron MT |
So does the employment base that supports the summer
tourist economy. It is a real eye opener to be a part of this seasonal economy.
Xanterra, my employer, hires over 2,000 seasonal
employees to operate the lodges in Yellowstone National Park. They are
virtually all seasonal, part-time jobs; only a few hundred are full-time,
year-round positions. Even the jobs with the National Park Service are mostly
seasonal. By mid-October, most operations in the Park close. When the operations
end, so do the jobs.
I come to Yellowstone on a lark, for the fishing. It’s
great having my housing and meals provided, and a small paycheck that covers
gas, trout flies, beer and occasional entertainment/fine dining in the outside
world. Heidi and I have already raised our family, and we are blessed with
retirement income and good health insurance. Our financial needs are modest.
Jefferson River Valley, Three Forks MT |
It is not a lark for some of the employees here. For
them, seasonal, part-time work is the best job they can find in this sparse
regional economy. When this job ends, it’s a scramble for them to find the next
job. For many, the hospitality/food & beverage job market is a treadmill
they are caught on.
Gaps in employment are a norm. The winter tourist
season (in the snow sports, or at a travel destination in the Sunbelt) doesn’t
start until early December. There is a similar employment gap of another month
or two in the spring. The uncertainty of where the next job is going to come
from is stressful. Some are lucky enough to have a sympathetic family member to
take them in during their time off. I suspect that more than a few wind up
homeless for a while.
Open Range near Browning MT |
For sure, a lot of people do this by choice. They
are willing to make the tradeoff in order to live away from the big city; up in
the mountains; near their outdoor hobbies. Some of them are clever, or
fortunate, enough to find year-round, full-time employment. I know a skilled
tradesman who works here at Old Faithful as one of the few year-round,
full-time Xanterra employees. He lives here in Montana by choice, for the
outdoors and rural life. Down in Salt Lake City, he was making $30 an hour. Here,
his pay is $18 an hour.
Cowboy statue, Thermopolis WY |
For a lot of the twenty-somethings, it is a job
choice. But, there is a lot of forty- and fifty-somethings working here too. Observation
tells me many of them are on the part-time, seasonal treadmill. I have a
new-found appreciation and empathy for the housekeeping, food & beverage,
and other workers in the travel/hospitality industry. I am much more mindful of
the tips I leave whenever I am traveling.