That’s an absolutely livable wage in NYC. You might need a roommate, but it’s easily achievable. I lived there for almost a decade (recently), but since you shouldn’t trust random people on the internet, here’s the MIT living wage calculator:
As a single adult with no kids, you’re just barely under the “living” wage in most of those, but well above “poverty” in all of them. In any borough, with a roommate, you’re cruising comfortably (see the “2 Adults (Both Working): 0 Children” column). In the Bronx, as a single adult with no kids, $30 is above the living wage mark.
It’s also worth noting, people may live outside the city, but take a train or subway in for work. Living just outside the city brings costs down quite a bit.
$30/hr is insanely low for NYC. I guarantee I couldn’t live on it there…
I don’t know if you have ever seen snow before but… this isn’t a full time job.
$30/hour is about $60K/year.
That’s an absolutely livable wage in NYC. You might need a roommate, but it’s easily achievable. I lived there for almost a decade (recently), but since you shouldn’t trust random people on the internet, here’s the MIT living wage calculator:
As a single adult with no kids, you’re just barely under the “living” wage in most of those, but well above “poverty” in all of them. In any borough, with a roommate, you’re cruising comfortably (see the “2 Adults (Both Working): 0 Children” column). In the Bronx, as a single adult with no kids, $30 is above the living wage mark.
It’s also worth noting, people may live outside the city, but take a train or subway in for work. Living just outside the city brings costs down quite a bit.
I mean… It’s temporary snow removal. Let’s call it seasonal. So like not full time.