Diggerland water park in
Camden County is open for the summer season starting today--
but like many businesses,
finding people who want to work hasn’t been easy.
Even with a $2 increase in
pay, park owners are having to get creative.
“We’ve taken all of our managers, and we cross-trained them to be lifeguard,
short order cooks, basically everyone here in a managerial role understands
that they need to take on a different responsibility,” says Diggerland president Ilya
Girlya.
Seniors
and teens as young as 15 are welcome to
apply. The 26-hour lifeguard training course gives people who qualify more than just a summer job.
“We are a Red Cross facility,”
says Girlya. “We train all of our lifeguards in house, we have our own
lifeguard instructors. You really learn a lifelong skill. There’s nothing
better or more fulfilling than learning CPR to save a life in an immediate
emergency, and we also expressed
to them that when you’re a lifeguard, little kids look up to you, parents look
up to you. They feel like they’re in the presence of
authority and that’s a real important job and one that is very fulfilling.”
Diggerland also offers
something called Blended Learning. It’s a hybrid of taking their
class online and then the actual practical swimming and rescue and CPR is done
at the facility. Diggerland will also pay for their license, so there’s no cost
to applicants.