Tuesday, 28 February 2012

A Cosmetic Job After The Storm


Battered, flood-soaked East Coast, a week after tropical tempest Irene hit, is struggling mightily to recover its footing and its joie de vivre. The dire evidence of meteorological mayhem stretches from Florida to Vermont, with the total cost of damages threatening to breach the $10-billion mark. 

As New Yorkers and folks from other states try to get back into the groove, they are discovering (as others had in years past after a hurricane) that one of the ways to do that is surprisingly to have one’s hair done.
Having a perm or a haircut seems to have a cleansing effect on the psyche with the unexpected but welcome result of getting one past the post-disaster blues.

That is good news for cosmetologists and aspiring cosmetologists, who must earn their cosmetology licenses first via training and cosmetology CE (continuing education) packages at cosmetology schools like Cosmetologycampus.com, one of the leaders in the industry.

Across the U.S., annual salaries for cosmetologists are highly variable, depending on the industry in which they practice. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data revealed an average range of $15,530 to $42,460. On average, the full-time cosmetologist in a typical city or town receives about $11.13 per hour or $23,140 in a year. 

Cosmetologists who work in full-service salons, day spas, and as skin-care and nail technicians earn a bit higher, an average of $12.96 per hour or $26,950 per year. Those who work in Hollywood (movies and video) command an average hourly wage of $29.50 or an annual salary of about $67,370. Not bad.

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