January 2006 Newsletter
January 2nd, 2006 at 4:47 amFrom www.americansinfrance.net
Happy New Year from Americans in France!
Riots (Continued)
France seems to have returned to normal after the rioting that
took place in late October and early November of last year. We
now seem to be into the government reaction phase. The proposal
that received the most press is the one proposing to lower the
apprentice age from fifteen to fourteen years. Whether this will
have any real impact on the problems facing those in the cités,
suburban housing projects, is debatable. As I stated last month
education and training are not really the problems. The problem
is finding a job.
I know from personal experience finding work in France is not
easy. If you are 'outside the box' i.e. have a degree no one
understands, my case or have the wrong sounding surname finding
employment is extremely difficult.
In France origin is very important, where you come from and
school attended, heavily influence your career/employment
opportunities. Schooling is especially important anyone that
attends a grand ecole is just about set for life. I heard the
story of a graduate of a grand ecole who after listing his
personal information on his resume listed the grand ecole he went
to. As if that was the most important thing about him.
I think this is part of the problem because this also works in
reverse. I saw on the news the story of a young man that lived in
a cité. He spoke Japanese and spent time living in Japan. His
recommendations letters included both the French ambassador to
Japan and the Japanese ambassador to France. Yet he could not
find work. Why? The area he lives in has a bad reputation, this
is enough to make employers reluctant to hire him.
Christmas in France
I am writing this on Christmas Eve so this 'Christmas in France' is about to happen. We mix French and American cultures, this year for the family feast we are doing stuffing as in Thanksgiving stuffing. We also mix the cultures around the Christmas tree not only do we hang stockings but we also put out shoes. Thus Santa Claus can put the presents next to our shoes, as is the French way.
New Web Sites
Over the last few years or so France has seen an explosion of low-cost airlines offering cheap flights to a number of destinations. Including Paris, the South of France and the Alps. The only problem is that these low-cost airlines use unknown regional airports. In response I have created three web sites: Beauvais-Airport.com, Bergerac-Airport.net and ChamberyAirport.net. Each is an 'unofficial guide' offering the visitor practical information ex: airport access, hotels, airlines …
Jeff SteinerCopyright
Americans in France
Resource for people that would like to live or travel in France.