How can one possibly be a bread-winner in this line of work?
  • obnoxious


    Is that the best you can do, Tom?
  • Sorry for the length - this has been on my mind lately, as someone who teaches and mentors young church musicians. I just sent another student to get an MSM at Notre Dame this month. What is the future here?
    First, there is a lot of doom and gloom in this thread (Lars - while I feel for you, your situation is an extreme outlier and not representative of the field of church music in any way. Yes, I also used to live in Europe and play for 20 euros a mass. But in the USA where this organization is based, that is not remotely the case). Playing for free should not even really be discussed on a professional forum like this. While I truly respect the intention and sacrifice, by definition that is for volunteers, not professionals. Even my subs and students who have not learned pedal yet make healthy Mass stipends at my cathedral and all around town. If you choose to play for nothing, that is your decision, not the church's (IOW don't blame the church or the field of church music because you choose to play for free on the side of your real job).

    But to the OP's point, even though I am blessed to have a job that does support my family (my wife stays home), I would say that it is extremely difficult to do so. I have a doctorate, run a cathedral music program, teach at a university on the side, etc., etc. I am only aware of a bare handful of cathedral music directors in the USA who even have families of children at home, much less support them as the sole income.

    As many have pointed out (and as I live out), you can pack around the edges with gigs, lessons, concerts, etc. But the problem is that hours of the day are finite. You'll have to cut into family time, severely, to support your family - the classic catch-22. I work 7 days a week while the university is in session. However you cut it, it's not easy. A better path may be to pursue large suburban jobs, where weddings and funerals are constant, tons of families want piano and voice lessons for their kids, and cost of living may be more reasonable.

    Still, I would not advise a young man or woman who hopes to be the sole breadwinner to consider this field. It really does not make sense. In four more years as a church musician you will be lucky to keep up with inflation (even in normal times - forget it right now). However, if you invest those four years in ANYTHING professional and sensible (that is - anything with a clear employment prospect at the end, such as a 4-year degree in engineering, MBA, nursing school, tech school, etc., etc.) you will have a path upward in life. As a SECONDARY income (e.g. half time or Wednesday night/Sunday Morning, odd office hours) the pay for church music can really be quite good relative to the time commitment. But there is a definite ceiling (I would say 70-80k) in terms of what you can get full time, even in the best jobs. There is a tiny percentage (maybe 5%) of jobs that reach up to 90k/low 6 figures, but most of us aren't getting those any time soon! And those are often in big cities where cost of living is astronomical. In looking at the numbers of one such job, I realized it would be simultaneously a 50% raise for me AND a 50% pay cut in terms of cost of living!

    If you must pursue church music as your career and to support your Catholic, open-to-life, spouse-at-home family, I'd advise earning at least a Master's in organ/choral conducting/church music, as cheaply as possible, and then you must search the national job market and be willing to move to any job you can find that pays a livable wage. They really are out there, but they are not going to be the entry level ones that you find locally without having to move. If you search the AGO job listings you are more likely to find professional full-time work. Look for smaller cathedrals when starting out, or large, wealthy suburban parishes. It's never going to be easy, but I would say either work and search to get into the 60-80k bracket, or find another line of work. Again, that's if you are the breadwinner.

    From the other side, if there are any priests or parish council members reading this, there really needs to be some homework on your part. [If, that is, you value hiring a stable, professional, Catholic family person]. Before hiring, sit down with a couple of people (maybe a realtor from the parish and a business person) and map out the cost of a decent small home in the area, health insurance, utilities, state income tax, etc., and discover what a lay person's budget looks like. Start there, rather than from some arbitrary and meaningless diocesan budget standard or your memories of what you earned 25 years ago before you entered seminary. What often frustrates me is the apathy about truly examining and discussing the situation, and finding creative solutions. Instead, too many of these salary discussions are arbitrary and emotional ("I feel like a church musician shouldn't earn more than..."). But I digress.
  • kevinfkevinf
    Posts: 1,190
    I do not share the doom and gloom of this thread. I entered this field after a Master's degree in 1983. I made 30K my first year and was thrilled. From my beginning at that time to now I have tripled my income. But, I have had to move and I have had to be careful about the job choices because of the cost of living.

    All of which is to say that I have frankly never seen the market more friendly to decent wages. I, too, mentor a few young ones which I have encouraged to get at least the Masters, get trained in chant and not to be afraid to also teach at the school ( I do this as part of my job).

    The jobs are there...one just has to look for them. And I get a few calls a month from priests asking about a good wage. I advise them also.

    I say that one should do it if one wants to but to be smart about the market and the cost of living. Its hard work but I am the happiest I have ever been.
    Thanked by 2Bri mattebery
  • 42k salary. (Blessed.) Husband and father of 1. (Very blessed!) Take with a grain of salt.

    This isn’t a very exciting prospect, but there are some changes, ranging from small to substantial, that can at least make things easier, especially when taken together. Forgive and ignore if you’re already doing this stuff.

    • Put a cap on eating out and related things. Make it very occasional.
    • If you’re the only one working and your wife and children stay at home, maybe only vehicle is the solution. If the fam needs it, they can drop you off and pick you up from work.
    • Do your clothes shopping and such at second hand/good will/garage sales.
    • Couponing, and going for deals and sales on groceries and toiletries. (Buying in bulk too.)
    • live very intentionally — give yourself shorter, stricter shower times, vigilantly shut off lights, heaters, ACs when you’re not using them.

    We do some of these, and we are saving money. It might not be as much as we like, but we are definitely not living paycheck to paycheck. That said, looking for other work, like others have said, is another (or additional) course of action. (I am looking into this right now myself. Looking to start giving music lessons, gig around on my guitar, and even mundane things like donate plasma. I still have connections with my former employers who might take me on part time.) But embracing a simpler, more “impoverished” life really doesn’t have to be that bad. Some of the happiest, “spiritually rich” families I’ve ever met come don’t have a lot by way of money and possessions.

    Wishing you peace. May God bless you and provide all you and your family require.
    Thanked by 3tomjaw Elmar LauraKaz
  • francis
    Posts: 10,816
    just to reinforce what John says above, this is the Gospel reading for today.

    Luke 12:32-34
    At that time, Jesus said to His disciples, Do not be afraid, little flock, for it has pleased your Father to give you the kingdom. Sell what you have and give alms. Make for yourselves purses that do not grow old, a treasure unfailing in heaven, where neither thief draws near nor moth destroys. For where your treasure is, there also will your heart be.
    Thanked by 2John_F_Church Elmar
  • GambaGamba
    Posts: 548
    even mundane things like donate plasma


    Lemme pass this along to the AGO’s outreach/young-organist committees. What a brilliant encapsulation of the stagnant pay and dim prospects of this field….Become an organist! it pays enough that you can get by, if you also sell your blood.
    Thanked by 3tomjaw CharlesW Salieri
  • francis
    Posts: 10,816
    We all sold our blood the first time we sat at the console
    Thanked by 1hilluminar
  • ServiamScores
    Posts: 2,883
    And the blood of our children, lol.

    Good thing Jesus paid the tab in full; I don’t have that kind of currency.
  • FWIW it’s more ambition than necessity that I’m taking on extra work. It’s not required but it will help a lot. We are making it work, I just want it to work /easier./
  • I have a music degree specifically in 'liturgical music' from a local Catholic College. I have 15 years experience. I am not even breaking 38K base rate. It's demoralizing.

    I am also a single mom with three kids. I have to maintain a bustling piano studio to makes ends meet, and even then it's not enough some times. This means I work 4 days of office hours, 2 evenings evening teaching piano and running choirs, and also play masses on weekends. I am running on fumes most days; all I want are two days in a row off to breathe. Or heck, evening my evenings free.

    I finally started to dream what it would look like to not live paycheck to paycheck. It's crazy to think what a lifestyle change a 45-50k per year job plus weekends off would give me. The more I think about it, the more I want that. I'm just so tired of living on just enough when secular opportunities would give more peace of mind. The scary part is giving up flexibility when the kids need a doctor appointment or stay home sick from school.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,978
    I used to tell folks, when they asked what I did, that I am a musical prostitute. You can feel like that at times in many parishes.
    Thanked by 2ServiamScores Elmar
  • ServiamScores
    Posts: 2,883
    I've thoroughly purged a lot of the "greatest hits" from our parish (getting rid of the hymnals helped immensely, although I had stopped scheduling them 4 years ago) but every once-in-a-while my hand is forced for a funeral. I feel dirty afterward, every time.
    Thanked by 1DavidOLGC
  • Charles,

    I know someone else (that is, not me) who feels the same way you do.

    For those new to the field, or aspiring to work in the field, I urge you to be alert to the risk, but not dwell on it or hope to attain such a situation.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,978
    Chris, I think that if I had not had a well-paying job with the government, the low wages and such would have seriously bothered me. As it was, I was able to laugh a lot of it off. now that I am retired, I hope the people who follow me are in good shape. Thankfully, it isn't my problem any more.
  • SalieriSalieri
    Posts: 3,177
    Become an organist! it pays enough that you can get by, if you also sell your blood.

    Vampires need to eat, too. Just be sure to play BWV 565.
  • Reval
    Posts: 186
    These posts are heart-breaking.
    Young people, thinking about majoring in music, heed these posts.
    It's relatively do-able when you're in your twenties to play a lot of gigs, live cheap, teach as much as possible, etc.
    Somehow when you hit your thirties it's a lot less appealing, and it's more difficult the more children you have, or if there are medical issues that require high-cost prescriptions and treatments, etc.
    I have three kids and I have told them many times, "Whatever you do, don't major in music, unless you're independently wealthy!" which they're not. I have a bachelor's and a master's in viola performance from a brand-name conservatory. I had lots of student loan debt when I was done. After I finished my master's, I realized what a terrible way this is to make a living. At that point I went off to library school, where I was able to get enough job skills that I could get a teacher-level salary that I have maintained for about 30 years.
    I partly blame schools of music for churning out graduates who are extremely competent, but there's simply not enough work for these young people, and for the jobs that do exist usually the pay is awful. I understand that the music profs need to maintain a studio of students so that they can make a living, but this just perpetuates the problem.

    @John_F_Church I commend you for making it work, and I hope God will provide even more abundantly for you and your family!
  • matthewjmatthewj
    Posts: 2,700
    I’ll be helping with hiring for a position soon - and while it does only pay around the 50k range, one can buy a decent home there for around 120-150k, cost of living is lower, etc.. I’m sure there could be further room for private instruction if one had a large family to support.

    You just have to be relatively normal, a good Catholic person, and an excellent musician..

    Feel free to reach out.
    Thanked by 2MatthewRoth Bri
  • CHGiffenCHGiffen
    Posts: 5,192
    Way back when I was an undergraduate, my loves and talents were in music, mathematics, and science. My parents pushed for me to pursue medicine and, when I demurred, physics or chemistry. But by then I was excelling in mathematics and could see that music did not offer much in the way of possibilities unless one was extremely lucky, despite the talent. So I took a B.A. in mathematics and went to graduate school, earning a Ph.D. and, following two years of postdoctoral research support, went into academia. All the while, where possible, I maintained my interest and involvement in music (oboe/English horn performance and some teaching, singing as a chorister and soloist, choir conducting, organist, and composing intermittently as much as possible), rarely, if at all, being paid as a musician.

    When I finally retired (early) from university teaching and research some twenty years ago, I began to pursue musical activities more intensely, singing of course, but mainly in the form of editing early choral music and composing/arranging, which led to my involvement in CPDL as an administrator and for 10 years as president (all volunteer, unpaid). Except for a very few years as (unpaid) choir director and organist for the "traditional" choir at St. Thomas Aquinas in Charlottesville and a couple of years as the director of an ad hoc/occasional choir at St. Paul's Episcopal in Hudson, I've never had the choral composer's luxury of having my own choral group/choir to write music for and have it performed.

    Thus it is, that much of my choral output has been either unperformed or only performed in unusual places/circumstances (mainly in Europe) -- and live recordings of performances are few and far between -- which has been the most disheartening aspect of my deep love for and efforts to compose worthwhile sacred choral music, as well as my own perceived smaller compositional output. My professional life as a mathematician sustained me until retirement where music could not, but at least I've had a some musically rewarding (albeit not financially rewarding) experiences.

    Thanked by 1DavidOLGC
  • Music is, and may always be, a tough gig - just look at the lives of any famous composers and you'll see the theme of running around doing a bunch of things to hopefully make ends meet. So I suppose that we have it easier today than most of them - at least in aspect that we have access to more comfort and safety even in the lower middle class. What would Bach or Vierne have given for competent modern ocular surgery?

    Having said that, as music gigs go, church music is still often a pretty good gig with a reasonable, steady salary that one merely augments (rather than relying on gigs and piecemeal earning). Compared to a lot of musicians we have it easy. However, the particular difficulty lies in coupling this line of work with other ideals, such as being open to life and having a spouse stay home with the kids. These ideals often weigh on Catholic musicians more than others. And I'd still advise anyone who really feels called to do all that (be open to life, AND have a spouse who stays home) that it would be better to pursue more lucrative work. Work that not only starts better but can grow throughout your career as your family grows. That is the particular case I'm speaking to.

    If you love church music and foresee a future where you share breadwinning with a spouse (or remain single), then, as musical gigs go, church music can be a really good one. Maybe it's mainly about expectations and life choices.
    Thanked by 2Bri DavidOLGC
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,978
    I think another factor is job availability. My former boss, the chief engineer and manager at a government agency where I worked, once said that there were many people who could do his job. Unfortunately, there was only one position and it was filled. Yes, cathedrals pay more than parish churches - usually. But how many cathedrals are there and how many musicians are the schools churning out? Too many for the available positions. It is not unusual for a significant music position to be held by someone like Widor for 60 years before it becomes available again. Granted, that's a long time but the turnover rate for the good jobs isn't frequent.
    Thanked by 1CHGiffen
  • ServiamScores
    Posts: 2,883
    Assuming the gig is worth keeping and you get along with the priest. I had a good (for what I needed at the time) gig, but the priest was reassigned and the new pastor and I were oil and water and you can guess who didn’t make the cut.

    I do think that there are “too many” musicians in one sense only: too many for the number of churches that will pay a living (or something close to it) wage. If all the churches that actually need musicians would actually pay for the services they require, there would be a dearth of sufficient musicians. I also know that these dynamics are partly determined by your location. Where I am, I have a heckuva time getting subs, and other churches sometimes struggle to fill their directorships. Other places (large metros, in particular) often have a sea of candidates to choose from. One posting I saw in Indy a few years ago had so many applicants they limited it to people with DMAs.
    Thanked by 2trentonjconn Elmar
  • SalieriSalieri
    Posts: 3,177
    .
  • francis
    Posts: 10,816
    In this work one seeks not the bread of men but only the Bread of Life. Otherwise, seek another path.
  • ServiamScores
    Posts: 2,883
    That seems a bit glib, if I’m honest, Francis. Even the Apostles could expect to be fed when they did their ministry. It wasn’t without its hardships—sure—but the expectation, from the very beginning, was that communities of Christians supported each other (and especially their ministers). That doesn’t seem too much to ask, where formal, corporate worship is concerned.
  • There's a big difference between being fed, and having yourself and family fully sustained.

    Except in large busy cathedrals, it's difficult to see that church musician should be a full-time role. Of course it's possible to make anything full time, but there's a difference between what is essential, and what you want to do.

    Very few musicians in any genre get a full-time family-sustaining income from employment.
  • MarkB
    Posts: 1,079
    So parish music directors are supposed to work another job AND do music at the parish EVERY weekend and EVERY holiday? Even if you could support a family that way, you wouldn't get to spend any time with them. Being a parish music director is already straining enough on a family because you work when everyone else has off, and you work on all the most important family celebration holidays except for the 4th of July. You even have to do the evening Mass on Superbowl Sunday when there are only a dozen people in the pews.

    It's difficult to see how pastor is a full-time role, from what I've seen in many parishes.

    The hardships of being a parish music director merit consideration in compensation, even if the hours aren't 40 per week most weeks.
  • ServiamScores
    Posts: 2,883
    I, for one, often have more to do than I can accomplish within the work week. I’m certainly full(er) time. And I fail to understand how/why a church shouldn’t want a full-time musician. Considering that corporate latreutic worship is one of our primary obligations as Christians, it seems odd to not want to have someone who can fully devote attention to making sure that one off the most important aspects of said liturgy is done with relative competence and dignity.
  • stulte
    Posts: 355
    Ideally, there would be more than just an organist/director. There should also be 2-4 paid section leaders to ensure you can perform higher quality music and to help aid the learning of less experienced singers.
  • GambaGamba
    Posts: 548

    Except in large busy cathedrals, it's difficult to see that church musician should be a full-time role. Of course it's possible to make anything full time, but there's a difference between what is essential, and what you want to do.


    I probably could manage to play 4 weekend masses, lead a rehearsal of an all-pro choir, and handle necessary music selection and administrative duties in 15-20 hrs/wk at a TLM parish that exclusively celebrates High Mass with Latin propers and nothing else, has an all-pro choir and massive endowment, and doesn’t mind that I’ll be completely unavailable for funerals M-F 9-5. It’s what makes most churches different from this [ideal] that makes up the further 20-40 hours:

    1) Tracking down the “other appropriate chants” – the hymns, motets, what have you…
    2) Beating the bushes, befriending, and bribing to scare up a tenor for the choir
    3) Working out who is paying the parish’s bills, getting to know them, and selling them on sacred music, so they are your friends and evangelists and not your foes
    4) Tracking down slightly less-appropriate music for AAAB choir, and/or composing such, because that’s all you have to work with
    5) Working out how on earth to teach 13 singers of all ages and all abilities how to read music and match pitch , while simultaneously helping them grow past the 648 vocal problems currently present in the choir, in a 90-minute rehearsal which must also include getting Sunday’s music to resemble what’s on the page
    6) Motivating the parishioners to open the hymnal or other worship aid, to notice what happens and pray when the choir is singing, and otherwise to participate in the Mass
    7) Do as many things as possible to get the youth to learn to sing and understand the liturgy, and thereby provide richer spiritual fare than the dumb videos the lame Religious Ed teacher shows them, and keep alive a faint hope that after a few decades, two of them may still be Christians and one of them may be sufficiently competent to sing your funeral
    8) Get the rest of the staff on your side, so that they’ll help you (this involves helping them too, often by helping them remember how to attach a file to an email, that Advent comes before Christmas, and that they are all Very Good At What They Do and Amazing, but may also include shoveling snow, hanging Christmas lights, and other random things you did not foresee….)
    9) Printing, folding, and stapling a library together of stuff from CPDL, xeroxing the chants, making leaflets and posters and flyers in an old version of Word, and otherwise reinventing the wheel and doing stuff the hard way because there’s just not enough money to do things the right way, and the way of transgressors is hard, Proverbs says.
    10) Winning over and accompanying the Boomers who sincerely miss your predecessor who sang such beautiful uplifting songs from the hymnal we used to have in the good old days when Fr. Happy was here

    This is what it takes in a normal parish just to maintain the status quo and get it moving ever so slightly in the proper direction. You just can’t do that when you’re not full-time, no way.
  • TCJ
    Posts: 986
    Maybe I'm odd man out, but I appreciate working weekends and holidays for multiple reasons.

    1. It doesn't limit my time with my wife and children. I can just as easily spend a Monday with them as a Saturday and it's the same to me.

    2. Parties and the like interest me little, if at all. Working weekends gives me an easy out for avoiding all the invitations that I would want to say "no" to anyway.

    3. Family outings are much more fun on a week day than on the weekend. Going to the zoo on a Saturday is a nightmare and going in the afternoon doesn't leave enough time to do anything. Going on a Monday morning during a typical school day (we homeschool -- extra perks!) is fun and relaxing because the place is virtually empty.

    As far as missing Superbowl Sunday? Why would I want to experience hell on earth anyway?!
    Thanked by 2tomjaw DavidOLGC
  • TCJ
    Posts: 986
    In the vein of what Gamba wrote, knowing how to clean gutters, replaster walls, fix the secretary's computer problems, and change light bulbs are also essential skills.
    Thanked by 2Elmar tomjaw
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 2,309
    You can do what you like, but bosses (pastors and otherwise) take advantage of that, and they don't seem to be understanding when the next guy wants distance.

    Regarding section leaders: I'm firmly in the camp that there should be male singers paid to cantor, i.e. lead the propers and sing the psalm verses as well as the melismatic verses at Mass and to intone (or pre-intone, or both) the antiphons, to intone the psalms (and the verse, probably), and to continue the hymn (and sing everything in alternation) at Vespers… look, I get it, the proliferation of evening Masses and a general disinterest in chant and in proper worship makes this seem ridiculous, but that is the ideal, at the very least.
    Thanked by 1hilluminar
  • You even have to do the evening Mass on Superbowl Sunday when there are only a dozen people in the pews.


    Where on earth are you, that Superbowl Sunday is more important than Mass?

    If the evening Mass is there for the right reason, it will have its usual complement. If not, it shouldn't exist anyway.

    Thanked by 1tomjaw
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,978
    The church in this country has been running a scam on musicians for at least 50 years that I know of. Many priests don't know the difference between Hassler and Haas and have no interest in learning. With the decline in music instruction in the schools, the congregations are no better. The secular culture has invaded the church and, even worse, taken it over. I have said for years that much of it comes down to leadership - or lack of it.
  • ServiamScores
    Posts: 2,883
    Many priests don't know the difference between Hassler and Haas
    This is a great line and I’m going to use it in the future. Mercifully, this is not a problem I have to contend with (quite the opposite, in my case, thank God!)
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 2,309
    I'm not certain they always know the difference between Haugen and Haas. (Haugen-Haas, the newest ice cream venture…)
    Thanked by 1CharlesW
  • francis
    Posts: 10,816
    Don’t get me started on the outright struggle that is going down in the church. We are all headed for a destiny not unlike the days of yore.

    Things have changed and what is rotten will fall never to rise again.
    Thanked by 1tomjaw
  • Many priests don't know the difference between Hassler and Haas

    I was once told by a Pastoral Associate "Bach was a good Catholic"
  • ServiamScores
    Posts: 2,883
    "Bach was a good Catholic"
    By modern standards, he was!
  • SalieriSalieri
    Posts: 3,177
    "Bach was a good Catholic"

    By modern standards, he was!

    One might even go so far as to say: "More Catholic than the Pope." (It's just too bad that he and Mrs Bach (I & II) bred "like rabbits".)
  • ServiamScores
    Posts: 2,883
    Salieri, I almost made the same joke.
  • Liam
    Posts: 5,092
    Johann Christian Bach notably became Catholic in his twenties, and was highly regarded by a young Mozart, among others.
  • Pax, you said ""Except in large busy cathedrals, it's difficult to see that church musician should be a full-time role. Of course it's possible to make anything full time, but there's a difference between what is essential, and what you want to do." I disagree. Mid-larger churches with active ministries can definitely be full time. Here's my job description form the top of my head:

    Plan music for and lead music in:
    Children's Choir
    Adult Choir
    Hand Bell Choir
    Two Ensembles
    Cantors
    Funeral Choir

    --Anything tech or music related from the bells ringing the angelus to the microphones to the laptop that projects (I hate it, too) to turning on the TVs that we use for projectors before mass ( I don't like that, either), to sound system issues during mass, etc. Making powerpoints for every mass, including funerals

    --4 masses a weekend plus weddings and funerals

    --Plan music, find an teach new hymns, ordinaries, psalms, etc

    -- Attend staff meetings

    --Maintain instruments, purchase new music, purchase and maintain items for hand bells, other instruments

    --Meet with couples to plan weddings.

    --Continually adjust the funeral and wedding packets to reflect the last drama we had

    --File, refile, cry, and print out new music. Constantly.

    --Women's Advent Night music and music for parish festival every year.

    One way our pastor mitigates the pay is by making our full time 32 hours per week, which I appreciate.

    TCJ: "Maybe I'm odd man out, but I appreciate working weekends and holidays for multiple reasons."

    When my children were young I felt this same way. I was able to function as a "stay at home mom" during the week. It was stipend work and any planning I did was at home during the week. I went in and was paid per mass and rehearsal. It was terrible pay, but I was married back then and it was a second income.

    Now that my kids are older and in scouting, I miss all of the camp outs and special activities on the weekends. I have family that is only a 3 hour drive away. Of course they make holidays and birthdays on the weekends when people can drive. I can't attend those. My kids are older and miss that connection as well.

    I am lucky that my family plans the schedule around us, but there have been times I have had to leave a family party (in town) in the middle of it if no sub had been available and return 3-4 hours later.

    I'm constantly exhausted becuase I don't feel like I can ever mentally "turn off." I'm here in my office on yet another day off because of a funeral. I love this ministry and I am always honored to play, but I know my time is coming to a close- at least for a season- when I am resentful to be here because I really :needed: a day to attend to things at home, things that have been put off because I am at work, or working other gigs to make up a living wage. I just don't feel like I can breathe

    I have an interview today for a non-music M-F today.
  • ServiamScores
    Posts: 2,883
    My only day off is Thursdays (after I’m there until 9:30pm for rehearsals the night before) and we had about 7 funerals in a row that were all scheduled for Thursdays with no input from me. They just scheduled them and expected me to be there. It became a running “joke”. So I feel your pain.
  • Update:

    Excellent interview. They wanted to fast track me. Bypassed the second interview to talk salaray and benefits. Turns out they pay even less than the base rate of a parish musician. This is a diocesan job working in the Office of Catholic schools. I told them if I accepted that salary I wouldn't be able to continue to send my children to Catholic schools myself.
    I'm totally disheartened with non profits and church work at this point and don't see myself applying for non-private sector work at this point.
  • ServiamScores
    Posts: 2,883
    So sorry to hear this. You’d think, as a diocesan employee, that you’d be able to send your children gratis…
    Thanked by 2tomjaw CHGiffen
  • The people who teach at that school I don't think get to send their kids for free...
    Thanked by 1Liam
  • SalieriSalieri
    Posts: 3,177
    At this point, it is my belief that dioceses exist solely for the purpose of collecting money, and making life more difficult for everyone in the process.
  • ServiamScores
    Posts: 2,883
    The people who teach at that school I don't think get to send their kids for free...
    They ALSO should have this benefit. Or at the very least a substantial discount. This is very common practice in certain educational sectors, and something that I asked for when I took my current post. Granted, I don't have 9 kids that I'm trying to push through; only 1 is currently school age, but still. Half-rate tuition should be the BARE MINIMUM for all staff. If colleges can waive 40k/yr tuition for the Janitor's kid, then our schools should certainly be able to help single mothers. For Pete's sake.
  • The parish I work for does not have a school and is not related to the school my children attend. To be fair, the school has taken tremendous care of my family and I after the divorce. It was a mutual choice of my ex husband and I to enroll them in catholic schools long before any separation. His well-off family even paid the tuition for us. Since our divorce, both have refused to pay any tuition (legally they can do that) and it is on me to pay for the tuition and uniforms if I am to keep them there. The school provides scholarships for us and I am in awe that I am asked to play just enough funerals and weddings that provide the rest of the tuition. It's usually within $50-$100 of what I need. I could not plan that if I tried. God is good. The school is good with aid; the diocese not so much.
    Thanked by 2CHGiffen Elmar