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-   -   TOP 10 most/least stressful jobs of 2012. TOP 10 highest paid CEOs in Canada (https://www.revscene.net/forums/670963-top-10-most-least-stressful-jobs-2012-top-10-highest-paid-ceos-canada.html)

Ferra 07-16-2012 09:01 AM

that list is full of shit

looks like some random lists and things one guy came up with randomly out of nowhere

Eff-1 07-16-2012 09:56 AM

If anyone bothered to click on the links, eventually you come to a page where the methodology for the survey is clarified. You would also note that the actual article is "America's Most Stressful Jobs".

Quote:

Methodology - Stress Rankings for Jobs Rated 2012
THE 11 STRESS FACTORS

The amount of stress a worker experiences can be predicted, in part, by looking at the typical demands and crises inherent in his or her job.

Our ranking system for stress considered 11 different job demands which can reasonably be expected to evoke stress (see list below). Each demand was assigned a range of points. A high score was awarded if a particular demand was a major part of the job, fewer points were awarded if the demand was a small part of the job, and no points were awarded if that demand was not normally required. For example, "deadlines" was one demand measured. Journalists, who often face daily deadlines, received the maximum of 9 points in this category. In contrast, biologists, who seldom face deadlines, received no points. The demands measured and the point ranges assigned to each area are as follows:

Travel, amount of 0-10
Growth Potential (income divided by 100)
Deadlines 0-9
Working in the public eye 0-5
Competitiveness 0-15
Physical demands (stoop, climb, etc.) 0-14
Environmental conditions 0-13
Hazards encountered 0-5
Own life at risk 0-8
Life of another at risk 0-10
Meeting the public 0-8

Bouncing Bettys 07-16-2012 05:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PiuYi (Post 7976515)
taxi drivers are STRESSED man

they have to deal with: abusive customers, drunks, people who just walk off without paying cab fare (they can literally do nothing about this), other taxi companies picking up customers on their turf, rushing to places when dispatch calls only to have the customer already picked up, extreme heat (they turn off the car when waiting to save gas), etc etc.

On top of all of that, they've got to deal with this guy.
http://ts1.mm.bing.net/images/thumbn...679f6a9f2ee087
:troll:

belka 07-16-2012 05:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by asian_XL (Post 7976547)
1. Soldier. Annual income: $35,580

^ I thought soldiers make much more than that when they are sent to war. Didn't those US soldiers get $20,000 per month staying in Iraq?

That 35k is your first two years of service, even then your food and lodging is payed for because you are still in training. I'd say your average "soldier" makes around 50-55k, with the higher scales in the trades.

DGCB - Regular Force and Class C NCM Rates - 2012

asian_XL 07-16-2012 06:22 PM

^ that's more like it.

As for the CEO, I wonder how much bonus or dividend they received every year.
36mil is relatively low compare to this. USA #1. John Hammergren of McKesson One-year total compensation: $131.2 million

penner2k 07-16-2012 06:27 PM

All oil rig work onto the list of most stressful

- you fuck up you get hurt... bad... possible death/missing limbs
- can work for up to 12 hours with next to no breaks when the crunch is on
- get yelled at cuz things arent happening fast enough
- work a week during the day.. then gotta change your sleeping schedule and work nights

Could add more. It was by far the hardest job I've ever done.

pastarocket 07-16-2012 07:48 PM

CEO Michael Pearson really gets paid. Over $36 million! -never heard of this guy or the company he works for.

Ludepower 07-16-2012 09:23 PM

2. Firefighter. Annual income: $45,250

I dont think firefighters have hard jobs. They barely fight fires...mostly responding to car accidents.
For their night shifts...they just sleep. They have it good.

MR_BIGGS 07-16-2012 09:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ludepower (Post 7977190)
2. Firefighter. Annual income: $45,250

I dont think firefighters have hard jobs. They barely fight fires...mostly responding to car accidents.
For their night shifts...they just sleep. They have it good.

:lawl::facepalm::seriously:

Imagine getting to a car accident scene with limbs everywhere. Not to mention wildland firefighters in BC and Alberta have a long wildfire season to deal with every damn year.

Harvey Specter 07-16-2012 09:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by StylinRed (Post 7976288)
bradley shaw pays himself too much


as for least stressful im surprised they didn't put accountants in there

I think Jim Shaw is been paid something like $20 million dollars a year for staying away from the board and the company after his crazy outbursts.

murmur 07-16-2012 09:58 PM

i wonder how the canadian tax system impacts the earnings of the CEOs.

bing 07-16-2012 10:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by asian_XL (Post 7977013)
^ that's more like it.

As for the CEO, I wonder how much bonus or dividend they received every year.
36mil is relatively low compare to this. USA #1. John Hammergren of McKesson One-year total compensation: $131.2 million

For what its worth, that's mostly in stock option. His salary is around ~50million.

LiquidTurbo 07-17-2012 12:06 PM

I'll give you another example why this list is full of shit. Low level assembly worker is considered not stressful?

-Loud Environments
-Production Demands
-Repetitive Stress Injury
-Dirty conditions

Case closed, especially since Librarian isn't on the low stress list.

zetazeta 07-18-2012 08:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by murmur (Post 7977249)
i wonder how the canadian tax system impacts the earnings of the CEOs.

I'm pretty sure most of the $$ is from stock options in which case, the tax is a lot lower (capital gain). There's also a lot more tax saving strategies for people in the uppermost brackets.


Interesting, never heard of Yamana Gold before... Was expecting Barrick's CEO to be there tho :O


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