ASAAL Job Fair & Job Seminar 2016, New Jersey

Alliance of South Asian American Labor or ASAAL Job Fair & Job Seminar 2016, New Jersey will be held at Atlantic City, NJ. The event is hosted by ASAAL, New Jersey Chapter. All Bangladeshis as well as all South Asian communities are encourage to come. Information can be provided in Bangla too.

Hiring agencies in attendance:

Caesars Entertainment
Atlantic City Police Dept.
Atlantic City Electric Dept.
Home Energy Assistance
Strike Force Security Company (security, cleaning, labor)
Atlantic Cape Community College
Atlantic City Career Academy

Venue:

Unite Here Local 54 HQ
1014 Atlantic Ave, Atlantic City, NJ 08401

Contacts:

Jahangir Kabir, 609-334-6990
Mohammed Akber Hossain, 609-334-1490
Subrata Chowdhury, 609-233-2728
Farook Hossain, 609-271-8603
President, NJ Chapter

Selenium ASP.net Career Seminar

Selenium ASP.net Career Seminar, organized by EastWest Information Technology. Topics of seminar include – Why Selenium and what to learn, why ASP.net and what to learn, live demonstration of Selenium and .NET implementation, job opportunity, recruiters view, recruiting help etc.

Venue:

76-11, 37 Avenue, Suite 202
Jackson Heights, NY 11372

Contact:

718-406-9111

Bangladeshis Build Careers in New York Traffic

Bangladeshis Build Careers in New York Traffic

By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN

Above a Korean fried chicken restaurant in Jackson Heights, Queens, Showkat Khan worked the room of mostly Bangladeshi men, speaking Bengali with a few English phrases mixed in, his enthusiastic message of opportunity broadcast through a crackling amp. At one point, he held aloft a copy of New York City’s Civil Service newspaper, The Chief.

“You are here to make money in this country, and to get a better life,” Mr. Khan said.

There was more than one way toward that American dream, he acknowledged, outlining a few options. But one path seemed to stand above the others, if only because Mr. Khan had already paved the way: He is a traffic enforcement agent.

Mr. Khan is part of an influx of Bangladeshi immigrants who earn a living by writing parking summonses for the city, a curious and growing presence navigating the choking traffic and bumper-to-bumper sea of parked cars.

Bangladeshi immigrants, who represent less than 1 percent of the city’s population, now make up between 10 percent and 15 percent of the 3,000 traffic agents, Robert Cassar, the president of the union representing the agents, said.

The Friday after Thanksgiving, which many New Yorkers mistakenly believe offers a holiday reprieve from usual parking restrictions, is in fact one of the busiest days of the year for traffic agents. Mohammed Chowdhury, who is from Bangladesh and supervises traffic operations for much of Queens, said his officers might write three times as many tickets on that day.

“The next morning, everyone is feeling lazy; and who is going to get up and move the car?” he said. “If there is street cleaning on Friday where you live, almost 80 percent of the cars won’t be moved. They’ll all get ticketed.”

…Read the rest of the article here