
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -- Teenagers throughout the U.S. are finding it increasingly difficult to land the after-school, weekend and summer jobs they need for experience and spending money.
While the nation's average 2011 unemployment rate was 9 percent, the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics says it was almost 25 percent for job-seekers between 16 and 19 years old. That's up 10 percentage points from a decade ago.
Experts say many of the entry-level positions once sought primarily by teens are being nabbed by older people who need the paycheck. Automation has also eliminated many jobs at traditionally teen-friendly employers like car washes, photocopy shops and supermarkets.
Participants at a forum Tuesday in Hartford say the trend is alarming, and society suffers when an entire generation's chance to learn workplace skills are delayed or denied.
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