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New Brunswick

Fredericton teen profits from digging people out of storms

While some students were lucky enough to go south for March break, the week was all business for a Fredericton teen trying to profit off Thursday's nor'easter.

Cameron Ritchie, 17, is the founder of Homewurk, a service that connects students with odd jobs in Fredericton

Cameron Ritchie has been busy putting both his entrepreneurial and shovelling skills to the test this week with the latest nor'easter that hit the province. (Photo submitted by Cameron Ritchie)

While some students were lucky enough to go south for March break, the week was all business for a Fredericton teen trying to profit off Thursday's nor'easter.

"A lot of the people were just away on vacation in the nice warm weather,and they don't want to come home to a full snowed-in house," said Cameron Ritchie, founder of Homewurk, a service that connects students with odd jobs across the city.

Before the storm even hit Thursday, the 17-year-old had lined up40 high school and university students for shovelling and snowblowing driveways for residents across the capital city and surrounding area.

"We had the whole city of Fredericton to spread us all out," he said.

The young entrepreneur said most of the shovelling happened Thursday morning, when people were trying to get to work. Students also shovelled decks, pathways andporches.

He said many students will bring their own trucks, snowblowers and shovels to get a job done.

Leo Hayes High student Cameron Ritchie has a list of 140 students always able to do jobs. (Philip Drost/CBC)

Ritchie, who plans to take engineering at the University of New Brunswick next fall, said his team would be out again Friday doing the final bits of snow-removal before the next storm hits on the weekend.

"The storm has finally stopped and you can clear everything," he said.

Matching jobs to people

Homewurk has been running for just over a year and the Fredericton teen said business is booming.

The local business started after dozens of Ritchie's peers were complaining they couldn't get work around the city and were looking for jobs to pay for university.

"They're really hard-working students and I see that," he said. "I'm like, 'Why can't they get a job? That's not really fair.' Employers are missing out.

"On the other hand you hear adults saying how busy they are so I thought, 'Why don't I match these two demographics up?'"

Usually when I'm in school, like at lunch, I'm still working. I'm dispatching, organizing payments.-CameronRitchie, founder ofHomewurk

He described the system as a two-in-one service in other words, "killing two birds with one stone."

"A student comes by and the job gets done," he said.

But the job does come with demands.

When Ritchie is in school, the workload carries on. His teachers allow him to take calls from potential or returning clients in class and he'll arrange to hire a student over his lunch break.

"Usually when I'm in school, like at lunch, I'm still working," he said. "I'm dispatching, organizing payments."

For a part-time job, Maurits Vanderlee shovels residents out of a snowstorm. (Cameron Ritchie)

Now the Leo Hayes High School student has about 200 people working for him.

Jobs are year-round and can consist of everything from helping seniors move from homes to condos, to painting decks and shovelling driveways during major snowstorms.

Noah Trebble, Daniel Hovey and Nick McCullough help a client move a piano. (Photo: Cameron Ritchie)

Ahomeowner suggestsa price, but Mitchell has to decide whether it's reasonable.

Employees are paid once the job's done.

"I always make sure my students get paid, that's my priority," he said. "People in Fredericton are so, so generous that I'm always super proud to say that I'm from here."

More snow, please

He's hoping to benefit from more snow days over the weekend and into next week.

"I'm excited to help my peers and help people around Fredericton they might not be able to shovel [on] their own or they would just rather sit down with a cup of coffee instead of being out in the cold."

In coming weeks, the high school entrepreneur is hoping to expand his business and reach out to more high school and university students. He'll do this by growing the business's presence on social media and going door to door, seeking clients.

"The more jobs we get, the more students get a snow-day pay," he said.