Is it true they get paid alot bucks to do 5 minutes of work when they interpret on the job site for instance traffic stop by police or emergency room?
Is it true they get paid alot bucks to do 5 minutes of work when they interpret on the job site for instance traffic stop by police or emergency room?
Is it true they get paid alot bucks to do 5 minutes of work when they interpret on the job site for instance traffic stop by police or emergency room?
Reason I asked about this cuz I recieved an email from someone. It was about a deaf who asked a cop to have an interpter instead this cop complained to this deaf person about how much it costed too much to have an interpter. It does not mean deaf people who complain it is hearing who complain about them. Okay. I Just want to know if it is true or not.
It is hearing who have problem paying them, not me.1. By taking a job, an interpreter cannot take another job at the same time.
2. In metropolitan areas, freelance interpreters have to drive all over the place, for hours at a time in my area, to get to their jobs.
3. Often they show up and the job has been cancelled.
4. If you want an interpreter to be available for you, he or she has to eat and pay rent, otherwise you get a starving homeless interpreter.
5. Therefore, interpreters usually have a 2-hour minimum to ensure that by taking a job that only ends up taking 5 minutes (or is cancelled without enough warning to get another job), they don't get paid a grand total of six dollars (or zero) for having accepted the job instead of one that really did go for two hours and would have paid for gas, food, rent, and all the other things that most freelancers struggle to pay for.
I'm heartily sick of this stereotype that interpreters are SWIMMING in money for doing very little work and leeching off the deaf community. I have never once met a single interpreter like this. Possibly they exist but never in any of the conventions or workshops or workplaces I have ever been to.
Well, Jazzy, what you said above is from a different perspective. The comment came from a public agency that would have to pay for an interpreter. Does this mean the cop who said that to you means that your rights are not worth protecting? The money is budgeted into their books so why is he/the dept. complaining? It's the law.
I have no idea why he complained but I need to know if it is true or just another story make up by deaf person who was pulled by cop. I never say it was me but I find it odd when I read this email from someone about it. So I question about it. I hate to be lied by someone about it.
It is hearing who have problem paying them, not me.
I have heard of doctors and other private places refusing to get an interpreter because it's expensive, but a public place like police station or being arrested? No way! A cop would get in trouble if they said that, so I would be surprised if they did. It's possible but it would be a dumb thing for a cop to do!
I'm heartily sick of this stereotype that interpreters are SWIMMING in money for doing very little work and leeching off the deaf community. I have never once met a single interpreter like this. Possibly they exist but never in any of the conventions or workshops or workplaces I have ever been to.
You pay WHO to do their jobs? The police or the interpreters?Dont be upset with me because I am taxpayer and I pay them to do the jobs and I like to be know about this instead of being not aware of it.