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Should Your Child Consider a Career in a Trade?

CRSMCA Consider a Career in Trade
April 18, 2020 at 6:00 p.m.

By Erica Sweeney, Originally published in Next Avenue.

Trade jobs are widely available, often high-paying and training usually comes with no student debt.

Although the price of college is soaring and a fouryear degree isn’t the guarantee of financial security it once was, 70% of parents surveyed by the National Center for Construction Education & Research (NCCER) said they wouldn’t advise their child to embark on a career in construction. They may want to rethink that.

Not only is there a dire need for the next-generation workforce in the construction trades, jobs are widely available and often high-paying. What’s more, training usually comes with no student debt.

Construction Work: Long Stigmatized Brian Turmail, vice president, public affairs and strategic initiatives at Associated General Contractors of America (AGC), says for decades, construction and trades jobs have been stigmatized and viewed as a “last resort, instead of a career opportunity that ought to be on the menu to be considered.”

More than 60 organizations, led by home improvement retailer Lowe’s, recently launched Generation T, a movement to help fill the skilled trade gap and change public perceptions of the skilled trades in America

Adds Turmail: “It’s been so impressed upon us that the path to success in the 21st century lies through a four-year traditional college education.”

But parents of teens and twentysomethings should understand that things have changed.

For one thing, the construction industry is desperate for builders, plumbers, electricians and others, because the field is aging. As boomers in construction retire, their jobs aren’t being filled quickly enough to meet the demand.

According to an AGC and Autodesk survey, 80% of construction firms are struggling to fill hourly craft positions, which make up most of the construction workforce. And they expect the problem to continue.

Helping to Fill Many Job Openings in the Trades Analysts predict more than 3 million skilled trade jobs will remain open by 2028. A recent survey by the National Association of Home Builders revealed that 69% of its members are already experiencing delays in completing projects on time due to a shortage of qualified workers.

It’s one reason why more than 60 organizations, led by home improvement retailer Lowe’s, recently launched Generation T, a movement to help fill the skilled trade gap and change public perceptions of the skilled trades in America. It’s creating a national marketplace to connect people to prospective apprenticeships and jobs.

Even with no experience, Turmail says, jobs in the trades are easy to come by.

“If you can pass a drug test, if you’re willing to work outside, willing to be part of a team and willing to show up early and work hard, you can find a job in construction in just about every market in this country,” he explains.

For example, the Generation T site forecasts more than 1 million opportunities for carpenters and nearly 650,000 for plumbers over the next decade.

Construction jobs are also becoming more tech-centric, which the industry hopes will appeal to a younger generation and their parents. iPads, drones and robots are regular fixtures on jobsites, and some heavy equipment can be operated via GPS and a computer.

Well-Paying Jobs Jennifer Wilkerson, director of marketing, public relations and the Build Your Future program at NCCER (a site for parents), says one of the biggest benefits of construction work — that jobs pay well — is also one of the major misconceptions about the industry.

In NCCER’s survey of parents, 40% considered construction jobs to be low-paying, Wilkerson says. But they actually offer high earning potential and room for advancement.

Average salaries (not including overtime, per diem or other incentives), are more than $59,600 for plumbers, $62,400 for HVAC technicians and up to $92,500 for project managers, according to NCCER’s 2018 construction craft salary survey.

Construction career pay enables young people to take on more financial responsibility, Wilkerson says. And when children are financially stable, parents benefit, too.

As Next Avenue has reported, a Merrill Lynch/Age Wave study found that parents are spending $500 billion annually to financially support their adult children. And 63% are putting their own financial security aside for their kids, the survey said.

“I think parents need to know your kids have a lot of options in construction,” Wilkerson says. Besides learning a broad skillset, they might be able to work their way up to lead a company or start their own business.

To help parents better understand what a trades career can offer, NCCER launched the Build Your Future site, with details.

Paths to Construction Careers There are multiple paths to a career in the trades for young adults, Turmail notes.

The most common is taking classes at a two-year college or private training facility after high school and then getting a job with a construction firm. A four-year degree is required for management roles in the industry, like a project manager, engineer or other “khakis and steel-toed boots construction job,” Turmail says.

Another option: participating in career and technical education programs while in high school and then getting hired by a construction company.

Many construction firms offer openshop apprenticeship programs, which pay workers while they learn, and then hire them. These programs also provide inhouse training programs for newcomers.

Union apprenticeships are a viable option in some parts of the country, Turmail says, although only about 13% of the construction workforce is unionized these days.

With a union apprenticeship, a high school grad signs up with a local labor union for a specific craft, like carpentry or electrical, gets paid to learn while working in that field and then finds a full-time job through the union.

Because the industry is “so eager to find folks,” Turmail says, many construction companies now will reimburse the cost of training.

Construction Work: Happy Work Construction jobs can be psychically fulfilling, too, for young people.

Construction workers were listed as the happiest employees in a 2015 report by TINYpulse.

“It’s economics and satisfaction,” Turmail says. “You want your children to get out of the house and be successful and independent once they’re grown up.” A career in construction might punch those tickets.

Read the whole article.

Erica Sweeney is a freelance journalist who has written for The New York Times, HuffPost, Teen Vogue, Parade.com and more. Follow her on Twitter @ericapsweeney and visit www.ericasweeney.com.



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