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Arizona Labor Blues
Quick Work Needed to Avoid Shortage Crisis
By David M. Brown
The construction industry is approaching a labor shortage
of crisis proportions and its leaders are trying to figure
out what it will take to fix the problem in Arizona and the
entire nation.
"This is a national crisis," says Gary Aller, director
of the Alliance for Construction Excellence at Arizona State
University. "We find in many skilled trades that new
people coming into the market have practically dried up."
Aller's program at ASU's Del E. Webb School of Construction
focuses on construction management, a market segment where
there also are shortages.
The country's construction industry, which contributes 8 %
to the gross domestic product, will need one million new workers
in the next six years and 2.4 million by 2014, says the U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics.
What's more, baby boomers are retiring. "It is important
to keep in view that the average age of a construction worker
in America is 52 years old," says David N. Jones, president
and CEO of Phoenix-based Arizona Contractors Association.
James J. Kuliesh, executive director of the Tucson-based Alliance
of Construction Trades, adds that the average age of a skilled
craftsperson in the U.S. is 47.
"Based on the U.S. Department of Labor figures, the construction
industry needs 240,000 workers each year to replace those
that are retiring and to allow some growth in capacity,"
Kuliesh says. ACT represents 257 specialty trade contractors
and suppliers in the construction industry.
"In 2006, workforce shortages became a harsh reality
for much of the construction industry, and the crisis is only
expected to worsen [this year]," says Dave Meyer, the
2007 national chairman of Arlington, Va.-based Associated
Builders and Contractors. Rebuilding the Gulf States is exacerbating
the situation everywhere, he adds.
In Arizona, finding labor, especially skilled labor, is difficult,
says Mark Minter, executive director of the Phoenix-based
Arizona Builders' Alliance.
Minter points out that the projected state population growth
of eight million in the next 30 years. Arizona is the fastest-growing
state in the country, followed closely by Nevada, and that
increases competitiveness for skilled and nonskilled workers.
"That means that we'll have to more than double our entire
built environment while we repair and replace the old buildings,
roads, water treatment plants and other infrastructure,"
he says.
A February 2005 report by the Arizona Department of Commerce
report cited U.S. Census Bureau figures that showed that nearly
1 in 11 jobs in Arizona was related to the construction industry.
The report also noted that the state has a shortage of workers
in the "core" skilled occupations, especially carpenters,
electricians, front-line supervisors and painters, but also
including management, field supervision and semiskilled and
unskilled labor.
The report concluded that by 2014 the construction industry
in Arizona will be 40,000 skilled laborers short of demand.
The problem is an expensive one to fix.
"According to a recent poll of [our] members, the labor
shortage is the No. 4 reason for project delay and project
cost increase," says David Martin, president of The Arizona
Chapter of Associated General Contractors. The top three reasons
were all related to materials pricing.
ASU's Aller says pricing for labor has increased for some
trades at double the rate of inflation.
Construction leaders say there are four issues that must be
dealt with promptly: immigration reform, healthcare, wages
and education.
The ABA's Minter recommends a program by which undocumented
workers already here can become residents - without having
to become citizens - so that they can be legally employed.
In Tucson, the Alliance of Construction Trades is actively
involved in a new coalition called "Arizona Employers
for Immigration Reform," a grassroots campaign to lobby
Congress on the importance of reform.
"If we open the doors to too many, it drives the wages
down of workers who are here," Aller says. "If we
don't bring in enough, wages go too high and we can no longer
build projects because there is no return on investment."
The immigrant workforce is indeed filling a void that the
U.S. can't fill, says Bo Calbert, president of the Phoenix-based
Southwest Region of general contractor McCarthy Building Cos.
"They aren't taking jobs from Americans; they're providing
a workforce that we can't provide," he adds. "We
need to develop a legal means for good people to come to this
country to fill the void that's here and be able to do this
in a safe environment with dignity."
For solutions, Aller and other construction leaders point
to the industry and not Washington, D.C.
"Immigration reform cannot be accomplished by politicians,"
Aller says. "The industry must step up and solve this,
or it will be dealing with a resolution that will satisfy
voters and will, more likely than not, destroy the industry."
While higher wages aren't alone a sufficient incentive for
career choice, they are important for maintaining a skilled
labor force in Arizona that won't be continually looking elsewhere,
says Dale D. Jacks, business manager for the Phoenix office
of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local
640. "Unless the wages and benefits are higher by ratio
and comparable to the surrounding boom areas, we will not
only fail to attract the numbers of desirable higher skilled
workers but we will loose those we have and ultimately those
we will have trained, at all levels."
Insurance is another problem. The rising cost of health care
has made it more difficult for local and national contractors,
the majority of whom employ 20 or less, to offer competitive
packages without continually upping deductibles and co-payments
or passing along these costs to employees in lower wages.
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"If the employer cannot afford health care for its employees,
they will go to an employer that has health care as a part
of its benefits package," the ACA's Jones says.
Aller adds: "The burden of companies not providing health
care becomes an issue for the taxpayer. We get our construction
projects done cheaper, but we pay for that health care one
way or another."
Minter and the ABA, for instance, have been working at the
federal level for legislation allowing association health
care plans, which would allow groups to form affordable insurance
pools and provide affordable health insurance to thousands
of businesses and their workers.
But he adds that this effort has met with opposition from
elected officials and lobbying groups in favor of a national
healthcare approach.
To really solve the labor problem, officials agree, a wide-ranging,
multifaceted educational agenda must become the construction-industry
foundation.
This training problem is particularly acute in Arizona, where
only 20% of the commercial workforce is union, and unions
train workers, McCarthy's Calbert says.
"A lot of the workers in the trades haven't had the opportunity
to get comprehensive, structured training to improve their
skill levels, except those in the union training programs,"
says Rick Mills, administrative assistant of the Southwest
Regional Council of Carpenters in Phoenix.
In the areas where the unions have a high percentage of the
workforce organized, there are always skilled, knowledgeable
tradespeople moving up into management positions, Mills says.
"Most of the nonunion workers here never even get an
opportunity to learn to read blueprints or have any professional
training to advance into management positions. The construction
workforce in the Valley is made up of a lot of workers that
aren't here legally, don't speak English and have a limited
education."
Carla Brandt, president of Phoenix-based American Subcontractors
Association of Arizona and president of Cobra Stucco LLC,
also of Phoenix, agrees. "One size does not fit all,"
she adds. "If high school students realize early on that
they do not wish to further their education at the college
level, they should be given an opportunity to enter a construction
trade school or other vocational training that would better
meet their educational goals."
ACA's Jones says that young people need to at least want to
try on the outfit.
"The training programs have been around for decades,
but, if you don't have interested individuals in learning
the skilled crafts and committed to a career in construction,
then you have nothing but a small number to fill a big demand,"
he adds.
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