WHY AMERICA IS RUNNING OUT OF CARPENTERS.
Many young people have favorable views of the skilled trades, but they believe that the starting pay is even lower than it actually is. This can be a big problem because the nation is losing many carpenters and their knowledge base.
America has a carpenter problem. We've
had a regular shortage as far back as
the 1940s, in fact there have only been
two significant reprieves for
construction as a whole since then; the
2008 Great Recession and the 2020
pandemic, but in 2022 as American home
construction approaches pre-2008 levels
it's all coming to a head across all the
construction Fields. There's an estimated
shortage of some 650 000 trades people
but it was specifically Carpenters above
all, that topped the National Association
of home builders 2021 list of
subcontractors, that are in short supply.
Builders just can't find them and it
will be even worse if it wasn't for the
pandemic fueled supply issues, so of all
the skilled trades, why carpentry? What
are the main culprits for carpentry's
falling appeal? Where have they all gone?
We can break down the mass Exodus, down
to three reasons: Compensation,
Certification and early retirement. The
median annual income of a carpenter is
just over forty eight thousand dollars,
that's significantly less than
Boilermakers, plumbers, brick masons and
electricians. Ethan James, the Man behind
the YouTube channel, the honest Carpenter
says “low pay is a result of the long
hours it needed to do the job”. Our trade
as opposed to many of the other trades
is a 1 hour volume job. Plumbers are
often in and out if it's a repair. Many
of those repairs occur in a day but
Carpenters, a deck or something like that
is going to translate into hundreds of
labor hours. It's going to be tricky for
your Carpenter to demand
90, an hour, if they're going to be there
for 300 hours or something depending on
the complexity of the job but the
nation's lack of qualified Carpenters is
part of a bigger Trend in 2021. Stanley
Black and Decker and KRC research spoke
to 800 high schoolers, 200 parents and
500 workers in skilled trade professions,
the survey found that the majority of
young people have favorable views of the
skilled trades but that many believe
that the starting pay was even less than
what it actually is,
so not only is carpentry one of the
lowest paying skilled labor jobs but the
public thinks that the pay is even lower
than it actually is. We've kind of been
beating it down for so long and making
it seem like a dead end path or career,
more like a punishment is how I see it
like if you mess up,
you're gonna have to build stuff.
Certifications and licenses or lack
thereof also play a big role in
Carpenter's pay. To become an electrician
or plumber in most states, you need a
certification or license to practice
carpentry, however has less rigid
standards.
Ethan James worries that, “when just about
anyone can call themselves a carpenter
it may lose its meaning and value” If you
were in North Carolina with me you could
put a tool belt on and say I'm a
professional Carpenter and advertise
yourself as a professional Carpenter.
There's not a lot of red tape, you have
no way of knowing what the breadth of
their experience is or what they are
qualified to handle, I mean these days
everybody's level of carpentry
experience is like 100 percent unique to
them. The pandemic spurred a lot of early
retirees in the carpentry field, suddenly
a large group of them was gone. According
to the associated builders and
contractors the average age of
retirement for construction workers is
61. Today a staggering one-fifth of the
current Workforce is over the age of 55.
There's a fear that in the next 10 years,
the majority of the remaining carpenters
will retire and will be left with even
fewer. We're losing and we're not
replacing them. We're also losing their
knowledge base, which is just as
important because uh, we're not seeing
the kind of information transfer from
the older generation to the younger
generation that we've had essentially
for every generation in human history.
For thousands of years for the first
time ever, we're not getting it. There is
some hope, though in our high schools,
according to the Department of Education,
there was a major dip in construction
class enrollment in American high
schools from 2007 to 2017. The past few
years though have shown a rise in
interest once again, some attribute this
to social media and reality television
programs centered around homes and
general construction. The Carpenters with
these accounts inject humor and
personalities into their educational "fix
it yourself videos", like many things in
America. The future of carpentry depends
on its youth. My dad always said, "when I
was young, doctors will always be
necessary because people always get sick".
It's like Carpenters are just doctors
for houses and houses will always get
sick too, so carpenters will always be
necessary.




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