Despite rising salaries, the skilled-labor shortage is getting worse - YouTube

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JUDY WOODRUFF: There's a shortage of skilled tradespeople throughout the U.S. economy,
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a persistent problem that started well before the pandemic.
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But, given high unemployment, it is an important time to explore what's behind that gap and
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what can be done about it.
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Paul Solman has the story for our series Work Shift, which focuses on navigating the job
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market in a post-COVID economy.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Superstar Seattle, where the high-tech young make six figures and up. But
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you can make that much in low-tech too, says plumber Vinnie Sposari.
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VINNIE SPOSARI, Owner, Mr. Rooter Plumbing of Seattle: Drain cleaning, light plumbing
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repairs and that kind of thing, we have got guys making over $100,000 a year.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Sposari owns Seattle's Mr. Rooter franchise.
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VINNIE SPOSARI: I have got plumbers that work for me today that make $200,000-plus a year.
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PAUL SOLMAN: And they're what age?
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VINNIE SPOSARI: Any age, in their 30s, 40s.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Making $200,000 a year or more?
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VINNIE SPOSARI: Absolutely.
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PAUL SOLMAN: That's because there simply aren't enough plumbers, not in boomtowns like Seattle,
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not anywhere.
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VINNIE SPOSARI: Manpower is one of the most frustrating parts of my job, filling all the
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spots, I could hire six, eight experienced plumbers right now.
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PAUL SOLMAN: But they're just not out there?
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VINNIE SPOSARI: They're just not out there. Guys that are my age, they're aging out.
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PAUL SOLMAN: But why aren't they being replaced with the young, given their historically low
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participation rate, made worse by the pandemic?
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There are all these kids who either aren't working at all or are working in dead-end,
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low-wage jobs. Why can't you just say to them, hey, by age of 25 or 30, you could be making
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six figures; just come with me?
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VINNIE SPOSARI: I would love to. I have gone to some career days. The kids, you're waiting
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for them to come talk to you. And they just don't.
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PAUL SOLMAN: So, why no takers?
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TREVOR CALDWELL, Mr. Rooter Plumbing of Seattle: First and foremost is the perception of plumbing.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Trevor Caldwell is Vinnie Sposari's right hand man.
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TREVOR CALDWELL: There's this stigma that goes along with getting your hands dirty,
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just a plumber, not a person, just a plumber. And I don't want to be that guy.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Or that gal.
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SARAH SCHNABEL, LaMorte Electric: You're doing manual labor. Some people tend to look down
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on that. And that makes people not want to go into it, clearly.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Sarah Schnabel isn't a plumber, but an Ithaca, New York, electrical apprentice,
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another well-paying trade which can't find good help these days, a frustration for Schnabel's
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boss, Brian LaMorte, and for his colleagues.
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BRIAN LAMORTE, LaMorte Electric: I know lots of guys in the trade who are contractors,
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and they're looking for help.
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PAUL SOLMAN: And willing to pay for it.
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BRIAN LAMORTE: We have recently raised our rates as a business to $90 an hour, and we
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are not pushing the envelope. We were $75 a little while ago and $65 a little while
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before that.
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It's getting to the point where you probably pay us more to come fix your light switch
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than you do to go to the doctor.
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PAUL SOLMAN: So, again, why no takers?
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SARAH SCHNABEL: I do think, for people my age, it's definitely more glamorous to think
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of the tech job, where you're in a really nice cushy office building.
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We're the kind of people who are going to hire someone to go change a light bulb, let
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alone go into the trades. That's kind of where my generation is right now.
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ADRIENNE BENNETT, Owner, Benkari Plumbing: I can't give them a power tool. They might
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kill themselves with it. They have never held a power tool in their life.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Yes, says Detroit master plumber Adrienne Bennett, whose firm is currently
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helping to revitalize Michigan's Central Station, it takes a non-cushy mind-set.
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ADRIENNE BENNETT: This is physical work. You need to be there on the job site every day.
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And you got to be on time. And a lot of the young people today, they don't have work ethics.
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PAUL SOLMAN: But, of course, plenty do. Determined to breed new plumbers, Vinnie Sposari runs
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his own year-long training program, paying young people from the get-go to learn the
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trade.
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VINNIE SPOSARI: We're paying our trainees $15, $16, $18 an hour. And then, when you're
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done with the program, you're not a full licensed plumber, but you're a service technician who's
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able to snake drains and to do the kind of small plumbing repairs and whatnot and get
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close to that six-figure income. You're getting paid to learn that.
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PAUL SOLMAN: After a certain number of hours and possibly an exam -- the requirements vary
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by locality -- you can become a licensed plumber, a quality credential in an economy where only
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11 percent of employers think colleges and universities are doing a good job of preparing
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people for the work force.
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Says Sposari of his apprenticeship program:
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VINNIE SPOSARI: It's open for everybody. I would welcome anybody.
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PAUL SOLMAN: But, says Sposari:
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VINNIE SPOSARI: You would be amazed how many people we want to hire, but our insurance
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company won't insure them because of driving violations, drugs, can't keep a job.
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You see some applicants come in here in a ripped T-shirt, hasn't shaved. You go out,
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look at his car and it's full of garbage. It hasn't been washed in a month. Those are
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the things we look at.
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PAUL SOLMAN: But, hey, plenty of young folks have intact T-shirts, clean faces, clean cars.
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Maybe they realize, or learn, that you need an apprenticeship to get licensed, says plumber
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Adrienne Bennett.
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ADRIENNE BENNETT: And the apprenticeships are five years. And you start out at maybe
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$15, $16 an hour, and to get to $40, $50 an hour is going to take you five or six years.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Plus, to get a job, isn't it who you know? And few potential candidates
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know tradespeople, it seems.
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MANUEL RIOS, Mr. Rooter Plumbing of Seattle: I didn't knew nobody.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Manuel Rios, a Mr. Rooter trainee, used to work on electric motors for $18 an
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hour, with little prospect of making much more. But, by chance, he met some plumbers
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there.
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MANUEL RIOS: They say that they make a lot of money. And I realized that the plumbing
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is never going to end, because you are always going to need a plumber. So the business is
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always going to be there.
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PAUL SOLMAN: The final barrier to entry in the trades is a familiar one, says electrician
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LaMorte.
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BRIAN LAMORTE: There is a certain feeling that it's kind of like a white man's game,
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I hate to say it. So, people who are LGBTQ., minorities are a little bit intimidated by
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the boys club that exists.
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PAUL SOLMAN: And, of course, women.
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Added together, that's about two-thirds of the country. In the late 1970s, Adrienne Bennett
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was recruited as a union plumbing apprentice under a federal program targeting women. Similar
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programs exist today.
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ADRIENNE BENNETT: This is something that will keep food on the table. It will keep clothes
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on your back. It will keep a roof over your head. I'm living proof.
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PAUL SOLMAN: Living proof, as CEO of her own industrial contracting plumbing business since
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2008.
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For the "PBS NewsHour," Paul Solman.