Miami, Fla. –
Building construction is chugging along in the Miami area in 2014, rebounding at last from the rock-bottom of
the Great Recession. Miami's skyline is rising again, like at Related Group's
Icon Bay, which, when completed next summer, will be a 43-story condo tower on
Biscayne Bay, with commanding views of the manatees and dolphins swimming in
the water below.
Construction and development are major economic indicators,
and in Miami-Dade County, Florida, more than 100 high-rise crane permit
requests are pending.
But there's a critical concern: The entire nation is
experiencing a skilled labor shortage.
From window installers to plasterers to electricians and
duct workers, each position within the construction industry is difficult to
fill now.
The Associated General Contractors of America recently
surveyed general contractors around country and two-thirds expressed a sincere
worry that they won't find the people they need to fill all the jobs.
"The irony is, the places that were hardest hit during
the construction downturn – cities like Miami, Phoenix, Las Vegas, parts of the
central valley of California," said Brian Turnmail of the AGCA, "are
the exact same areas that, now that they're growing again, are having the
hardest time finding skilled workers."
What's needed, he believes, to keep this economic rebound
positive, is a national re-emphasizing of the value of trade and vocational
schools.
The nation lost 2 million construction jobs during the Great
Recession, with Florida taking the biggest hit. The construction jobs dried up
back in 2008 and 2009, and many of those workers moved into the energy sector,
with a lot of the older ones retiring early. Many of those jobs have returned,
but nowhere near the levels it was during the boom years.
Even so, the sense in Miami among developers is that, with
plenty of construction jobs already underway and with plenty of new projects in
the pipeline, this will be the best year in a long time. As long as enough
skilled labor is available.
Carlos Rosso of the Related Group only fears that shortage
if mad-dash developers start overdeveloping, as they did in the years leading
up to the recession.
"I think we are in a more mature cycle," he said.
"There's less construction, but at the same time there's more than there
was two years ago. There's less construction then in the peak of the boom,
which makes us believe this is going to be a longer cycle."
Source: Fox
News
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