NEW YORK – Janice Moreno graduated from college with a
degree in English literature, but never landed a job paying more than $12 an
hour. Now, at 36, she's back in the classroom – in safety glasses and a T-shirt
– learning how to be a carpenter.
"I anticipate a lot of hard work," she said amid
instruction in sawing techniques. "I believe it's going to pay off."
If Moreno's six-week training program in New York City leads
to a full-time job, she'll have bucked long odds. On this Labor Day weekend,
ponder the latest federal data: About 7.1 million Americans were employed in
construction-related occupations last year – and only 2.6 percent were women.
That percentage has scarcely budged since the 1970s, while
women have made gains since then in many other fields. Even in firefighting –
where they historically were unwelcome – women comprise a greater share of the
workforce at 3.5 percent.
Why the low numbers, in an industry abounding with
high-paying jobs that don't require a college degree? Reasons include a dearth
of recruitment efforts aimed at women and hard-to-quash stereotypes that
construction work doesn't suit them.
Another factor, according to a recent report by the National
Women's Law Center, is pervasive denigration and sexual harassment of women at
work sites.
"It's not surprising that the construction trades are
sometimes called 'the industry that time forgot,'" said Fatima Goss
Graves, the center's vice president for education and employment. "It's
time for this industry to enter the modern era – to expand apprenticeships and
training opportunities for women, hire qualified female workers and enforce a
zero tolerance policy against sexual harassment."
Efforts to accomplish those goals are more advanced in New
York than in many parts of the country, with pledges by unions, employers and
city officials to boost women's share of construction jobs. One key player is
Nontraditional Employment for Women, a nonprofit which for three decades has
been offering training programs such as the one taken by Janice Moreno.
Known as NEW, the organization has arrangements with several
unions to take women directly into their multiyear apprenticeships – at a
starting wage of around $17, plus benefits – once they complete the training.
After four or five years, they can attain journeyman status, with hourly pay of
$40 or more.
Kathleen Culhane, NEW's interim president, said more than
1,000 graduates of the program have obtained apprenticeships since 2005, and
women now comprise 12 to 15 percent of the apprentices with leading laborers'
and carpenters' unions in the city.
Thanks to support from foundations, employers and government
contracts, NEW covers all costs for the women taking its programs, including
transit fares to and from the headquarters in Manhattan. Students must have
high school or GED diplomas and be able to carry 50-pound loads.
On a recent class day, Moreno and about 20 other students
were learning carpentry techniques from 67-year-old Howie Rotz, who's been
teaching since retiring eight years ago from a carpentry career.
"Women have a good work ethic," he said.
"They're very serious."
Another instructor, Kathleen Klohe, worked as a roofer and a
unionized carpenter before joining NEW after the recession hit in 2008.
"Did I come across sex discrimination? Once or
twice," she said. "A few times, I got the sense that I was not
wanted, but I kept on. I knew what I was doing."
She encourages her students' interest in construction, while
advising that it requires "a certain mental strength."
Beyond learning job skills, NEW students do role-playing to
get ready for challenges in dealing with future co-workers. Among the topics,
Moreno said, is how to distinguish between flagrant sexual harassment that
should be reported, as opposed to less egregious behavior that perhaps should
be endured.
"They want us to be prepared for the possibility we won't
be liked, or we'll be the only woman on the job," Moreno said. "If
you complain too quickly, your job can be at risk."
One of NEW's union partners is Laborers Local 79. Its
business manager, Mike Prohaska, said the local had about 220 women at last count
– 3.1 percent of the roughly 7,000 active members. Of its current apprentices,
about 12 percent are women.
"The women by and large are very well accepted,"
Prohaska said. "To survive, they have to toe the line... As long as
they're real workers, nobody minds having them."
If young women considering a construction career are in
search of a role model, Holley Thomas might fit the bill.
She took up welding at a community college in Alabama,
landed a job in 2009 with construction giant KBR Inc., and in 2010 became the
first woman to take first place in welding at the Associated Builders and
Contractors' National Craft Championships – a competition dating back to 1987.
Thomas, now 29, has worked her way up to foreman and is
supervising a 10-worker welding crew at a KBR project in West Palm Beach,
Florida. She speaks occasionally to high school girls, who are impressed by her
paycheck that averages more than $2,000 a week and what she calls "my
toys" – a Harley-Davidson, a Mustang and a Jeep Wrangler.
Thomas knows that harassment exists within the construction
industry, but says she's experienced none of it at KBR. She's impressed by the
efforts of some companies to recruit more women and minorities, though the pace
of change is slower than she'd like.
"The biggest issue is getting through to the parents of
the kids, the counselors at the schools and making clear that construction is a
viable career," she said.
From an older generation, Mary Battle also has succeeded
with a construction career, although she says it required unwavering
tough-mindedness.
Now 50, Battle has been working in cement masonry for 30
years and in 2012 became the first woman elected as business manager of
Plasterers and Cement Masons Local 891 in Washington, D.C. Under her
leadership, the number of women in the local has risen from five to 12, but she
doesn't believe that most construction unions nationwide are committed to
boosting the ranks of women.
"Men don't perceive of women as someone coming to work,
they perceive of women as a sex object," Battle said. "I set rules from
the beginning: 'Don't touch me.' You have to be prepared to set a man in his
place."
For younger women considering a construction career, Battle
tells them: "The job is not physically hard, it's mentally hard."
"No matter how much negativity you get, keep on the job
and don't quit – that's my motto," she said.
Battle, a mother of six, credits a devoted baby-sitter with
helping her cope with the long hours she sometimes faced as a mason. Many
construction jobs start in early morning, and it can be crucial for mothers in
the workforce – especially single moms – to arrange for early-morning child
care. Mothers can also find it difficult to accept temporary jobs requiring
lengthy travel from their homes.
Another challenge, for women who complete apprenticeships,
is to get assigned their fair share of working hours. It's a problem severe
enough drive some women out of the field, according to Elly Spicer, who worked
for 11 years as a carpenter and now is director of training at a technical
college affiliated with New York City carpenters unions.
"You'll find, unquestionably, that women get access to
less hours than men, even though they get same wages and benefits," said
Spicer 57. "You can't do this working six months of the year."
Spicer said she was mostly treated with respect during her
carpentry career in the 1980s and '90s, but she knew of other women who quit
because of constant pressure to prove themselves.
"Every crew was different," she said. "You
could have an enlightened foreman, while another might be patronizing. You
still find that variation today – good old sexism still rears its ugly head
sometimes."
At the highest level, the management side of the
construction industry insists it would welcome more women.
"Most of our members are desperate to hire
people," said Brian Turmail, public affairs director for the Associated
General Contractors of America. "They're looking for any candidate who's
qualified to come and join the team – women, minorities, veterans."
Turmail suggested that most women aren't tempted by
construction careers, while those who are interested might be hampered by a
nationwide cutback in school-based vocational programs.
"It's not a question of folks not wanting women – it's
women not wanting to work in construction," he said. "We would love
to see the numbers change. It's the right thing to do and we really need the
people."
Turmail's association, and many of its chapters across the
country, are undertaking educational campaigns and recruiting programs aimed at
diversifying the construction workforce. Similar initiatives are being pushed
by the National Center for Construction Education and Research, which assists
employers with workforce development programs.
Jennifer Wilkerson, the center's marketing director, said
the best recruiters of women are other women who've already succeeded in the
field. They can speak in detail about the many construction specialties – such
as welding and crane-operating – that women can master.
"A lot of times, we think of heavy lifting – the labor
side of it – but that doesn't represent the full spectrum of jobs," said
Wilkerson. "Once women know there's a place for them, and something they
really can do well, they love it."
The Department of Labor is stepping up its involvement with
plans to award $100 million in grants this year for apprenticeship programs
that expand opportunities for women and minorities. Some of the grants
targeting women call for providing child-care assistance when needed.
"The reality is that the face of apprenticeship in the
construction industry has been white male," Labor Secretary Thomas Perez
said in an interview. "We're working to ensure the future reflects the
face of America."
A crucial step, Perez said, is to raise awareness about the
dearth of women in construction, and to highlight the successes of the
relatively small number of women who've thrived in the sector.
"Women are good at this," he said. "They've
punched a ticket to the middle class and speak with great pride of the barriers
they've overcome. They are the pioneers, and they want the cavalry to
come."
Among those impatient with the slow pace of change is Susan
Eisenberg, a resident artist/scholar at Brandeis University who worked as a
construction industry electrician for 15 years, starting in 1978. She published
an acclaimed book in 1998, titled "We'll Call You If We Need You,"
based on her interviews with other women in construction.
Eisenberg has argued that women's share of the construction
workforce should be far higher than it is – perhaps 25 percent instead of 2.6
percent.
"It's out of step with so much of what's going
on," she said. "Women are now much more physically fit than my
generation. They're 15 percent of the military."
Eisenberg suggests that both management and unions should be
trying harder to recruit women. And she says government agencies could improve
the situation with tougher enforcement of anti-discrimination policies.
"People who think they will be held accountable will
change," she said.
Under current conditions, she says, women may be accepted as
apprentices, but then cut short their careers because of discrimination.
"We've moved from a closed door to a revolving door,"
Eisenberg said.
In the recent National Women's Law Center report, New Yorker
Patricia Valoy, who studied construction management and engineering at Columbia
University, described sustained harassment that she encountered during a
construction apprenticeship.
"Men would stop their work to stare and wolf
whistle," Valoy recounted. "On a few occasions I got called a 'bitch'
for refusing to reply to inappropriate remarks... I worked on the site for a
year until the stress of constantly being harassed, belittled and intimidated
was not worth the effort."
The Labor Department is well aware of the harassment
problem, and its Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs has pledged to
crack down on federal contractors who fail to prevent serious abuses.
"Ending blatant discrimination that excludes women from
working in construction and increasing their representation in the industry is
long overdue," wrote Donna Lenhoff, the compliance office's senior civil
rights adviser, in a blog post.
In one case this year, the office determined that three
female carpenters with a Puerto Rico construction company were sexually
harassed, subjected to retaliation, and denied work hours comparable to those
of their male counterparts. At times, the company failed to provide the women
with a restroom, and they had to relieve themselves outdoors, the office said.
Under a conciliation agreement, the company agreed to pay
$40,000 to the three workers and develop anti-harassment policies.
In another recent case, involving L&M Construction of
Capitol Heights, Maryland, federal investigators found pervasive sexual
harassment, including lewd acts, sexual gestures, and propositions directed at
female employees. The federal office said the company unlawfully fired nine
employees, including several men, for opposing the hostile work environment at
sites in the Washington, D.C., area. The company agreed to pay back wages to
the fired workers and pay for an assessment of its employment and
anti-harassment policies.
Statistically, it appears that progress is being made.
Construction consistently rates among the top 10 employment sectors with the
most sexual-harassment allegations filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission, but the numbers have declined in recent years – from 416 in 1999 to
132 in 2012.
"I love my trade very much. I love watching nothing
become something," union leader Mary Battle told the National Women's Law
Center. "They'll harass and belittle you... But we must stick with it, or
else things won't ever get better for women on the job."
Source: Northwest
Herald
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