Nevada now employs 60 percent fewer construction workers
than it did during the housing boom. Some found new careers. Others left the
country.
LAS VEGAS—The buzz and hammering of construction has
returned to this city, which was especially hard hit by the housing bust. The
construction workers, however, have not.
At the peak of the boom, Nevada employed 146,000
construction workers, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Now the state employs
only 63,000, a 59 percent decrease—and a two-decade low.
That’s led to some labor shortages, says Nat Hodgson, the
executive director of the Southern Nevada Home Builders Association. “The
actual skilled workers building the houses—it’s a challenge finding them,” he
told me. “It’s hard to entice them to come back until we can convince them
we’re really going to start growing again.”
It’s not just Nevada. Nationally, construction
employment is down 19 percent from its 2007 peak. The decline is
particularly stark in areas hard hit by the housing bust. In Arizona,
construction employment has fallen 50 percent from its pre-recession peak; in
California, employment has dropped 28 percent in the field. In Florida,
construction employment is down 40 percent.
Across the country, there are 1.4 million fewer people
employed in construction than there were in 2007, data shows.
But only 811,000 construction workers actually show up in unemployment-report
data. To be sure, there are differences in the way these two data sets are
collected that might account for some of the discrepancy, but it raises
an interesting question: What happened to all of the construction workers
felled during the housing bust?
James
J. Mikulich may provide one clue. His family has lived in Nevada for more than
a century, prospering in industries that built the region, such as logging and
transportation. He was in the tile and marble industry for 25 years, installing
floors and interiors in homes and hotels. Then in 2012 he blew out his hip and
had to have replacement surgery. While he was rehabilitating his leg, he had a
revelation.
“The
economy was downturning real bad, construction was at its lowest point in 30
years, and I said, I don’t want to enter back into that,” he told me.
One
morning, after waking up at 4 a.m. and doing his stretches, he had an idea. He
opened the Sunday careers section in the newspaper, called on a higher power,
and then closed his eyes and put his finger down on a random place on the page,
deciding that whatever career it suggested, he’d pursue.
His
finger landed on an ad for a massage-therapy program at a local career college.
“I
said, ‘What’s a better thing than to be able to help somebody out—help the
elderly, help the athletes, make a difference?’” he told me.
He
went down to the school, the Milan Institute, and got more information, then
started doing the pre-requisites that would allow him to enroll in the
eight-month, 720-hour course to become a licensed-massage therapist.
It
was tough transitioning back to being a student in his fifties, Mikulich said.
He was worried about his ability to learn new things such as anatomy and
kiniesiology, and feared that when he graduated school, he’d flunk the
certification test. But he continued to get up at 4 a.m., do his hip rehab, go
to school from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., and then go home and study.
Before
the certification test, he took over one room in the home he shares with his
elderly mother and told her he needed total silence to study for the month
before the test. And he passed. He now works as a massage therapist at Las
Vegas conventions, boxing competitions in town, at a beauty salon, and on a
freelance basis.
Mikulich,
who is now 54, was probably more easily able to transition careers than many
construction workers: He could go to school full-time because he'd saved up
some money and because his children were grown. Being a full-time student
allowed him to receive a Pell Grant that covered about one-third of the
$12,000 cost of the program. He also cashed in some retirement accounts to pay
for school.
For
most unemployed workers, getting together the resources to go back to school
can be extremely difficult, especially if they’re trying to support a family.
That’s because many construction workers—and others displaced by the
recession—spent their savings paying the bills while they were out of work. In one survey, only 15 percent of unemployed workers
said they had enrolled in training programs that would help them gain new
skills to find a new job.
And
only about 100,000 to 150,000 dislocated workers—people who have lost their job
and are unlikely to return to that occupation—receive retraining from federal
funding each year, according to Carl Van Horn, the director of the Heldrich
Center for Workforce Development.
“There’s
not a lot of government support for these programs,” he told me.
The
government spends $30 billion on Pell Grants, which don't have to be repaid,
but those are for full-time students. Mikulich told me that he felt lucky
he was able to get a Pell Grant because he didn’t have to work while going to
school.
“If
I had to work and do the program simultaneously, it might have been a problem,”
he said.
Most
unemployed workers can't use Pell Grants to go back to school if they want to
keep receiving unemployment benefits to help pay the bills. To qualify for
unemployment benefits, they have to prove that they’re actively looking for
another job, not going to school full-time.
There
are some federal funds available to dislocated workers, especially those put
out of work because of trade deals, said Andy Van Kleunen, the CEO of the
National Skills Coalition. Some of those funds go to advising workers about new
job options, and others actually pay for technical training or helping people
improve math and reading skills.
There's
about $1 billion available for training dislocated workers each year, he said.
On average, students can get about $3,000 through the program.
The
Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, passed
by Congress last year, is expected to expand some of these retraining programs.
The Ready-to-Work initiative, introduced by President
Obama in his 2014 State of the Union address, also expanded access to
apprenticeships in high-demand industries and seeks to make training programs
more job driven. Some nonprofit and union-led training initiatives have already
received grants through that program.
Still, there’s more need to make sure there are jobs for
people that go through retraining before students spend thousands of dollars on
a program that leads them nowhere.
“There are some really good, proven programs that work
out there,” Van Kleneun said. “But I would not say that they are the rule in
all circumstances.”
Many displaced workers don’t know there are potential
funds available to them.
Mike Farren, now 30, is spending between $15,000 and
$20,000 to transition to a career as a physical-therapist assistant. He had
worked at a steel factory in Indiana making structural eye beams for buildings
and bridges. He was compensated based on production, so when the economy
slowed, his pay rate slowed, too.
“As a career, it can be an unstable field to be in, and I
just kind of made up my mind that I didn’t want to have to worry about that,”
he told me. “When everything tanked in '08, it showed how quickly that job
could be gone.”
Farren started looking into programs that could help
retrain him in another field, and ended up moving to Las Vegas because a
program at the College of Southern Nevada was the least-expensive one he could
find, and because the cost of living in the state was so low. He is paying
out-of-pocket for the program, from his savings, and won’t make as much as he
did before once he’s completed the program. But it’s worth it to be in a
growing field, he said.
“It wasn’t all about money,” he said. “I made a lot back
there, I know I can live on a lot less than that.”
Many people who used to work in the construction field
have moved around a good bit since losing their jobs, sometimes to other states
where they could stay in the field. Mikulich told me he had friends in the
industry who had moved to New York, Pennsylvania, and Phoenix. While reporting
from North Dakota a few years ago, I ran into numerous men who had moved there
after losing their jobs in construction somewhere else.
Overall employment in North Dakota has grown by 30
percent since the recession began, and construction employment has doubled. One
labor-union coalition even banded together to recruit
construction workers to North Dakota. Construction employment in Texas is up 18
percent since 2010, and has nearly reached its pre-recession peak.
Some workers who had immigrated to the U.S. for work in
construction may also have returned to their home countries when the recession
hit. A report from the Pew Hispanic Center found that during the economic
slump, for the first time in four decades, more Mexican immigrants left the
U.S. than entered
it. And construction-heavy states including California, Arizona,
Colorado, and Nevada lost unauthorized-immigrant workers between 2009 and 2012,
according to a separate Pew report.
Latinos made up 24 percent
of the construction industry in 2011, and the industry was the sixth-largest
employer of Latinos, according to the National
Council of La Raza. Some of these declines could be the result of
laws such as SB 1070
in Arizona, which required police to question anyone they believed to be in the
country illegally.
Often, a worker’s fate would depend on whether he was
skilled or unskilled, said Cindy Creighton, the executive director of the
Nevada Subcontractors Association. Many unskilled workers would refer family
members or roommates to jobs, and then they all would be dramatically affected
during job cutbacks, Creighton said.
“When four, five, six people in a family lose work, they
had no choice but to leave the area, or change professions,” she said.
There is a certain irony, though, that so many people had
to leave construction, though, since the industry is now so short-handed. “Everybody’s
just screaming for labor—you can literally go door-to-door, fill out your
application, do your e-Verify, and go to work,” she said.
Whether that means people who left construction during
the recession should come back is up to them. James Mikulich says he still
drags his feet across tile floors, looking for uneven workmanship, and likes to
linger over marble.
“People are like, ‘Why are you touching that marble,
James?’” he said. “But I use that same formulation when I touch somebody—I
touch their leg and they say ‘I have pain or some dysfunction,’ and I say ‘How
can I help them, how can I make an impact on their life?’”
Still, for others, returning to construction might not be
a bad bet. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that occupations
in the healthcare and construction fields will be some of the fastest-growing
jobs between 2012 and 2022. Healthcare is expected to grow at a rate of 2.6
percent a year—construction will grow at the same rate. But though the
construction sector will add 1.6 million new jobs over that decade, economists
said, the industry still won't return to its 2006 peak level, even by 2022.
Source: The
Atlantic
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