On-Site Construction Training Can Offer More Than a Paycheck

By Aileen Cho, Monster Contributing Writer

Looking for a well-paying construction job but don't have the skills to land one? Good news: Increased demand means that a number of organizations can help you get the training you need.

Why the Construction Industry Wants You

Demand is currently high for construction workers. Among the reasons for that demand is the economic stimulus that will help fund infrastructure projects nationwide.

"The shortage of labor is in the double digits in most areas for workers," says Steven Greene, vice president of the National Center for Construction Education and Research (NCCER). "We see this as a positive aspect in that wages and benefits keep growing for construction workers."

And demand is expected to remain strong. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that "job opportunities are expected to be good for those construction workers with the most experience and skill."

Get Trained and Certified

To attract and incentivize workers, many organizations are now sponsoring training programs.

The NCCER is one such organization. The not-for-profit education foundation was created to help address the critical workforce shortage facing the construction industry and to develop industry-driven standardized craft training programs with portable credentials. The foundation offers more than 500 training and assessment facilities. The sponsored courses mostly last two to four weeks. Sponsors include high schools, colleges, vocational schools, and contractors or owners on active construction sites. Each sponsor sets it own policy for paying fees, but in many cases, you can learn on the job while earning pay.

"Anyone can actually look for and identify [the] places closest to them," says Greene. "All sponsors are listed and many with detailed locations. It's almost like Mapquest."

Courses include, among others, safety, mathematics, recognition of standard tools, blueprint reading, communication skills and employability skills. Most sponsors require trainees to be drug-free. Certain training aspects cannot be performed until you are at least 16, but there's no upper age limit. "I've seen programs with 60-year-old individuals seeking a new career," says Greene.

Earn Your Way

One employer who benefited from the training programs offered through the NCCER was Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport. By the time the airport's $2.6 billion expansion program wrapped up in 2005, some 2,500 workers had attended local colleges for NCCER-accredited training in such specialty skills as surveying or electrical work. In an agreement with participating contracting firms, the Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport put 15 cents for every man-hour worked into the program, says R. Clay Paslay, former DFW executive vice president.

Bridging Worlds

A similar safety and job-training programs, run by the South Carolina Department of Transportation (SCDOT), enabled low-income residents of Charleston, South Carolina, to raise their standard of living. At the site of the new Cooper River Bridge, the SCDOT ran a two-pronged program. The first was a two-week program including CPR, interpersonal skills, reading and math, construction terminology and job interview skills. Once applicants completed that, they began a journeyman year of working in a specific trade. Horrace Tobin, program director, cites a single mother who has gone through the program and got off federally assisted living. "She wants to be a crane operator," he says.

The SCDOT also has established a transportation education institute that will offer 20 scholarships to inner-city children for local technical schools. Another program will offer college scholarships.

Opportunities Are Widespread -- for Women, Too

When there's a big public works project, finding out what special programs may be available is just a matter of calling the owner agency. Most have a community outreach office. Big projects usually have Web sites with contact information as well.

And in addition to NCCER, the Associated General Contractors of America offers scholarships to students for high-level construction jobs, as well as management and training for trade workers.

Some programs target women for entry-level skilled trades. Nontraditional Employment for Women (NEW) in New York City offers two training options: a six-week daytime program or an evening and weekend program, says Anne Rascon, NEW executive director. "It's completely free," she says. "We provide an introduction to the trades, physical fitness and a hands-on component in carpentry, electrical and painting."

NEW also offers access to real construction sites. "We have very strong relationships with union apprenticeship programs," says Rascon. "Women are placed in a range of trades where they begin working on building sites throughout the five boroughs."

Are there counterpart programs in other states? Yes. Rascon cites Chicago Women in Trades, Oregon Tradeswomen, Cleveland's Hard Hatted Women and California's Tradeswomen, to name a few.

Learn more about construction careers.