SVreX said:In reply to pheller :
For the record, EVERYONE is threatened in construction. It’s dangerous.
My older daughter has been on construction sites for over 20 years. Yes, she got cat-calls, and stares. She also learned how to handle it.
When I mean threatened, I mean the ability to speak ones mind, ask critical questions ("uh should that be like that"?) and being a woman alone on a job site with man who has made cat calls at her in the past.
You're essentially proving my point - the trades, some trades (or other male dominated industries), in some instances, can be a toxic environment for young people. It's very difficult to tell a young person "you should join a trade" and then tell them "you should just ignore those guys making cat-calls and saying sexist things to you" when that young woman starts eyeing college as an alternative. I firmly believe that yes, some people manage to get in with a group of professionals and largely avoid those bad environments. The bad environments do exists, and when some young people get into this situations, it immediately turns them off to that field.
I worked with a family that installed accessibility equipment. We installed lifts, elevators, decks, concrete, etc. It was a great environment, ran and staffed by people who were flexible, respectful, and caring of their employees.
That was after a few years of working on two terrible, condescending, insulting, and unsafe residential construction job sites, an two auto shops where everybody seemed to hate their lives except the dude who had an $80k day job in IT working for the state. He loved being a mechanic on the weekends.
By the time I was working doing in-home accessibility, I finally realized that "man, if young people worked for this family, more people would go into the trades." All those other experiences had already turned me off to them.
When I was 18-23, I didn't understand "how to identify good work environments" or "how to find a good apprenticeship" because I just needed money for college, because college was the only thing on my mind.
I mean, maybe we, as "older generations of workers" need to be better tutors and leaders to young people in the workplace. Maybe thats how you get more young people in the trades.