Diadon Enterprises © 2018

How wishing wells and dog houses showcase carpentry skills | Dump Trucks Charlotte NC

Four volunteers surround a dog on the porch of its doghouse.
One of the doghouses from Pittsburgh's EASRCC competition ended up as an art piece at the Humane Animal Rescue of Pittsburgh. Permission granted by Humane Animal Rescue of Pittsburgh

The construction industry faces a stark shortage of workers, but programs and people across the country are working at the local level to solve the problem. Help Wanted highlights grassroots efforts to recruit the next generation of construction pros.

Do you know of a group that is helping attract workers to the construction industry? Let us know.

In 2014, while riding It’s a Small World at Walt Disney World, Priscilla Torres, then 24, had a revelation.

“I was like, ‘Someday I want to be a Disney carpenter.’ Like, that’d be awesome,” she told Construction Dive.

That’s become Torres’ ultimate, long-term goal: to translate the skills she's learned in commercial construction since that trip to Magic Kingdom into a scenic carpentry career, building creative sets or backdrops.

A carpenter in a red shirt adjusts a letter inside of a curtained off booth.
Priscilla Torres competes at the Philadelphia carpenters expo and showcase in the interior category.
Permission granted by EASRCC
 

George McDonnell served in the U.S. Army for 22 years, where he liked to columbus oh dump truck company with his hands. A friend of his turned him on to a job in the trades, where he has a more traditional view of his career path.

“I think I see myself as working with the foreman and so forth up the ladder,” McDonnell told Construction Dive.

Both recently finished their four-year Registered Apprenticeship Program with the Eastern Atlantic States Regional Council of Carpenters. In May they competed in a public skills expo and open house, Torres in Philadelphia and McDonnell in Pittsburgh. 

A showcase or a competition?

“I'll be honest, we like the word ‘competition,’” said Bob Landy, training director of the Philadelphia chapter. “One of the things that we try to teach our students to do is to compete. They need to compete, they need to compete with themselves. They need to compete against each other.”

This year marked the 55th annual showcase in Philadelphia, and getting in was no cakewalk. The top six general carpenters, interior carpenters (Torres' specialty), floor layers, mill cabinet makers and millwrights competed this year. 

They had to pass a comprehensive math test to earn a spot. But even a passing grade didn’t ensure entry — they needed one of the highest scores, said Landy, a 34-year carpenter whose father and uncles also worked in the trades.

In Philadelphia, the general carpenters went up against one another to build the best wishing well. 

In Pittsburgh? EASRCC presented the competing general carpenters with a design from the winner of an architectural contest: a doghouse.

The union then shared the doghouses with local humane societies, according to Rich Paganie, training director in Pittsburgh. 

One of the doghouses went to Humane Animal Rescue of Pittsburgh, where a local youth program painted it to display as an art piece at one of its shelters. 

While Torres and McDonnell didn't take home the cash prize ($500 for each category in Pittsburgh and prizes and cash ranging from $100-$350 in Philadelphia), they pushed themselves during the competition. 

McDonnell said the many aspects of the doghouse made it a tough build in the time period.

“What dog doesn’t need a front porch?” McDonnell said.

Employees at a animal rescue in Pittsburgh remove a large doghouse from the bed of a pickup truck.
“What dog doesn’t need a front porch?”
Permission granted by Humane Animal Rescue of Pittsburgh
 

Torres said she felt “proud” to be the only woman competing that year, and wanted to show people that anyone could give carpentry a try.

“I think I did really well, I did not win, but supposedly I lost by two points to the guy who did,” she said.

Paganie, the instructor, competed in the first Pittsburgh competition over 20 years ago, and says he’s still upset he didn’t win.

“It's 20 years later and still it's like, I want another shot at it,” he said.

Recruiting with an audience

The showcase and expo, by definition, didn’t serve just as a competition. The audience for the showcase largely includes family members of competitors, but Landy said in years past, as many as 20,000 viewers and potential future students have passed through to view the expo.

In addition, the union has gone to classrooms to show students how the trades provide a viable career path, especially for those who don’t fit into the university mold. More recently, EASRCC has tried to get in front of not just high school seniors, but freshman, sophomores and middle schoolers as well.

“I love when parents come because they're the ones in the background, kind of, you know, listening harder and knowing the value of it more than the children do,” Landy said.

Torres, who briefly attended college, thinks the trades as an option should be showcased more in high school.

“I do wish that I would have maybe known about the opportunity,” she said. “I basically had no idea it existed until four years ago.”

Construction Dive news delivered to your inbox

Get the free daily newsletter read by industry experts

  • view sample
  • view sample

Editors' picks

  • Image attribution tooltip
    D. Lentz via Getty Images

    The top 10 residential builders of 2022

    Dallas, Texas-based D.R. Horton remains at the top of the list for the 20th year in a row with 81,981 homes closed last year.

    By Mary Salmonsen • May 16, 2022
  • Construction workers columbus oh dump truck company on an infrastructure project.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Construction workers columbus oh dump truck company on an infrastructure project. via Getty Images

    Rising labor costs eat away at construction firms' profits

    Contractors are paying more for low-skilled workers but aren’t benefiting from increased productivity, economists say.

    By Joe Bousquin • June 23, 2022

Keep up with the story. Subscribe to the Construction Dive free daily newsletter

  • view sample
  • view sample

Keep up with the story. Subscribe to the Construction Dive free daily newsletter

  • view sample
  • view sample