The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Some college-bound miss chance for big paychecks

- By Michael E. Kanell mkanell@ajc.com

Historical­ly, workers without a college education are not only paid less than those with degrees, but they also have a consistent­ly higher unemployme­nt rate. That is still true.

Yet if young people avoid modest-paying blue collar work, they can inadverten­tly choke off the pipeline that leads to high-paying management jobs.

Not having a degree doesn’t mean you can’t have a career and make a lot of money, said Chris Elliott, chief executive of Caliber 1 Constructi­on in Villa Rica, a general contractor doing business in about 40 states.

“The biggest challenge we are having is there is a kind of generation­al gap,” Elliott said. “For so many years, everybody is, ‘Go to college, go to college!’ It used to be that we’d have 18- and 19-year-old guys come out of high school wanting to learn constructi­on and now we don’t see them at all.”

The shortages began with the shortfall in skilled laborers like those who work with concrete, framing and dry wall, he said. Now, there are simply not enough experience­d management candidates younger than 40, he said.

“Between 20 and 40 we are missing out. We need guys in the field,” he said.

There are college programs aimed at supplying supervisor­s, including highly praised programs like that at Kennesaw State University, but it’s still not the same, he said. “There are a lot of project managers coming out, but they’ve never been in the field.”

It is not just a temporary

problem, he said: it raises doubts about the future as companies look to transi- tion control from retiring managers to the next generation. “Guys don’t come to us, do apprentice­ships, get experience, so we can train ’em up. Who is going to take this over someday?”

Ironically, he said, ambitious young people who fear the low-paying blue collar world are often choosing college, amassing debt and missing the chance to make a very comfortabl­e living, he said. “You don’t have to go to college to earn a $100,000 salary.” That’s not hyperbole, he

said: A foreman, someone with five-plus years of experience, can make $2,000 aweek.

“Even novices make $1,100 or $1,200 a week,” he said. “In five or six years you can be making $100,000 and there are no college loans to repay.”

 ??  ?? Chris Elliott, chief executive, Caliber 1 Constructi­on
Chris Elliott, chief executive, Caliber 1 Constructi­on

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States