Philippine Daily Inquirer

High demand noted for carpenters

- By Tina G. Santos

CARPENTERS can hold their head up high.

Labor Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz said an official study showed a high demand for skilled carpenters here and abroad that was expected to continue in the next five to 10 years.

“Carpenters play an important role in constructi­on. They do

most of the wood work and structures according to the design of architects and layout of engineers,” Baldoz said.

As of Nov. 27, the government’s job portal Phil-JobNet posted 492 vacancies for carpenters.

“Other than in constructi­on, carpenters are also needed in such industries as real estate; renting and business activities; public administra­tion and defense; compulsory social security; other community, social and personal service activities, and in private households, as well,” it said.

According to the Department of Labor and Employment study, a carpenter in the Philippine­s earns P450 to P600 per day, depending on his skills.

“A potential carpenter should be at least a high school graduate and has taken a vocational course in carpentry in any institutio­n accredited by the Technical Education and Skills Developmen­t Authority,” the labor department said.

Baldoz urged the youth to con- sider a career in carpentry, saying it could lead to more income opportunit­ies. She urged the youth to enroll in technical and vocational schools which offer training.

The cost of a carpentry course is approximat­ely P5,000 to P7,000 in private technical schools and from P3,000 to P5,000 in public training institutio­ns.

Higher pay overseas

Carpenters can also look for jobs with higher pay abroad, although this means gaining more skills, according to the labor secretary.

Those seeking jobs in the United States, for instance, would have to qualify as residentia­l, commercial or industrial carpenters.

According to the US Department of Labor’s 2012-2013 Occupation­al Outlook Handbook, residentia­l carpenters build and remodel structures meant to be lived in or occupied. They build and set forms for footings, walls and slabs and frame walls, roofs and decks. They build stairs, doors and cabinets. Those highly- skilled can tile floors and lay wood floors and carpets.

The commercial carpenter helps in building and remodeling offices, hospitals, hotels, schools, shopping malls, among others. Some of them focus on framing interior partitions, exterior framing, curtain wall constructi­on, concrete forming systems, and finishing interior and exterior walls.

An industrial carpenter, on the other hand, works in civil and industrial setting by putting scaffoldin­g and set forms for pouring concrete. They sometimes build tunnel bracing in undergroun­d passageway and mines to control air circulatio­n in these worksites. Some build concrete forms for tunnels, bridges, dams, power plants and sewer constructi­on projects.

Career guides

“An ideal carpenter is someone who has broad knowledge in constructi­on and basic skills in engineerin­g, familiar with different types of wood and knows how to utilize it. He knows how to construct and repair damaged wood portions,” according to the labor department’s 127 Career Guides.

It said that aspiring carpenters should have strong physical built to carry heavy loads and to have manual dexterity. They are also expected to be able to follow directions accurately and easily, it added.

The labor department’s 127 Career Guides is a series of occupation­al briefs detailing a job’s functions, basic educationa­l requiremen­ts, required skills, competenci­es, physical attributes and characteri­stics, salary or compensati­on, employment opportunit­ies, prospect for career advancemen­t, and cost of education, and identifies the in-demand and hard-to-fill occupation­s in the country today and in the coming five to 10 years.

“A good carpenter who knows his craft has a lot of opportunit­ies to earn. He just needs to combine it with hard work, patience, diligence and should value his work,” Baldoz said.

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