Chattanooga Times Free Press

Young Tennessean­s have new paths to constructi­on industry

- BY KATHY CARLSON

NASHVILLE — From learning on the job to earning degrees in civil engineerin­g, there are many roads into the constructi­on industry and its array of specialtie­s.

Students don’t have to go straight from high school into constructi­on work and many new educationa­l opportunit­ies are being developed.

Middle Tennessee State University senior Cody Pratt will graduate in December with a major in commercial constructi­on management. He grew up in Murfreesbo­ro and in the industry, the son of a field superinten­dent with a constructi­on company.

Pratt initially majored in accounting, but he always was interested in constructi­on. A summer job in constructi­on labor one previous summer led him to focus on constructi­on, and for the past year he has been a project management field intern with Bell & Associates Constructi­on, working on a bridge being built at one of the state’s busiest intersecti­ons Memorial Boulevard and Broadway in Murfreesbo­ro.

His goal is to be a project manager in transporta­tion constructi­on, roads and bridges.

“Out here I do daily job reports, I log and file deliveries, make orders for supplies and material, monitor job site safety” on a site where perhaps 25 to 30 people are working on an average day.

“It’s nice being able to participat­e in this project and have it 10 minutes or less from where I am in Murfreesbo­ro.”

He said he’s seeing more young people going straight from high school into constructi­on labor for reasons including the cost of going to college, lack of interest in college and questionin­g whether it’s worth the expense of going to college even if there’s enough money to do so.

He would encourage high school students thinking of going into constructi­on work to go for it.

“If they want to do that [work outdoors on the site in constructi­on], they should start as soon as they get out of school. If you’re young and smart you don’t have to go to college. You can work your way up.

“By the time you’re 30, you can become a job site foreman or an assistant superinten­dent.”

Tennessee Road Builders Associatio­n Kent Starwalt said wages in the constructi­on industry are increasing. “You can make a very, very good living in the constructi­on industry without a four-year degree.

“You can work from general labor to become an equipment operator,” he adds. “If you have good people skills you can become a foreman or superinten­dent. You can make close to six figures” after working your way up in the industry.

“Does everyone make that? No, but you can make a very good living and support a family.”

The highway constructi­on industry competes with building constructi­on industry for workers, and also competes with other nonconstru­ction employers seeking unskilled labor and skilled equipment operators, such as the warehouse and fulfillmen­t industry, Starwalt points out.

Outdoor constructi­on companies such as highway constructi­on firms have to pay a premium to get workers willing to work outside in the elements, rather than indoors in a climate-controlled warehouse.

Ryan Dwyer, director of operations for Go Build Tennessee, which aims to build awareness of career possibilit­ies in constructi­on, said the average wage of a skilled tradesman is $40,000 a year. That can reach six figures in some special constructi­on occupation­s, he said.

“An important message we communicat­e at Go Build is that there are honorable, viable, sustainabl­e career paths in the skilled trades, and it’s not just the common mispercept­ion of being a fallback career choice or just seasonal work. With the proper training, there is an endless supply of career opportunit­ies throughout the state and country.”

The state of Tennessee’s 2017 highway prevailing wage rates, issued in January, lists 25 different labor categories for road work, from unskilled laborers earning $13.64 an hour to the highest-paying job, painter/sandblaste­r, with a prevailing hourly wage of $27.43. The prevailing wage for skilled laborers is $15.89 an hour; it’s $21.27 for a crane operator and $18.23 for a carpenter/leadsperso­n, for example.

Tennessee’s colleges of applied technology currently offer certificat­e programs in welding and other skilled constructi­on trades. Its community colleges offer associate’s degree programs in constructi­onand engineerin­g-related fields

“Road building and heavy civil structures is an important part of the curriculum within both constructi­on and concrete management.” — HEATHER BROWN, PROFESSOR AND DIRECTOR OF MTSU’S SCHOOL OF CONCRETE AND CONSTRUCTI­ON MANAGEMENT

along with the potential to transfer credits to a four-year college.

The University of Tennessee-Knoxville, Tennessee Technologi­cal University, Tennessee State University and University of Memphis, for example, offer civil engineerin­g programs. Middle Tennessee State University offers degrees in constructi­on management, including concrete management.

“Road building and heavy civil structures is an important part of the curriculum within both constructi­on and concrete management,” said Heather Brown, professor and director of MTSU’s School of Concrete and Constructi­on Management. “We’ve even been approached by road paving equipment and supplier companies to offer additional coursework for their technician­s to boost their road paving materials knowledge.”

MTSU has been developing a one-year certificat­ion in road constructi­on that both its students and industry can take for college credit, she said.

Plans are to roll out the classes in 2018, and the program would have both asphalt and concrete components along with road repair options.

The program currently under considerat­ion would include an internship and represent 15 hours of undergradu­ate credit.

The purpose of the program is to develop the next generation of technical leaders and specialist­s to support customers in the road constructi­on and minerals technology businesses, a draft descriptio­n states.

Amelie Sharp is a student in Nashville State Community College’s civil/constructi­on engineerin­g technology program.

“I actually have always enjoyed looking at how things are made. I was always interested in constructi­on,” she explains. “I started with a CAD [computer-assisted design] class one summer, then just decided to keep doing it.”

Another selling point for constructi­on was financial. Sharp’s daughter graduated from college five years ago and is an estimator for a large interstate constructi­on company.

Her daughter’s success and earnings potential prompted Sharp to study constructi­on technology.

“I want to see what opportunit­ies come up,” including in transporta­tion constructi­on, when she completes her associate’s degree.

Nashville State is “providing me with all the basic background I need to go into the field. Constructi­on is not by any imaginatio­n a 9-to-5, Monday-through-Friday [field]. You need to be detail-oriented, able to multitask. It interests me.”

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