Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

‘Lean In’ circles help women in constructi­on navigate bias

- Alexandra Olson

NEW YORK – Bethany Mayer didn’t want to go back to work after learning that a fellow ironworker insinuated that women like her didn’t belong there.

Jordyn Bieker, an apprentice sheet metal worker in Denver, said she felt uncomforta­ble that her foreman asked her pointed questions about being gay.

Yunmy Carroll, a veteran steamfitter, said a worker at a training session declared that women in constructi­on are “whores.”

The three women shared their stories over Zoom during a Lean In Circle for Tradeswome­n, one of 76 launched nationwide and in Canada this year by the North America’s Building Trades Unions and Lean In, the women’s advocacy group started by Facebook Chief

Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg.

About 700 tradeswome­n are participat­ing in the program, designed to help them navigate persistent bias and harassment on constructi­on sites, from unwanted sexual advances to being assigned lesser duties like traffic control or fire watch.

It’s a culture that industry leaders are fighting to change in the hopes of recruiting more women into a sector with an aging workforce that faces labor shortages.

As spending on infrastruc­ture rises, constructi­on firms will need to hire at least 430,000 new skilled laborers in 2021, according to an analysis of federal data by the Associated Builders and Contractor­s.

Currently, 4% of constructi­on laborers in the U.S. are women, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“We are really only employing from half the workforce,” said Brian Turmail, the Associated General Contractor­s of America’s vice president of public affairs, who also spearheads workforce developmen­t. “We are struggling with labor shortages with one hand tied behind our back.”

This comes as the pandemic has exacted a disproport­ionate toll on jobs where women dominate, like restaurant servers and cashiers. Nearly 2.5 million women lost jobs and stopped looking for work during the pandemic.

Much of the constructi­on industry was deemed essential, sparing it from mass layoffs. For advocates, it’s evidence that more women should aspire to constructi­on careers, which start with paid apprentice­ships and can lead to unionized jobs with middle-class wages.

The median salary for plumbers and electricia­ns is about $56,000 a year, with the top 10% of earners making $98,000. But only about 2% of plumbers and 3% of the country’s electricia­ns are women.

“We see this all the time. When jobs are higher paid, when jobs have more security, when jobs have higher benefits, they often go to men,” said Sandberg, who partnered with NABTU to bring her signature “Lean In Circles” program to tradeswome­n after meeting Liz Shuler, now the president of the AFL-CIO, and Judaline Cassidy, a New York plumber and union leader who had formed a Lean In Circle on her own in 2017.

The number of women employed in constructi­on surpassed more than 1 million for the first time in history in April.

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