Severe Shortage Of Skilled Trades Has Ripple Effect Across Housing Industry

A lack of available housing inventory, and land on which to build, is exacerbated by a massive shortage of laborers and skilled tradesmen to build the houses.

West Virginians have struggled to find affordable housing for years. The pandemic made things worse as a surge in home sales left builders unprepared. A lack of available housing inventory, and land on which to build, is exacerbated by a severe shortage of laborers and skilled tradesmen to build the houses. 

The shortage of available housing is affecting a disproportionate number of lower income families across the state. But the solution isn’t as simple as building more houses or offering tax incentives for builders. 

Ed Brady, CEO of the Home Builders Institute – a national nonprofit provider of trade skills training and education for the building industry – said the imbalance of supply and demand has created a confluence of events that are contributing to the problem.

“The need is at crisis levels, we don’t have skilled labor to build the housing, or infrastructure that we need in this country,” Brady said.

Economic Downturn

During the Great Recession, the residential construction industry lost an estimated 1.5 million jobs. Thousands of home builders went out of business. The road to recovery has been a long one. With fewer workers, rising lumber costs and a limited inventory of raw materials, last year took an average of 8 months to build a single-family home. That is the longest since the Census Bureau began collecting data in 1971. 

The Home Builders Institute actively recruits people in the skilled trades through on the job training and no cost pre-apprenticeship training and certification programs. Brady said their partnership with the Home Depot Foundation helps provide programs across the country that began as an outreach to help transitioning military families.

“Now they’re helping us get into high schools,” Brady said. “They’re helping us with organizations like 100 Black Men of America, they’re helping us create academies throughout the country. We need to get industry invested in this movement to get more skilled labor. The opportunity for young people, underserved people is there; we just need the funding to help them find a career path like the rest of the country has.”

The Home Builders Association of West Virginia has six local associations. They include North Central West Virginia Home Builders Association, Southern West Virginia Home Builders Association, Greater Charleston Home Builders Association, Eastern Panhandle Home Builders Association, Northern Panhandle Home Builders Association and the Mid-Ohio Valley Home Builders Association.

The association’s president Aaron Dickerson said that the severe labor shortage in skilled residential construction is worse in the state’s rural areas.

“Housing affordability and affordable housing kind of goes hand in hand,” Dickerson said. “And with that, the labor shortage of creating those homes, we’re really trying to draw the manufacturers, the businesses into state but the rural areas where the companies are trying to come to – it is difficult in finding the construction companies and the labor to provide the affordable housing for the individuals who are going to work on those projects and eventually form the skilled labor for those companies.”

Aging Workforce 

In 2022, nearly a quarter of skilled tradesmen were 55 or older. For every three tradesmen that retire, there’s just one trained worker waiting to take their position.

“That generation was heavy into the skilled trades and they’re all leaving the workforce, whereas my generation, when I was coming up through school, if you didn’t plan on going to college then you were doing the wrong thing,” Dickerson said. “So you’ve got two generations there that have left the workforce, and it’s created this huge void we are now trying to fill.”

It’s estimated the U.S. won’t catch up with demand until 2050. By 2030, almost 80 million skilled tradesmen will have retired.

Apprenticeships are increasing as manufacturers and other companies associated with the trades partner with organizations like the Home Builders Institute to provide students with the skills, experience and job placement while addressing the industry’s labor shortage.

Dickerson said part of the problem is the stigma surrounding manual labor and the emphasis today to earn a college degree.

“We’re trying to get rid of that stigma of walking down the street and parents saying, ‘Well look at that street sweeper, you don’t want to be that person, or look at that plumber, you don’t want to do that,'” Dickerson said. “That stigma of getting your hands dirty isn’t necessarily a bad thing. It’s the old adage that dirty money is a clean money type situation – that you can make a good living wage, and not put yourself in a ton of debt.”

The Home Builders Association of West Virginia works with tech schools in Marion and Monongalia counties. They also collaborate with the Wood County Vocational Technical Center in Parkersburg. A student chapter through the Mid Ohio Valley Home Builders Association is focused on introducing more young people into the profession.

“Because those students are coming out – that’s the next generation of our workforce – so the more we can be involved with them during the training program, the more we can ensure they are trained in the way we would like to hire somebody.”

He said national efforts to fill jobs are better funded, but they try to do as much as they can on a local level to make the profession more attractive. 

Viable Wage

“In the future, your skilled trades are going to be some of your higher paying jobs because less and less people want to do it and that skill just isn’t there like it was handed down generation to generation in the past,” he said. “And that’s where getting rid of that stigma of getting your hands dirty is so important – to let these kids understand that you can go out, get your hands dirty and still provide for your family.”

The average salary for entry-level sheet metal workers in West Virginia is $56,000. The hourly rate for the men and women who choose to become electricians is $27+ an hour. Carpenters can make up to $31 an hour and up to $64,000 annually.

Kent Pauley, state representative to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB), is a seasoned tradesman and contractor. He said the good news is that today’s skilled laborers are entering the profession at a time of increased job security and better work conditions.

“When I was coming up in the early ’70s, it was very difficult to make a good living, I mean the pay scale,” Pauley said. “I tell the story if I was fired there’d be five people behind me wanting that job. Well, that’s not the case today. We have to pay better, do a better job of taking care of our employees, there’s better insight for job safety than what it used to be.”

Immigration

The residential construction industry has historically relied on immigrants who make up 30 percent of all positions. This includes Hispanics and people from eastern Europe trained in skills like carpentry, painting, drywall, tile installation, brick masonry and others. 

But with tougher immigration policies, this readily available workforce has shrunk.

“With an immigration policy that restricts the flow of those that are willing to do jobs that sometimes are hard to fill, it causes just another headwind to provide the skilled labor in order to build the housing we need in this country,” Brady said. “Without a good immigration policy, which provides legal free flowing skill to come into the country, we’re going to continue to go in the wrong direction in providing that skilled labor.”

Brady said the industry needs to embrace change.

“We have a huge opportunity to diversify this industry,” Brady said. “It’s traditionally been, quite frankly, white male dominated. You add in the immigrant population, we need to market to women, to people of color and we need to diversify this industry in order to populate the skills that we need.”

According to the Home Builders Institute, 723,000 more jobs per year are needed to keep up with demand. That translates to the need for builders to bring on 30 times more new hires than the current pace. 

Brady stressed the answer lies in opening the skilled trades to a broader and younger workforce.

The reason it’s so important to get young people into the industry is we’ve lost a generation or two of giving people the opportunity to explore the industry,” Brady said. “A degree was a mandate out of the high school system. And that hasn’t panned out to be all that productive.”

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This story is part of the series, “Help Wanted: Understanding West Virginia’s Labor Force.”

Project Remodels Homes For Health

A $1 million grant provided by UniCare helped establish a program aimed at improving the livability and conditions of five homes throughout West Virginia.

The Livable Housing Project’s goal is to remodel and fix substandard housing that often affects minority households.

The project was established through a collaboration between Unicare Health Plan of West Virginia and the Marshall University Minority Health Institute in October 2021. 

A $1 million community grant provided by UniCare helped establish the program aimed at improving the livability and conditions of this home and four others chosen throughout the state of West Virginia.

Organizers partnered with a development group called LIFE Seeds to identify a home in disrepair in Cabell County for the first project.

“And so they went out, they did walk through the community, and they went through the local churches, local community centers, and people can apply for this project that they developed,” said LaDawna Walker Dean, minority health coordinator for the West Virginia Minority Health Initiative. “They made every decision and effort that they did with pursuing the community housing, and so their main focus was to pick a house that we can afford to not totally remodel, but to fix up.”

The project helps families with issues like mold and other concerns that arise when housing hasn’t been updated.

Dr. Anthony Woart is professor and chair of the Department of Public Health at Marshall University and founder and director of the Marshall University Minority Health Institute.

“Addressing social determinants of health is essential to addressing health disparities and health equity among minority and vulnerable populations,” Woart said. “I am therefore honored to have been a part of the Marshall University Minority Health Institute’s efforts in providing opportunities for livable housing among the minority and vulnerable populations of West Virginia as part of the institute’s mission and vision.”

After the unveiling of the first repaired and remodeled home, the project will focus on Kanawha, Mingo, McDowell and Logan counties.

“Our work has just started by helping minority families throughout West Virginia be able to have access to safe, affordable, good-quality housing that can positively impact a person’s health, well-being and overall community equity,” Walker said.

For more information visit the Marshall University Minority Health Institute.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and Marshall Health.

How Labor Shortages Affect Housing And Us & Them Takes Us To East Palestine, This West Virginia Morning   

On this West Virginia Morning, West Virginians have struggled to find affordable housing for years. The pandemic made things worse as demand increased. A lack of available housing inventory – or land on which to build – is exacerbated by a shortage of laborers and skilled tradesmen to build the houses.

On this West Virginia Morning, West Virginians have struggled to find affordable housing for years. The pandemic made things worse as demand increased. A lack of available housing inventory – or land on which to build – is exacerbated by a shortage of laborers and skilled tradesmen to build the houses.

Caroline MacGregor continues our radio series “Help Wanted: Understanding West Virginia’s Labor Force” with a look at how a shortage of workers is affecting the housing industry.

Also, in this show, workers continue to excavate contaminated material from the site of a train derailment earlier this year in East Palestine, Ohio. The accident just across the state border, sent toxic chemicals into the air, soil and water. Several government agencies are on the scene to coordinate the response.

In a new episode of Us & Them, host Trey Kay hears from residents who say they don’t know who to trust. Some worry about delays and misinformation while others think things are going as well as they can. We listen to an excerpt.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Concord University and Shepherd University.

Caroline MacGregor is our assistant news director and produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Project Rainbow Focuses On Housing Support For The LGBTQ Community

Housing can be a difficult issue for many, but especially for those in marginalized communities. A group in Morgantown is working to create Project Rainbow, a shelter and housing aid organization specifically for LGBTQ community members.

Housing can be a difficult issue for many, but especially for those in marginalized communities. A group in Morgantown is working to create Project Rainbow, a shelter and housing aid organization specifically for LGBTQ community members. Reporter Chris Schulz sat down with three of the project’s board members, Cassidy Thompson, Ash Orr and Erin Shelton to discuss the group’s objectives.

Schulz: Cassidy can you tell me in your own words about Project Rainbow?

Thompson: Project Rainbow is an initiative that we came up with, some of my coworkers and I, to empower and give safety and security to queer folks in West Virginia and Appalachia. The overall goal that we have right now is to open a safe haven shelter for LGBTQIA people to come and be safe while they navigate their housing journey. A lot of our folks that we work with in that community are met with intimidation and violence and threats, and we just want somewhere safe for them to be, somewhere where they’re accepted and loved. Hopefully it blossoms into a movement and something bigger. But this is just definitely an underserved community in West Virginia and Appalachia.

Schulz: Ash, tell me about the need for Project Rainbow and housing services in the LGBT community in West Virginia.

Orr: The reality is the queer community, especially trans individuals, face a lot of discrimination when it comes to housing and finding safe, affordable housing as well as navigating finding housing while being in shelters. Our typical shelters are not always safe environments for queer and trans individuals. 

What we are seeing right now happening in West Virginia, and in other rural Appalachian states is just blatant attacks on our rights to exist. Unfortunately, with these new anti-LGBTQ laws being introduced and passed, we are starting to see members of the queer community and trans community trying to figure out if they’re gonna be able to keep their jobs, if they’re going to be able to keep their housing, if they are going to have to try to find ways to keep themselves safe. If they have to leave their jobs or housing, they’re going to be unsheltered and or homeless. 

I think that with this project, we are able to act as a safety net for those individuals, while also making sure that they are being provided respect and resources. West Virginia is such a unique area because we have the highest amount of trans individuals per capita. These are individuals who are facing daily discrimination and hatred, who are just trying to find a safe place to rest their head at night. I’m really glad that we as an organization, who are not only queer individuals and allies, but also current and former unsheltered individuals, we have the experience, we have the networking capabilities, we have the resources to come together to fill in these gaps that are taking place here in our state.

Schulz: Erin, what are Project Rainbow’s objectives beyond emergency or temporary housing?

Shelton: As far as what we want to do beyond emergency shelter, I think peer and professional based advocacy and support is so important for anyone who’s unhoused but especially people in the LGBTQ community, because there is just so much blatant mistreatment and discrimination that goes on in any system but the housing system, that just goes totally unchecked. A lot of times when people are actively living in crisis, they just don’t have the resources to advocate for themselves. I think that we just see this already really, really difficult process become even more difficult when you add that layer of marginalization, and potential discrimination. 

We want to be the people who are able to provide that advocacy, who are able to provide that safe space, and who are able to just let folks know that they are valid, that they matter. We see a lot of younger, queer people who are unhoused, who have been kicked out by their families. We want to show people that does exist, you have a whole community of us behind you who support you. You deserve to have not just all your needs met, but you deserve to be able to survive and thrive.

Schulz: Ash, what is Project Rainbow trying to achieve immediately, in the next year?

Orr: Yes, so we are wanting to open our doors here in the next coming weeks to start serving our community. What that fundraiser is that Cassidy launched for us, is helping us get across that finish line, helping us to just get that last bit of funding in place so we can safely open the doors and know that we have a few months of support already set aside. 

Schulz: Erin?

Shelton: I think our most immediate objective, like Ash said, is to get people sheltered. I think any good housing organization takes that housing first framework where we want to get people sheltered, we want to get people housed and then we’re going to continue to follow up to make sure that they are getting the quality resources that they need when it comes to social services, health care and mental health care.

Schulz: Cassidy, anything to add?

Thompson: The immediate objectives are opening the shelter, as was stated, hiring staff and not just hiring anybody, but we hope to employ and empower people who are the demographic that we’re trying to serve. We have a couple of folks who are in the LGBTQ community who have been with us from the beginning, who both faced being unhoused and they are really interested in wanting to work on this project with us. We also want to immediately set up our mental health care services and hope to add housing program services in October when that grant funding becomes available.

——

Recently, Project Rainbow announced they will be opening their doors June 1.

Morgantown’s ‘Project Rainbow’ And New Book Explores Cancer Prevention On This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, housing can be a difficult issue for many but especially for those in marginalized communities. A group in Morgantown is working to create Project Rainbow, a shelter and housing aid organization specifically for LGBTQ community members.

On this West Virginia Morning, housing can be a difficult issue for many but especially for those in marginalized communities. A group in Morgantown is working to create Project Rainbow, a shelter and housing aid organization specifically for LGBTQ community members.

Reporter Chris Schulz sat down with three of the project’s board members, Cassidy Thompson, Ash Orr and Erin Shelton to discuss the group’s objectives.

Also, in this show, the Allegheny Front, based in Pittsburgh, is a public radio program that reports on environmental issues in the region. Here’s their latest story about a book that focuses on the people and techniques of cancer prevention.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Concord University and Shepherd University.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

National Survey Shows Concerning Mental Health Results In LGBTQ Youth

May is Mental Health Awareness Month and a recent nationwide survey of the LGBTQ community revealed concerning numbers. 

May is Mental Health Awareness Month and a recent nationwide survey of the LGBTQ community revealed concerning numbers. 

For the past five years, the Trevor Project’s annual survey on the Mental Health of LGBTQ Young People has asked LGBTQ youth, ages 13 to 24, from across the United States about their experiences in the past year. This year’s results from more than 28,000 respondents raise concerns about child and student mental health.

Of those surveyed, 41 percent seriously considered attempting suicide in the past year — and young people who are transgender, nonbinary, and/or people of color reported higher rates than their peers.

Jeneice Shaw, a licensed psychologist and assistance and training director at the Carruth Center for Counseling and Psychological Services at West Virginia University (WVU), said that LGBTQ youth are dealing with additional stressors from a young age.

“Often what you see is that queer students, or queer folks in general, have a lot of extra added stress, because their identities are politicized,” Shaw said. “Especially young queer folks have more to manage in a lot of ways, so they have higher levels of anxiety, higher levels of depression, higher levels of attempted suicide than the cisgender or heterosexual population.”

Shaw said one benefit she’s seen is that younger generations are more open to conversations about mental health, but stigma still persists. One of the survey’s findings was that even though 81 percent of respondents wanted mental health care, only 44 percent were able to access it. 

Shaw recognizes that many of the issues impacting LGBTQ people are systemic, and can’t be resolved in a therapy session. But the survey also found that small changes like living and going to school in gender-affirming environments significantly reduced the risk of suicide.  

“Broadly, respecting people’s wishes and decisions like having gender neutral bathrooms in schools and spaces that are easily accessible. Not politicizing the health care for trans and non-binary folks, which we see happening a lot,” Shaw said. “I just think there’s a lot of bigger societal pieces that are threatening the existence of trans and non-binary folks, of like, ‘You don’t exist,’ kind of thing, like, ‘This isn’t real.’ And that’s not true.” 

Ash Orr works as a press relations manager for a national LGBTQ nonprofit. Locally, he is a board member for Project Rainbow, an organization working to provide housing support for displaced LGBTQ members. He said that housing instability can exacerbate mental health issues.

“Here in West Virginia, we have the highest amount of trans individuals per capita of anywhere else in the country. And housing is already such a sensitive issue for the LGBTQ community, even if you take away the ongoing attacks that are happening to our community,” he said. “Housing is something that is stressful to navigate as a queer, trans person. You have to think about, ‘Is this landlord safe? Are the individuals that I may be neighbors to, are they safe? Will this be a place that I can come out to as being queer or trans while living here?’”

The Trevor Project’s survey found that less than half of LGBTQ youth — 40 percent — found their home to be LGBTQ-affirming. The survey also found that transgender people are much more likely to consider suicide. More than half of all trans men surveyed considered suicide in the past year, double the rate of cis men surveyed — cis meaning identifying with their assigned gender at birth.

“We do see a lot of younger individuals, especially now with everything going on in our state and in Appalachia, seeking housing assistance and discrimination assistance,” he said. “These issues are systemic, but they also intersect with one another, and that’s why we really do need a whole system overhaul when it comes to how we are looking at mental health access, mental health providers and services, as well as unsheltered services and resources.”

Megan Gandy, an associate professor and Behavioral Social Work program director at WVU, said that for things to improve for LGBTQ youth, it will take everyone working together.

“The thing that really struck me the most was just the fact that it takes a community for LGBTQ+ folks and kids to be well,” she said. “Legislation matters, school matters, families matter, faith communities matter. All of these things matter to make youth mental health better.” 

Gandy said she’s already seeing the impact of restrictive laws, such as House Bill 2007, which the West Virginia Legislature made law earlier this year and significantly limits access to gender-affirming care for anyone under the age of 18.

“I’ve seen literal families packing up and moving. It’s not just with kids, even though that law was for kids, it’s also with adults, because they’re fearful about coming out,” Gandy said. “They’re fearful about the repercussions that they might face. They’re also trying to plan for the inevitable with what next year’s legislation might cut, they might limit adult access to gender affirming care.” 

For the first time this year, The Trevor Project survey asked respondents to describe a world where all LGBTQ people are accepted. Key phrases that popped up repeatedly included things like, “people just exist,” and “basic human rights.”

Gandy said she does see a path forward for those who want to support LGBTQ children and youth.

“Youth need caring, supportive adults. It doesn’t matter if they’re heterosexual and cisgender or if they’re LGBTQ+, they just need caring and supportive adults and LGBTQ youth need adults to support them in their sexual orientation, their gender identity,” she said. “That’s something that is relatively easy to do for adults, but somehow they still find it difficult to do because of their own biases and their own belief systems that they haven’t updated with new information.” 

According to Gandy, there is a particularly easy action anyone can take to show their support of LGBTQ youth.

“One of the simplest ways that we can show that LGBTQ+ youth matter is visibility because it is, it can be an invisible minority status,” she said. “We can show visibility, visible support through rainbow flags, the pride progress flag, the trans flag — those really do actually mean a lot when kids see that and it just automatically communicates to them that you’re a safe person.”

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