Opinion: California must invest in workforce to meet housing goals (CA)

Construction workers are repelled by the sector’s physically demanding work and comparatively low pay

By SCOTT LITTLEHALE
PUBLISHED: April 14, 2019 at 6:10 am

Burdensome regulations and exclusionary zoning are not the only barriers to solving California’s persistent housing crisis.

Even under the rosiest of regulatory scenarios, California’s residential construction industry needs at least 200,000 new workers to produce enough new housing to improve affordability.

But it is struggling to compete for them. Industry leaders often claim it’s because “Young people don’t want to get their hands dirty;” “Parents are pushing college instead of vocational training;” or because “Schools have abandoned shop classes.”

Actually, research shows that the seeds for today’s housing construction labor shortage were planted by the homebuilding industry itself – more than three decades ago.

The last time California produced housing on a scale that state leaders say is needed to boost affordability today was the 1970s. During those years, residential and non-residential construction wage rates were equal. Builders routinely employed apprentices and made binding commitments – often through collective bargaining – to fund skilled trade apprenticeship programs.

During the 1980s, homebuilders refused to renew collective bargaining agreements and began replacing higher skilled crews with lower skilled workers. As land and regulatory costs grew, contractors relied on a strong supply of young men without a college degree and a growing pool of immigrant laborers to offset these burdens by working for less.

Construction labor productivity began to shrink alongside these shifts, but it has taken decades for annual deficits in housing supply to reach a crisis point. Today, we need to double our housing production just to tread water. To boost affordability, we need to produce even more. Either scenario demands more workers.

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Labor woes must be addressed to solve California’s housing crisis (CA)

Scott Littlehale, Guest Columnist
Published 3:47 p.m. PT – March 5, 2019

If you are concerned about California’s housing affordability crisis, remember these three numbers – 15, 33, and 200,000.

Fifteen is the percentage of total residential project costs consumed by construction labor. The other 85% is the stuff really driving up the cost of your homeland acquisition: Zoning, permitting, environmental compliance and related costs.

Thirty-three (percent) is how much less, on average, residential construction workers earn compared to construction workers who build our commercial facilities and public works.

Put in perspective: The last time California produced housing quantities similar to what Governor Newsom is calling for today – the 1970s – there was no wage gap between residential and non-residential construction work.

Two hundred thousand is the minimum number of new residential construction workers that California needs – under current levels of labor productivity – in order to build enough new housing units to keep our affordability crisis from getting worse.

Obviously, if you want to build more housing units, the last number is the most concerning. Construction is one of the nation’s most dangerous occupations. The industry’s jobs are amongst the most economically volatile – often the first to go during cyclical downturns and recession. Employers must be willing to offset these risks with higher compensation to attract new workers.

But most are not.

Recent research shows that the cost of living adjusted compensation for California construction workers ranks now 46th among US states. One in six construction workers faces some form of wage theft. Residential construction workers earn 24% less per year than other jobs on average, and more than half do not get health insurance at work.

Complicating matters for the housing industry is that there are no longer any shortcuts available to meet its labor force needs. The nation is near full employment, net immigration flows have been negative since 2005 and California’s population of young men without a college degree is shrinking.

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California needs 200K construction workers to help affordability (CA)

by Steve Randall
20 Jan 2019

The lack of housing supply has multiple factors including the cost of borrowing and materials; but a shortage of labor is also a major factor in many areas.

In California, the Housing and Community Development Department has said that the sector needs improved productivity to tackle housing affordability. But a new study says there is a key barrier to this – a workforce shortage.

Smart Cities Prevail, a construction industry-focused non-profit, says that the residential construction industry in California must do more to attract the 200,000 workers it needs to meet the ambitious goal to improve affordability.

“The data shows residential construction work is more dangerous, economically risky, and lower paying than most other jobs in our economy,” said study author Scott Littlehale. “When you consider these dynamics alongside the industry’s aging workforce, its failure to institutionalize investments in apprenticeship training, and a shrinking supply of young workers and immigrants, it is clear why the housing sector is struggling to attract the new workers it needs.”

Littlehale found residential construction workers earn 24% less per year than all other jobs on average, and less than half have health insurance coverage through their employer. This is exacerbated by a typically longer commute.

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