What’s good for workers is good for Wyoming’s economy

Bob Abbott
August 3, 2023

For project developers and construction contractors across Wyoming, opportunity is knocking.

At the federal level, the bi-partisan Infrastructure and Jobs Act, Inflation Reduction Act and Chips and Science Act are unleashing billions of dollars to support Wyoming energy, infrastructure, and advanced manufacturing.

Indeed, these investments are a big reason why the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics is projecting that between now and 2030 about 60% of new jobs in our nation’s economy won’t require a college degree. Many of them, in the skilled construction sector, will build and maintain these federally funded projects.

In short, the opportunities ahead cry out for investments that promote quality jobs and expanded career pathways into the skilled trades.

Yet for generations, Americans have told our kids that college — and the enormous student debt load that comes with it — was the preferred pathway to a middle-class life. State legislatures and courts alike mounted decades of attacks on workers’ rights, labor standards and the institutions that have long replenished our supply of skilled trade workers.

Wyoming has not been immune to these efforts — or their effects.

It is one of roughly two dozen states that have passed laws to weaken collective bargaining institutions. These so-called “right to work” laws are consistently linked to inferior job quality, safety and workforce development outcomes.

This summer, a new state law that restricts the use of pre-hire labor agreements on publicly funded construction projects went into effect — even though research finds these types of agreements lead to better economic and workforce outcomes.

Today, Wyoming has the highest per-capita rate of workplace fatalities in the nation, even as it faces a historically tight labor market.

The fact is that partnerships between employers and labor should not be perceived as a threat to the generational energy and broadband investments coming to Wyoming. They might just be key to their success.

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Study Finds Apprenticeships Are on the Rise in Minnesota (MN)

Overall participation in apprenticeships grew by 27 percent between 2014 and 2017. About 96 percent of those are in construction.

SEPTEMBER 16, 2019
AMANDA OSTUNI

Apprenticeships are becoming an increasingly popular way for Minnesotans to kickstart their careers.

A study by the Midwest Economic Policy Institute (MEPI) and Dr. Robert Bruno of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign found that participation in apprenticeships in Minnesota grew by 27 percent between 2014 and 2017, with 11,500 individuals enrolled in a program in 2017.

Apprenticeships are largely utilized as an alternative to college. MEPI policy director Frank Manzo says they have grown in popularity alongside the rising costs of college.

“An apprenticeship program offers the ability to earn while you learn,” Manzo says. “You go through roughly the same amount of classroom and on-the-job hours as you would through a bachelor’s degree program… but you’re getting paid to do it instead of accumulating debt.”

Citing data from policy research organization Mathematica, Manzo says apprenticeships provide an average annual earnings boost of $4,700-greater than most boosts provided by a bachelor’s or associate’s degree.

In addition to helping the individual, the MEPI study finds that apprenticeships serve as a significant boost to Minnesota’s economy.

“The data shows that every dollar spent on apprenticeship programs increases Minnesota’s GDP by $21,” says study researcher Robert Bruno, in a press release. “That makes apprenticeships one of the most effective investments we can make-not just in workers, but in the economy.”

The construction industry is at the heart of Minnesota’s apprenticeship participation. Even though construction accounts for just 11 percent of national occupations suited to apprenticeships, about 96 percent of the total number of individuals actively enrolled in Minnesota apprenticeships between 2015 and 2017 were working in skilled construction trades. This amounts to an annual industry investment of $30 million.

Manzo says this disproportion comes from the fact that construction is the only industry in the state to fully embrace apprenticeships thus far. He adds that the industry has been motivated by the impacts of the widespread labor shortage.

“They’re having difficulty finding qualified craft workers, so the solution is either pay people more and attract more workers into the industry or invest in training more workers and build up their skill sets,” Manzo says.

With the training approach, Manzo says many construction companies readily got on board with apprenticeships, working together to establish programs where workers could bounce between companies as jobs were available since the industry is naturally volatile and different companies win different bids at different times.

Manzo says he’d like to see state initiatives broaden the breadth of apprenticeship opportunities, particularly into fields like healthcare, IT, agriculture, and manufacturing.

“[Construction apprenticeships] have produced skilled construction workers that build our infrastructure, ensure schools are built safely,” Manzo says. “These programs could be replicated in other industries.”

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(PDF Copy of Study)