Getting started in the Construction Trades
Are you looking for a career instead of a minimum-wage job? Are you considering a career in construction? Then you have come to the right place.
We need trained professionals to build structures like our homes, offices, high-rises, roads and bridges. These projects are essential to our everyday life and need hundreds of workers trained in more than 20 different building trades. Building trades (also called crafts) include laborers, ironworkers, cement masons, carpenters, heavy equipment operators, plumbers, sheet metal workers, painters and many more. This website will help you get started down the pathway to become one of these skilled professionals.
What You Need to Get Started
You do not need construction skills to get started; the professionals will teach you what you need to know. But there are some things you will need to succeed:
Work ethic
Be open to learn, love hard work and strive to be your best.
Reliable
Show up and work hard every single day, no matter what.
Early
Always be on-site a half-hour early to prepare for work.
Learn
Listen, pay attention, ask questions and follow directions.
Hands-on
Learn by doing, solving problems and overcoming challenges.
Physical
Ready for hard work, heights and cold, wet weather.
Drug-free
Construction sites can be dangerous. Everyone must be alert.
Safety
Pay attention. Wear safety gear at all times. Speak up.
Pre-Apprenticeship
Pre-apprenticeships are hands-on training programs that help prepare people for entry and success in the building trades. These programs provide construction training and education, and help with driver’s licensing, transportation, child care, budgeting, getting a high school diploma/GED, etc. The best part is if you show up and bring your best every day, they will help you get into a paid apprenticeship program.
If you already have your high school diploma/GED, driver’s license and a proven work ethic, you can apply directly to an apprenticeship in the building trade of your choice.
Apprenticeship
Once you are in an apprenticeship training program, you are working on a construction site, learning your trade from skilled professionals and getting paid. You EARN while you LEARN.
It takes about four years for apprentices to become experienced journey-level workers. They reach journey level by learning from experienced workers on the job site and taking classes. Apprentices get regular pay raises along the way, plus benefits and retirement.
You do not need past experience, a clean record or a college degree. You just need to apply and try out for the apprenticeship program that interests you. These training programs need people of color, women, veterans and residents of economically distressed zip codes.
A career in the building trades is important, fast-paced work that is physically and mentally challenging. At the end of each day, you will be very proud of what you have learned and what you have built. Most importantly, you will be able to support yourself and your family for a lifetime.
Experienced Workers
Candidates with five or more years of experience in a specific trade should contact a union hall or employer directly.