The Policy Group on Tradeswomen's Issues (PGTI) is a collaboration of individuals from a variety of disciplines committed to increasing women in the construction trades. PGTI leverages the diversity of members' professions to gain greater insight into how to best push enforcement of policies set forth to increase career women in the trades. Content on this blog is submitted through PGTI members and collaborators.
Thursday, July 19, 2012
July Organization to Watch: Tradeswomen Archives: A growing community-building collection of tradeswomen resources FROM tradeswomen
Tradeswomen Archives is a project that uses innovative approaches for the collection of digital and paper materials to build community resources by and from women who work in non-traditional blue-collar jobs. In order to document our lives, Tradeswomen Archives has set up an interactive Facebook page and a website for women to upload their stories and images as well as inviting people to send in traditional hard copy materials. The idea behind the project is that women have made history by breaking into non-traditional jobs and we don't want to lose it!
This is a tool for building the community of women in the trades, in longshore, and other male-dominated blue collar jobs, and a resource for activists, researchers, and teachers. Started by four tradeswomen in 2007, the collection houses the personal papers of Vivian Price, Jane Templin, Pat Williams, Lynn Shaw, and many photos, interviews, videos, and flyers from tradeswomen and tradeswomen groups. There are international materials in the collection as well as sources from the US.
Please contact Vivian Price vprice@csudh.edu if you have ideas and comments about building the archives, or if you want to donate to the collection, which is housed at California State University Dominguez Hills.
Tradeswomen Archives http://www.tradeswomenarchives.com
Tradeswomen Archives Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Tradeswomen-Archives/182586774318
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Friday, July 6, 2012
Camp shows young women a world of opportunities Read more: The Daily Tribune News - Camp shows young women a world of opportunities
SKIP BUTLER/The Daily Tribune News Above, Ansley Brinson was the first young woman at the MAGIC Camp to drive the telescopic forklift provided by the Yancey Brothers Caterpillar dealership. Below, Georgia Power engineer Randy Todd helps Starla Parker line up her materials for her welding project.
Stephen Lawlor with the Yancey CAT training department explains the forklifts controls to the students who would later drive the machine and move a pallet around the Cass High School parking lot. SKIP BUTLER/The Daily Tribune News
Amanda Brinson, from left, Xandria Southern, Nick Lumpkin with Yancey CAT and Hannah Thomas perform a safety inspection on the forklift before students are allowed to operate it. SKIP BUTLER/The Daily Tribune News
Georgia Power engineer Randy Todd helps Starla Parker line up her materials for her welding project. SKIP BUTLER/The Daily Tribune News
MAGIC volunteer Euharlee Mayor Kathy Foulk, left, works with student Courtney Rediger in one of Cass High’s welding booths. SKIP BUTLER/The Daily Tribune News
Mentoring a Girl in Construction Camp began here in Georgia just a few years ago and has since made its way across much of the nation. During its first week in Bartow County, 16 girls spent five days learning industry safety standards, which were put to the test with hands-on instruction in carpentry, electrical, welding and heavy-equipment operation.
"This is to bring awareness to these young ladies that there are opportunities for them in the construction field," said Georgia Power Project Relocation Coordinator Janet Queen. "We haven't done a real good job of letting them know that they have a place here, too. You know, some of the highest paid jobs in Bartow County are in the construction field. We know the economy is slow right now, but these jobs are coming back and we want to have a workforce that is prepared and ready.
"We need to be training these students so that when the jobs are here, they're there to fill them and they don't have to leave Bartow County to work."
Renee Connor founded the camp five years ago, transformed an idea into a growing nonprofit and has enlisted the help of industry leaders. In Bartow, MAGIC Camp partnered with Georgia Power and the Bartow County Board of Education to operate out of Cass High School.
"We actually started the camps in 2007. We had one camp in Gwinnett County, Ga., and it has grown from one camp to 25 this year all across the U.S. We started with six little girls and now we're actually doing three camps in the state this year," Connor said. "For companies like Georgia Power, it's about workforce development. For schools, it's about getting students interested in taking classes, but for me, it's all about the girls. If I can get one of them an opportunity they had no idea about, that's what it's all about.
"Right now, there is a skilled labor shortage in welding. ... And the girls have no idea the money they could make. A lot of government contracts now are being tailored to minority-owned businesses, which include women-owned businesses, and they have to set aside so much of those contracts to give to those businesses and these girls have no idea -- they will after this week."
Cass High Construction Teacher Jerome Black was on hand during the camp, but each day, a new guest instructor participated in lessons to introduce campers to successful women employed within the construction field.
"We try to use the instructor from the school, but we try to bring in a woman that is certified in that trade area every day to team teach. It's just better to bring in successful women that do it every day," Connor said. "We have a speaker every day this week to talk to the girls from a different area of construction. We had a mechanic come in [Wednesday] from the [Gerdau] steel plant, and she is in the Air Force Reserves and she's closer to their age so they could see younger women in the field."
Connor, a member of the National Association of Women in Construction, owns Precision Tapping, a firm specializing in pressure tapping -- a method of connecting to a pressurized pipe without an interruption of service. Other professionals on hand during the week included Journeyman Carpenter Dottie Myrick, a member of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters.
"We're working with these girls trying to give them the basics of what we do as carpenters. We made toolboxes out of plywood the other day. ... And today, we're out there teaching them to weld -- and they're doing a very good job," Myrick said. "It's a pleasure to be a part of [MAGIC Camp]. I was asked to come out and do carpentry on Tuesday and I just had so much fun on Tuesday, I've been back every day since.
"There's nothing these young women can't do. ... For these girls, there's so much that's open to them. They can do anything they want to do, carpentry, welding, engineering, anything. And this is a good way to show them that they can do it and they can learn to do it."
Students attending the camp graduated Friday, taking home projects completed throughout the week. The day they learned carpentry, participants built a toolbox. When learning the basics of electrical wiring, campers built a lamp. In the welding shop, girls made a garden ornament from bolts and washers.
Every high school in the county was represented except Excel. At least two of the students involved, Samantha Meyers and Chelsea Maggard, hail from Cass and will have an opportunity to continue under Black's instruction.
"I think it's a phenomenal program for the young ladies opening their eyes to what is available to them in their future, not keeping them down to what people might think is traditional for a lady," Black said. "Hopefully, it will help me get a few more in my class."
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Thursday, July 5, 2012
From BBC: Electricians job scheme looking to expand
By Victoria KingBBC News
Retrieved from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-18492957
Continue reading the main story
A scheme training women in social housing to be electricians is looking to expand. But its advocates believe changes in attitude from the government and employers are needed to help initiatives like it to thrive.
A year ago, mother-of-three Nicole Briscoe was job hunting with little optimism. Now she is on her way to becoming a skilled tradeswoman and is planning to set up her own business.
Nicole is one of 11 women taking part in Wired for Success, a training scheme run by the Electrical Contractors' Association (ECA). All of them are tenants of housing association L&Q which teamed up with the ECA to get the initiative off the ground.
It's the brainchild of Diane Johnson, the first female ECA president, who is adamant it can - and should - expand, both geographically and to other trades.
"It is a no-brainer," she says. "These people are on benefits - and the minute they're qualified they can come off them."
Round-the-clock
Flexibility is key to Wired for Success.
Nicole's youngest daughter was just five when she signed up, and it was the seemingly impossible task of fitting fulfilling, financially viable work around her child that had until then kept her out of the job market.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote
Nicole BriscoeWired for Success traineeThe empowerment I feel knowing where I'm going to be at the end is amazing”
This programme, however, allows her to begin work later in the day - after taking her daughter to school - and finish work in time to pick her up.
John Blaus, from Electrical Assessment Services, is actually at the plug-face, so to speak, training the women - and in his words, he's never worked with "a more dynamically committed group of people".
But he stresses just how much support has to be provided to make the scheme work - support given round the clock by one of his colleagues, Jan Emery.
"At 10.30 last night she was dealing with a problem with a lady who just had not got sufficient finance to get to the workplace today," he says.
"Without her I think we would have lost two or three ladies by now due to natural issues and problems they come across."
There's no doubt that such a level of flexibility and support presents a challenge for traditional - often male-dominated - industries, as well as colleges and similar institutions.
They would almost certainly need help themselves to overcome such challenges.
Benefits issues
Another issue Nicole and her fellow trainees have encountered is with the benefits system.
Wired for Success is not recognised by the Job Centre as a training programme, so they are still under pressure to be looking for work in order to qualify for JobSeekers Allowance.
As Diane Johnson puts its: "These girls are actually in training and yet we cannot seem to prove to the benefits agency that they are not sitting at home doing nothing.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote
Iain MacDonaldElectrical Contractors' AssociationThere is far too much money that is being deployed to the commercial benefit of training providers”
"We actually need help on that and any scheme like this would need help."
Even very simple things can present difficulties - Nicole's National Insurance number requires her to sign on at the Job Centre on a Tuesday but that's one of her training days.
"Those little issues may seem small, but they are issues in terms of just being able to get on with your work," she says.
"All that said, I'm on this course and I'm loving it. The empowerment I feel knowing where I'm going to be at the end is amazing."
Labour MP Catherine McKinnell, who is a friend of the scheme, says problems like these, while not inevitable, are "constantly recurring", but she hopes the forthcoming switch to Universal Credit will provide an opportunity to make the benefits system fit better alongside different forms of training.
The government has also launched an independent review of its apprenticeship programmes, so the hope is that this sort of feedback can be fed into that.
'Non-productive outcomes'
There is only ever a going to be a limited pot of funding for schemes like Wired for Success, and while it is expensive, those involved believe it's a considerable improvement on much of what is going on now - and would be better for the taxpayer in the long term.
"What I don't understand is that the government is happy to provide money to put people on courses, then when they finish the course they don't go anywhere," Diane Johnson says.
"They stay on benefits, there is no job at the end.
"If there was some support for this initiative then basically we can guarantee that these people would never go back on benefits again because they can go out and earn a living."
Iain MacDonald, head of education and training at the ECA, goes further.
"As an industry we often see substantial amounts of funding being directed towards non-productive outcomes. I would like to see public money being directed towards what you would term an industry-recognised outcome.
"There is far too much money that is being deployed to the commercial benefit of training providers and not the commercial benefits of the industries the qualifications purport to serve."
Everyone involved in Wired for Success agree that while it might sound counter-intuitive, schemes to tackle unemployment can't just be expected to conjure up jobs.
Instead, the focus has to be on providing people with skills, so if vacancies come up, they're ready - or alternatively, they can set up their own businesses from scratch.
Retrieved from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-18492957
Labels:
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