Modern Home Builders Issue 146 | Page 18

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The skilled trades are the backbone of our economy. They build our homes, keep our power running, maintain our vehicles, and ensure our infrastructure is safe. Yet, we are facing a workforce crisis that threatens to disrupt not only the construction industry, but every sector that depends on these essential skills.

For every five tradespeople retiring, only two are entering the field. This staggering imbalance is not a projection; it’ s starting to happen now. The generation of men and women who carried us through decades of building and maintaining America’ s infrastructure is reaching retirement age in record numbers. The tsunami of retirements on the horizon is one of the greatest labor market challenges of our time.
Why the time to act is now
Training a tradesperson is not something that can be accomplished overnight. Unlike some roles where on-the-job learning or quick certifications suffice, the trades demand years of hands-on training, apprenticeships, and mentorship to achieve mastery. Without a strong pipeline of new entrants learning directly from experienced professionals, critical knowledge is at risk of being lost forever.
The skills transfer window is narrow. If we don’ t act now to attract, train, and retain the next generation, the gap will grow wider, and the consequences will ripple across industries. From housing shortages to delays in renewable energy projects to rising costs for basic services, the impact will be felt everywhere.
Digging into the data
At Bring Back the Trades, we’ re currently conducting a comprehensive gap analysis research project supported in part by F. W. Webb Company, to better understand the scale of this challenge. This study is examining the pipeline and retirement data across seven key trades in the United States, looking both nationally and at the state level.
Our aim is to put real numbers behind the anecdotal evidence: how many workers are leaving, how many are coming in, and what the geographic disparities look like. We are also exploring the potential economic
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