Guest Column: America Needs Proud Blue Collar Workers
I enjoyed a relatively happy and comfortable childhood because of the blue collar work of my father. He worked most of his adult life at an AEP power plant. Both of my grandfathers were hard working blue collar workers too.
Scott A. Pullins, Esq.
Publisher,
The Pullins Report
HT to Bizzyblog. Here's Paul:
I am going to be politically incorrect. The fact is not everyone should go to college. Yet we have pushed the notion that the only way to get a useful education is to obtain a college degree.
Recently I spoke with an official of the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA). He supervizes an important part of the subway system. He told me there are hundreds of vacant jobs. The result is that the infrastructure is deteriorating. MTA has the money; the MTA positions are authorized; qualified people are unavailable. We have stigmatized folks who pound ties or who maintain the electrical system. Mind you, folks who would take these jobs would earn good money. Indeed, they would have a chance for worthwhile promotion. But no, if they have no college education, even in some so-called “university,” they aren’t important. We are digging ourselves into a greater and greater hole. Another downside is that many people who go to college are out of place – they simply don’t belong there.
What caused me to tackle this subject was an e-mail which came screaming across my computer saying that all sorts of blue-collar positions are available in Northern Virginia. We are building a major extension to the Metrorail system to Dulles Airport and considerably beyond. The dirty little secret is that we don’t have the workers available to build this extension.
There are many new light-rail systems under construction all over the nation. In other cities extensions are being built. In New York the Second Avenue Subway is a multibillion dollar project to reduce overcrowding and delays on the Lexington Avenue line and to provide better access to mass transit for residents of the far East Side of Manhattan. Again, workers are scarce for this project.
The truth is we have reversed a very good system. When I was in high school many boys took a shop class. Many ended up with high paying jobs. But then the push came for a college education. If you ask many high school graduates today what he or she intended to do upon graduation you would hear, “I’ve applied to [this and that] college.” There they would not belong. They would struggle and eventually get low grades. Why do we put young people through that kind of situation? We must change the stigma we have placed on noncollegiate work. We again need to make workers who lay the tracks, who pave the roads, who collect the garbage, become proud Americans.
There is no way these folks shouldn’t be as proud as those who
go to college. Granted they will never have a degree to hang on the
wall. But they will be able to support their families in fine fashion.
True, they may need to wipe the grease off of their hands and arms. So
what? We should be ashamed for what we did to the young people of
America. Many, I am sure, have dreaded going to college. These are the
folks who know how to repair a car or fix a television set who can be
excellent so-called blue-collar workers. It is long past due to honor
those who do the real work in America. We have no time to waste. There
are all these jobs going wanting. If they are not filled soon our
infrastructure will continue further to disintegrate.






I couldn't agree with you more. Just remember an idiot going into collage is an idiot coming out of collage but with a piece of paper certifying they are an educated idiot. So many who go into collage with no people skills on how to hand the reality of life and they think they know everything and what gets me is these companies hire them. How they are buffaloed and bamboozled into thinking they have invested in a qualified person when in the end they will be losing money because they hired garbage.
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One main problem is the fact that every job posted in the country prefers a degree of some kind. Contractors are continually striving to make the highest profit with minimal cost, including labor. As illegal immigrants pour into this country and employers higher them to do the job for less, what do we expect. Unions hands are tied, however they are the best labor source.
Some people do not belong in college, but they see it as the only way to make a living wage. As long as elected officials keep allowing the blue collar manufacturing jobs to leave this country, employers to hire undocumented illegals, continue to pay outrageous salaries and compensation to CEO/CFO's whose companies fail taking with them the hopes and dreams of the employees who made them who they are, we as a country, as a region are in big trouble.
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