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| HELPING
HANDS Skills are transferable. (Photo courtesy
of DOD) |
After more than six
years in the Army following his West Point graduation, Bill
Gaul never dreamed he would have to worry about finding a
job. He was trained as an engineer, had project management
experience and flew helicopters. But when Gaul decided to
leave the military in 1986 it would take almost five months
before he found work. He remembers it as a stressful time,
laden with anxiety. After several years in the civilian work
force, Gaul decided to make his difficulty finding work actually
work for him.
Aware that other veterans were
also having difficulty finding challenging jobs, Gaul founded
The Destiny Group, a San Diego-based firm that uses online
technology to match men and women leaving the service with
civilian employment. Jobs in approximately 95 careers are
listed on the Destiny Group Website, including construction.
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| GAUL |
"We specialize in one type
of candidate only," says Gaul. Employers recognize that
the men and women are for the most part well-skilled, responsible
and have a good work ethic. "They show up on time and
are drug free," he adds.
With shortages of skilled construction
craftworkers expected to surge over the next 10 years, construction
employers naturally are angling to employ some of the men
and women exiting the military. The Defense Dept. estimates
that 250,000 persons will leave military service each year
either through retirement or declining to re-enlist.
Job referral firms arent
the only ones with their eyes on returning veterans. Hoping
to capture a significant slice of this work force, the 15
construction labor unions of the AFL-CIOs Building and
Construction Trades Dept., along with their eight employer
associations and the North American Contractors Association
(NACA), founded Helmets to Hardhats. The idea for the program
surfaced in 2001 at an industry meeting focusing on ways to
help veterans in transition. BCTD Secretary-Treasurer Joseph
Maloney attended that meeting to tout the departments
apprenticeship programs. During the conference Maloney met
Matthew P. Caulfield, a retired Marine Corps general and work
force consultant and recruiter. Maloney and Caulfield started
brainstorming and soon the seeds were planted for Helmets
to Hardhats, or H2H.
"We didnt want thousands
of people showing up at apprenticeship programs so we had
to develop a plan," explains Maloney. Military members
have the second-highest level of computer literacy skills
after college students, so the program was designed around
the Internet, Maloney says. H2H allows both prospective workers
and employers to register on line. The goal was to "make
this a digital handshake," he adds. An online program
also would offer flexibility to someone being discharged in
San Diego but heading home to Buffalo.
H2H is a nonprofit, Web-based recruitment
program administered by the Center for Military Recruitment,
Assessment and Veterans Employment. A joint labor-management
committee, co-chaired by BCTD President Edward C. Sullivan
and NACA Chairman Kenneth E. Hedman, oversees the labor-management
board of trustees. Caulfield is the programs executive
director.
Here is how it works: potential
workers register on the H2H Website and fill out an extensive
questionnaire detailing previous work and military experience,
education, personal information, career goals and geographic
preferences. Employers, including contractors and craft apprenticeship
programs, also register on the Website. A computer program
matches job candidates with employers or apprentice coordinators.
A representative from the individual union or contractor makes
the next contact with the veteran to assess if the match has
a future.
There is no fee to register with
H2H. Caulfield says the cost of hiring via H2H for the first
placement year, 2003, was $1,001, significantly lower than
the industry average as reported in The Saratoga Institutes
Human Capital Report for 2000. The H2H cost drops in 2004
to $471, annualized from January to May data, Caulfield adds.
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| EQUIPPED
The construction industry is beginning to see the
military as a prime source of new workers needed to fill
its depleted ranks. (Photo top courtesy of DOD) |
"We see this as a huge opportunity
for our union, our contractors," says William Luddy,
executive director of the carpenters Labor-Management
Education & Development Trust.
The building trades and the contractor
groups supplied early seed money to jump-start the program.
In 2003, H2H received congressional funding and formally launched.
For its first year, Congress approved $3.4 million, followed
by $5.5 million for fiscal 2004. The 2005 funding request
is still pending as part of the Army budget funded through
the Defense Authorization legislation. If the time comes that
Congress no longer funds the program, other resources will
be found, say its leaders. "We will not let it die under
any circumstances," asserts Hedman, also manager of labor
relations at Bechtel Construction Co.
Given its public funding, H2H is
not limited to unions and their contractors. "We started
as a labor-management program to kick off but that doesnt
mean that an...
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