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@homelessperson54552 жыл бұрын
Man, who woulda thought that abusing trade workers, underpaying, neglecting them, and removing those curriculums from schools would make a shortage.
@mildyproductive97262 жыл бұрын
How else could the top guys in the union make crazy bucks? Union work is the ultimate fuck you to meritocracy. The guy that lasts the longest without quitting or dying or being forced out due to politics is the guy that gets the biggest check. Everyone else is just waiting for him to die or retire. When the industry is growing, that's great. The guys at the top roll in cash. When the industry is not growing, you have a bunch of old people at the top wanting their payday, but there's not enough new workers to exploit.
@jarrodheley78792 жыл бұрын
When I was at school (27 now, plumber) we were told that we had to decide on a career path, so as to know which university course to enter after school. This was important, because if we failed, we might be forced into trade work! Anyway, I got into plumbing by chance, but it's treated me well. I know a lot of people who went to university, because that seemed the logical next step after school, only to end up in jobs they are over qualified for.
@amyglynn68272 жыл бұрын
@@mildyproductive9726 how are you blaming unions for this?
@mildyproductive97262 жыл бұрын
@@amyglynn6827 In union work, the longer you are in the union, the more you get paid. When this trade has too many veterans at the top, and too few at the bottom, the new workers get overworked for shit pay, and no one wants to enter the field. Then the old guard starts complaining that there's not enough workers. They really mean that their system has broken, because growth was unsustainable. And due to slow down of carpentry work, the system looks more like a ponzi scheme without enough suckers trying to buy in. If new carpenters were paid by supply and demand, you'd have exactly enough carpenters. But then the older guys in the union wouldn't be able to make way more money vs. the new guys. It is nice to be able to rely on union membership to one day make near doctor-money for swinging a hammer... until there aren't enough new guys "paying their dues" to support your retirement.
@ericbrown11322 жыл бұрын
@@amyglynn6827 really the union sounds great at first, but when you get into it you find out it’s bad. Entry level guys only get work last, no pay if you don’t work. The old guys stay in there until they die because they don’t have to do shit and get paid 10x the lower guys doing all the work. It’s exactly everything socialist tell you capitalism is. Oh and you have to pay every month just to be on a list hoping to get to work. Not to mention work is being outsourced to illegal immigrants so the demand for union guys is destroyed. Then you college educated people think that labor work should be ultra cheap because it don’t require an education, but it does and if gov would stop excessive immigration the market could balance out and rich would have to shell out money for the labor creating less of a pay gap allowing a middle class. But the elites lobby for immigration to keep labor cheap and profits high.
@minedustry3 жыл бұрын
I used to be a carpenter. I now make twice a much money doing something else. There is something wrong with building houses all day and not being able to afford one yourself.
@Radbot7763 жыл бұрын
You can afford a house but you gotta work 6-7 days a week no vacations and you must forget you exist
@gregbenwell61733 жыл бұрын
Exactly how I felt!!
@minedustry3 жыл бұрын
I actually work mandatory up to 10hr 6 or 7 days per week now, but it's double time on Sunday and triple time on holidays. There's 10,000 different kinds of jobs and all of them can't find people who actually show up, just dumb enough to do the work without being a threat of taking the bosses job or becoming a competitor after learning how the business works.
@no1special9993 жыл бұрын
@@minedustry Can confirm, I was fired once because a customer saw my work style and my hand skills, didn't like my bosses attitude and then in the middle of the job right in front of him asked me if I was interested in building them a custom built in media center with all media/data wires wired internally and plated to the wall since my boss has turned that job down. I was fired for not blatantly telling her that my skills and capabilities were owned by the boss.
@BigMacOrange3 жыл бұрын
I'm the 69th like of this comment. 😏
@jenniferlynnkarr Жыл бұрын
My dad is a carpenter and he recently had to switch to a desk job because he's getting older. I remember going to work with him when I was really little because my parents couldn't afford to pay for child care. He carved an incredible set of front doors with the aztec calendar in them. His clients were all wealthy, but sometimes they would try to not pay him. I can't blame anyone for not wanting to deal with absolute nonsense like that.
@dandelion_fritters Жыл бұрын
This is why whenever I made something for someone, pay up 80% of the cost upfront. I can’t gift anything anymore. Things are just too tight.
@neilsonlee7610 Жыл бұрын
Nice
@PWingert1966 Жыл бұрын
25% up front plus half for materials. then at each stage youi ask for payment as per contract. No payment you walk away! Make sure to document your work as well as time and effort, vidoes of you doing the work and get signoff for bneing on site each and every day by the GC or homew owner! Documentation is everything in a lawsuit.
@BS-vx8dg Жыл бұрын
"His clients were all wealthy, but sometimes they would try to not pay him." If I had not had my own business with such people as clientele, I would not have believed this, but yeah, people can be amazingly ballsy.
@sandrafrancisco Жыл бұрын
wealthy people don't become wealthy by being generous or honest in their business dealings.
@greezy2833 жыл бұрын
i tried for 2 years to get a carpentry apprenticeship. every one expected 1 year of experience... That year of experience is what that apprenticeship is meant to provide. Everyone wants hard workers but nobody wants to train someone.
@leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget3 жыл бұрын
Yeah seriously just lie they'll just assume you got shit training for that year
@STScott-qo4pw3 жыл бұрын
actually it's not so much no one wants to do it but no one wants to PAY for it. it always boils down to some way to get something for nothing.
@akllls6173 жыл бұрын
Dude I just commented on this .. i tried so many times to get into the unions and trade companies but they either want an apprentice of at least one year or they want experience in whatever trade you are applying .. doesn’t make sense I hear there’s a shortage of young guys but when young guys apply with no experience they don’t want them .. 🤷♂️
@hansvanoosterwijck59693 жыл бұрын
as a roofer myself, the reason being for this is because once they get a bit learned up they feel like they earn a shit-load more or competition snicks them away. I'm not saying i dont want to pay up for a good worker but dont expect a 10y salary once youve just learned the trade a bit
@newelement46423 жыл бұрын
@@markhughes2611 unfortunately that is what has to be done to get that experience in.
@AverageSheky3 жыл бұрын
As a younger kid who used to be in trades, the 80 hour week standard, work eat and sleep attitude by everyone over 35 really killed it for me. There has to be more to life than just hammering nails and collapsing into bed
@fosphor89203 жыл бұрын
some people don't know what to do if they don't have some sorta purpose, like working hammering nails... It is kinda strange
@johnurbanek10273 жыл бұрын
This is why I quit being a mechanic. I got so sick of cars that I even gave up on the 10+ year long resto-mod I was building.
@ciello___83073 жыл бұрын
exactly. Theres a reason why people don't want to do it.
@lordsheogorath33773 жыл бұрын
Sad to say this but the majority of people in the Trades have no ambition or sense of self-worth and hate people that do. They say things like "gotta put in the work" or "pay your dues" when what they actually mean is that they weren't smart or ambitious enough to go into business for themselves as soon as they possibly could and resent people who refuse to spend decades working their ass off to make other people rich.
@Stallionsound3 жыл бұрын
...pansy...
@nfiedler7 Жыл бұрын
This is a great wood project book kzbin.infoUgkxkPIWb22DigCqxmlXerCyUF4HCl6eSU2L . Most of the projects use the pallet simply as a source of reclaimed wood not as a recognizable pallet so even if you didn't have a pallet you could make these projects with any reclaimed (or even new) wood. The instructions are excellent. The style is charming and would work with lots of different decor. There are quite a number of projects that involve tiling of teh wood pieces which is a really cool idea and can produce beautiful pieces when working with aged wood.
@willgibson7478 Жыл бұрын
It's not just the trades. I see the same thing in industry: real wages declining, job security a distant memory, expectations completely delusional.
@TEWMUCH Жыл бұрын
True. Working in general just sucks! They want u to be super skilled, pulled in 5 directions LITERALLY!! And dont even make enough to afford a one bedroom and pay your car note to get there.
@soberanisfam1323 Жыл бұрын
Live by capootalism, dye by capootalism
@beigenegress2979 Жыл бұрын
I think either Texas or Florida just mandated that employers aren’t obligated to give construction worker water breaks? I may have got part of this wrong, but it boils down to removing protections to insure that construction workers working outdoors in the heat do not have protections for water breaks. That’s the issue, not that I mixed up the state. 😢
@snapman218 Жыл бұрын
It’s called being raped by inflation
@Mrbfgray Жыл бұрын
Yet 6 figures readily available and still no takers.
@marktaro Жыл бұрын
Growing up my father repeatedly told me to never get into the trades(he did electrical), the work was so difficult and unrewarding, and I would see him suffer from the stress of work and alcoholism. I was pushed into college by school counselors and parents, and after graduation was not able to find a decent job (in the US anyway). Years later, he congratulates and is proud of other young men getting into the trade, while putting down people who went to college. It's those kind of mind games that makes his generation insufferable.
@bignickenergy3525 Жыл бұрын
This is the first time I've heard of anyone saying not to get into a trade. Your dad was insane. Though I agree on the college funnel. Frankly, not everyone needs college and now we have a generation of underpaid and overqualified kids with crippling debt and a distaste for any sort of handiwork
@blasphimus Жыл бұрын
@@bignickenergy3525 My dad pushed me to go to college. The trades aren't for everyone and there's not a lot of money in the trades. For every rare guy making $200k as a tradesmen, I can match against a software dev making $350-400k while working from their mansion. My friends that graduated from college were gifted 5 houses from their parents just for finishing (they owned more than 100). The trades make good money at time, by you can't forget that the tradesmen who own their own shop can't compete with Bay Area start ups who can pull millions. Or business majors that can pull down millions with just as much hard work.
@workhardplayhard7610 Жыл бұрын
This is how tradesmen generally treat any potential apprentices. Every day is mind games, ridicule and abuse. All while being paid in a week what they make in one hour. Toxic industry from bottom to top.
@smelltheglove2038 Жыл бұрын
My whole family are tradesmen. You’d think I’d know all sorts of tips and tricks. Hell, I worked on the job site my entire teens. Only problem is I was never taught anything. As soon I was given an opportunity to actually do anything other than clean up or carry materials I was immediately screamed at for either going too slow or because I was doing it wrong and kicked off of the task. Never had the opportunity to actually get a hang of anything. As I got older I would get called stupid and all sorts of names because when they were my age they knew how to do it all. The older generation are the problem.
@setokaiba9250 Жыл бұрын
Are you me? That's the reason why I never learned anything either and then they blame me!
@wingit4316 Жыл бұрын
Another casualty of our generational break in the trades is the lack of guidance. If you don't have a family member or friend who's in the trades, nobody is there to tell you how things *really* work. When I was 17, I tried to get into the carpenter's union. They put my name down on a queue for the pre-apprenticeship. A year later, I got connected and discovered that nobody was actually drawn from the list in reality-- you needed to have someone to 'sponsor' you, at which point you could be selected. If I hadn't gotten lucky, I'd be another of thousands of young aspiring carpenters who just couldn't get in. I spent a year walking into sites with my bags on, looking for work. I framed sheds and practised all manner of things on my own. I read books, tried to understand what I was doing. I visited probably around 50 sites, at least one a week, and nobody was willing to take me on board, even for below minimum wage. The gatekeeping in the trades can be a bit insane sometimes
@ryanbeard1119 Жыл бұрын
It's like they want, fit young, workers with 50 years experience. They won't train, they act like the world is a video game.
@raziphaz2219 Жыл бұрын
The only reason the guy in the video was able to get in was because someone was mentoring him since 13. A newbie doesn't stand a chance
@StallionFernando Жыл бұрын
As someone who's trying to get into the trades (Masonry) this is the first thing I noticed, have seen ads posted for months begging for workers but because I have no experience no one is willing to give me a chance, the gatekeeping is the #1 problem imo. Gonna take what little money I have and move to a different state where the probability of finding a masonry job is higher.
@TonklinFallen Жыл бұрын
That wasn't experience back in early 2000's, I wanted to be a sparky. I gave up trying to find an apprenticeship and retrained in IT, and I got scooped up within weeks of completing my course.
@dergunter1237 Жыл бұрын
its the old boomers in the trades (same issues are in every other field with them). They dont want to mentor they want young guys to make them more money. Thats why they keep the mentoring at a minimum so they can always pay them as low as possible with the young guys having no chance to go anywhere else. These boomers did that with their own children and now the grandchildren noticed the plan and simply refuse to be abused which pisses those boomers of.
@harrisric1283 жыл бұрын
I've been saying it for about 2 years now... Young people are done being paid pennies to do hard work. Thank you for not trashing young people (like most people our age do) thank you for the reality of what's going on
@tomislavmidanovic86662 жыл бұрын
dude ive worked for a whole year as a drive wall worker, 60-70 hours a week and only being paid like 20 euros a day. of course im gonna leave. i dont want to brake myself mentally and physically for that
@harrisric1282 жыл бұрын
@@tomislavmidanovic8666 exactly
@zachs94702 жыл бұрын
Exactly dude. I was getting paid less than a Walmart worker. I quit and decided to do something else. Wasn’t worth the physical challenges and the hard work knowing someone is getting high in the back of Walmart making more than me.
@peteparadis16192 жыл бұрын
I’m 64 and agree with you.. The Man wants you always to work like a galley slave for nothing, but, the chickens are coming home to roost.. Gotta pay more and treat better.. Not rocket science
@TheTradesmanLU20012 жыл бұрын
I make over 100k a year working around 35-40 hrs a week as a union glazier. 52.27 per hour after my benefits which puts me at about 83-85$ an hour. My hourly on my check is often around 58 because I do run work about 70% of the time . The other 30$ or so goes towards my pension, 401k, health and welfare and various other things. I’m not kidding when I say that I’ve made over 25k in a month many times . We get into working 6x10’s or even 7x12’s and the pay is ridiculous! Like 5500 to 6000 PER WEEK. IRS takes a nice bite of it but it’s still a nice paycheck. We do have a licensed, accredited apprenticeship program that runs for 5 years and 10,000 hours between classroom and on the job. My son in law just started working with me (actually a year ago) and he went from $17 up to $23 already. And will continue to climb until he reaches the journeyman scale once he completes the program. I feel like it’s a very respectable, reasonable income. I’ll never get rich but i can honestly say that I cannot remember the last time I wanted for something I couldn’t have.
@jkdubya853 жыл бұрын
My dad is a carpenter. He’s 64 and he’s retired twice now. All he has to do is put out the word he’s willing to some work and he has people lining up to pay him $60/hr and he refuses to work more than 5 hours a day if he agrees to do any work at all. Turns down >90% of offers because he makes more money building and selling furniture. Dude is a master and I’m lucky to have him as a dad. I can fix my own everything and building/selling furniture with him is fun.
@jctai1003 жыл бұрын
May I ask, is it because he's well known in his industry by now? I would've thought with the scarcity mentioned, even young carpenters can charge more with the housing boom.
@jimknowles54833 жыл бұрын
Congratulations on his furniture business!! What kind of furniture does he make??
@jkdubya853 жыл бұрын
@@SoloSanguine you ever hear the phrase “you get what you pay for?” 45 years of experience costs extra. Plus, he only does actual carpentry work nowadays 3-4 days a month if that instead working in his shop, so don’t worry - your statistical dunk is still valid.
@jkdubya853 жыл бұрын
@@jimknowles5483 Patio furniture mostly. Tried to get into higher end living room stuff, but people keep asking for patio furniture. Sunny climate here...it makes sense.
@jimknowles54833 жыл бұрын
@@jkdubya85 Hey thanks! Great to see him appreciated for his abilities! Are most of his patio clients upscale? Or just regular income? I'll bet you can see the quality! Do you have a web site? Thanks again! just jim
@genamueller Жыл бұрын
My husband is 56 yo and has been in the construction industry for 30+ years. His body is broken and tired and honestly for the amount of money we’ve made through the years in hinds sight we’ve been robbed. The knee and shoulder surgeries he’s facing will be astronomical. We have encouraged our son to stay far away from the trades. People have zero respect for those in the trades industry. I don’t want our son to go through what we have gone through. I want a better life for him.
@inkognito3145 Жыл бұрын
That’s so sad. It would not be hard to make trades less taxing on the body and having a better pay but that would require the bosses to make less money and safely we all know it’s not gonna happen. I a carpenter myself and I wish only the best for you husband and you kid
@genamueller Жыл бұрын
@@inkognito3145 thank you very much.
@jamesbaker3153 Жыл бұрын
How long were you a carpenter and if you werent why are you speaking as if your pain paid for what you have?
@elpacho....9254 Жыл бұрын
Same with football players.
@Caesar-nq5if Жыл бұрын
America will plunder and squeeze you dry. This place is a tomb for men. Prison planet.
@mnjesu3 жыл бұрын
"I don't know why people aren't going into the trades?" "My knees don't work anymore and I'm 36." Gotcha.
@TheMavosa3 жыл бұрын
Need some good knee pads. But need to look at it like you are an athlete because if you don't want to be that guy who is broken by 40, you need to take care of yourself.
@MillisConstruction3 жыл бұрын
True story.
@angry-white-men3 жыл бұрын
For my job, I sit all day and my knees still hurt, lol.
@Rufio19753 жыл бұрын
Comments like that is why people don't do it. Always negative. You sound like you are scared of some hard work.
@DonaldAJr3 жыл бұрын
That's why all the Mexican people are here working (Please look at my second paragraph). I have no ill will towards any of them and I know they're trying to make a living for their family here and in Mexico. People have got to do what they got to do, when our government does what they do with drug enforcement. Now here's the crux of the matter. Due to the fact we have all the Mexicans here doing construction, It Has Cut The Knees Out From Under The Labor Force With Hourly Wages. As everybody knows labor is an hourly pay job. It's not a salary job and give it a few more years, Mexicans will be doing all the air conditioning work next. Mark my damn words.
@jasonedgar16222 жыл бұрын
Electrician here, 29 years old and been at it since i'm 21. Fully Licensed and have my Red seal certification (Canada btw). I used to charge customers the best price I could do for them but honestly after 5 years of that and scraping by because of the tool costs/fuel/vehicle I started to bid what I felt I was worth. 100$/HR or more often a estimate...I lost alot of customers for a while but I realized something. These people would get a hell of a good price from me and then push me even more on price always looking for deal like my knowledge/skills were in the discount section, the price I gave was never good enough for them. The clients I get now know the value of a good tradesperson and will PAY for the work to be done and done right. They never push back on price and when I get a phone call for something and give a price if the person says "seems pretty expensive, I could of had it done for half that" well guess what, call that guy up and let him burn your house down for cents on the dollar. TBH, younger workers coming in the field now are being paid too little, our first years here can make more at walmart.
@Lion-hj7ch2 жыл бұрын
Electricians start at 22-25$/h, wallmart is 14$. What are you talking about
@jasonedgar16222 жыл бұрын
@@Lion-hj7ch where im to in Eastern Canada Jman wage for commercial work is $26/h and our apprentices get 60% of that wage as a 1st year so $15.6/h. Hardly worth the actual work you will be doing vs a Mc Donald's or Walmart or at least thats what i've been told by first years I knew that gave up the trade. Your mileage may vary though
@Lion-hj7ch2 жыл бұрын
@@jasonedgar1622 whoah! That is so strange. I've been in New condo construction in Toronto for 8 years now. I talk to other trades all the time cause my job is dead end and not unionized, I'm have a spot open for framing once they're done the strike. They're offering me 22 for start, my friend started 25. Once you finish your apprentice you make 45-50, plus a bonus if you're good with the company. Plumbers, electricians, HVAC, all get 50+. Also piece work framers, if they're good, they can make 4000$ a week. Max I've seen 6k a week, but that's not often. Stars have to align for that
@717UT2 жыл бұрын
I once worked for a boss that believe that the first focus of his company was give the customer the best value for their money. That essentially lead to him not making the best profits from a business standpoint and that trickled down to his employees not being paid very well. And the typical week was 45-50hrs a week, lots of time out of town for the day, and exclusively exterior work all year round. It was brutal and I worked for him for 7 years. I barely got by. If I wasn't a dumb kid burned out of college, I should have moved on long before and started something more lucrative. Long story short, like you said, don't prioritize giving people a great deal on your expertise. You don't start a company to run a charity.
@grandcanyon22 жыл бұрын
@@jasonedgar1622 at least your honest, here in new york city ibew its 48 a hour for a journeyman, but first years get only 40 percent, which is 19.2 dollars, once folks year that they run for the hills. remember the way the pay scale is the first three years your wages will be alot lower. So folks decide to work retail or mc donalds while looking for a better situation. The city jobs offer better starting wages and perks like free metro cards, a electrical helper for the new york transit start at 23 a hour and after the first year you can take the test to become a electrical maintainer and go from 23 a hour to 41. Heck local 94 building eingineers start helpers out at 35 a hour and after four years they make 50 a hour. you start off with 70 percent wages of the journeyman.
@drfrankenbass3 жыл бұрын
Ethan, that was epic! I couldn't agree more. I'm a 60 year old self-employed carpenter who doesn't run a crew or advertise, and have far more work than I can do, and the backlog in my neck of the woods is long. And yet people still seem amazed when I want $40 per hour to show up with enough tools and materials to fill a tractor trailer, and decades of experience in all fields of construction. But they're starting to catch on. And I'm tired of giving it away. The body's still holding up, but who knows how long that will continue. Thanks for speaking up for us.
@TheHonestCarpenter3 жыл бұрын
Thank you drfrank! You hit the nail right on the head. I didn’t even get into the WAREHOUSE of tools and materials we purchase and re-purchase just to operate. But I’m glad you’re still working well. Keep sticking to your guns-and keep those higher bids coming in!
@willbee67853 жыл бұрын
I tell people even before they open their mouths, the van costs £15,000; ($20,000), the fuel to run it costs X; the tools in it are £4,000; the man has £40,000 worth of training, he has spec’d out your job & he is geared up for any job any customer may request, not just you, plus the materials don’t fall out of the sky, plus not every merchant sells everything. He has overheads.....That’s when I take a breath. I look at them; “so you were saying” Furthermore, I say this to people & it isn’t even my job I’m talking about. I got out of the trade over 30 years ago. But still in the industry in management.
@russrockino-rr08643 жыл бұрын
Most homeowners are stupid and don't realize what a good deal they are getting!
@DeadEyeRabbit3 жыл бұрын
$40 too low sir.
@joerobinson7933 жыл бұрын
Supply and demand. You should be aiming for $50-$55 per hour. Maybe more depending on your market. If the customer doesn't want to pay it, they can just do it themselves.
@drost47 Жыл бұрын
I used to be a carpenter for 5 years. Got all the way up to a foreman. My body hurt all the time, the weather sucked. Started in my early twenties. I now work as a mechatronics technician, make almost triple what I used to, and it's significantly less stressful and hurtful. My time as a carpenter was harder then my military service (navy).
@christophersmith2091 Жыл бұрын
I'm ex navy and a house framer so my question is what the heck was your rating to make it that bad? Were you a seabee or in deck division or something.
@drost47 Жыл бұрын
I was an EM in the navy. I think it was more that my carpenter time was also basically a walking osha violation mixed with very long hours.
@christophersmith2091 Жыл бұрын
@@drost47 I was a DC. And my first osha violation was for no fall restraint. I am as well, a walking osha violation. Hello fellow snipe/ carpenter dude. Peace to you.
@Dustomatic3 жыл бұрын
I once considered getting into carpentry. The problem was that the entry level jobs paid so much less than my restaurant job that I couldn’t justify spending years working harder for significantly less money.
@Dbeau613 жыл бұрын
In the Midwest, Lyman USB is hiring starting $20 with no experience. That being said I don't know if I want others to suffer through the job I have. I'm 24 and my knees/bones in my hands start to ache in winter. However if there's only 10 seats on a rocket ship, out of 40/50 I think my seat should be reserved 🤙
@Jrock420blam3 жыл бұрын
@@Dbeau61 there aren't many trees to use the wood for carpentry on Mars, i think your seat might get taken lol
@Dbeau613 жыл бұрын
@@Jrock420blam is was a joke lol
@jetjiles493 жыл бұрын
In my area, even the apprenticeship positions ask for at least a year or two experience in carpentry or construction. No way in hell can I get my foot in now, where I am in my career.
@Dustomatic2 жыл бұрын
@@Dbeau61 if I took a job making $20/hour I’d have been taking a pay cut from every serving job I’ve ever had. Also, yeah, I’m 48 and my joints are all pretty healthy. I’m not sure you can even put a price tag on that.
@jasonlepage79153 жыл бұрын
a little correction i would like to make for you , the bricklayer does not have the hardest job , , , THE BRICKLAYERS HELPER DOES , , , that poor bastard is worked to death .
@danielbackley93013 жыл бұрын
Absolutely the truth. I worked with a bricklayer 40 years ago he said he could lay 500 bricks a day . I told him that he could do that only if he had a real Ballsy laborer otherwise he would be lucky to lay 100.He then asked who I had labored for, i told him who I had worked for for 3 days till I got a groin pull (I was 16 at the time )he said you learned the hard truth about bricklaying.
@michaelgartner66633 жыл бұрын
Aren't those folks called Hod carriers? Either way, those guys were huge after 1 season.
@paulsmith52183 жыл бұрын
Years ago they might have had it tough. Nowadays bricklayers have it much harder.
@jamese92833 жыл бұрын
@@paulsmith5218 Why harder now?
@axemanchris3 жыл бұрын
You got to start somewhere.
@camc88792 жыл бұрын
I live in Southern California(it might be different here). I think nepotism is killing the trades. Its too difficult to get in. I am an electrician I wanted to switch to carpentry. I wanted to learn different skills with my own handy man business being the goal. To get into the union you needed to be “sponsored”. To get a non union job you needed experience. What it really came down to is you needed to know somebody.
@chriswarren9857 Жыл бұрын
Mahn you want to get paid less by switching from an electrician to a carpenter
@qdub6614 Жыл бұрын
@@chriswarren9857 it may not be about money for him, it could simply be building a repertoire!
@CrossForum Жыл бұрын
Also So Cal. I tried to get a carpenter out to replace fascia boards around my roofline while getting the roof done and could not find anyone. The roofer I hired tried to find someone but all his contacts were busy. I ended up just patching the existing boards with epoxy filler, sanding and painting. I've also learned basic plumbing and electrical because I can buy the materials and do it for a fraction of the cost of a tradesperson. Amazing how expensive (per hour) the trades have gotten in the last 30 years.
@sidehustlefinance Жыл бұрын
Come to Florida. No unions and plenty of opportunity. Anyone with 2 hands can make good money. It's not you, it's your LOCATION.
@skydizzle633 Жыл бұрын
@@sidehustlefinancedoes the florida pay rate for carpentry provide a good life with money after bills?
@joea3381 Жыл бұрын
Preach it, man. I'm leaving the trade myself because of low wages.. it barely pays rent. And it's freaking sad that I build houses for others but can't even afford to have my own
@zell863 Жыл бұрын
Carpenter and 60 in one month. Live in apartment. Built over 50 houses only in USA.
@NA-NCL2 Жыл бұрын
Same thing here.. i work in Germany as a Carpenter and the payment is nearly 2000-2500euro a month. My house rent costs 1300euro. It's mad how can a house cost so much money. And the payment is just enough to pay rent bills and food. Lets all open youtube/twitch and nobody should work.
@joea3381 Жыл бұрын
It's like a butcher not being able to afford meat
@Alex-kj2kq9 ай бұрын
Yea I’m leaning towards leaving. I’m the youngest one at every job I’m only 21 it’s sucks to see fast food and other jobs make a bit less. Yet we more work
@ashleyrun2113 жыл бұрын
I'm a 66 year old Carpenter and have always been busy. I have raised my rates to $ 60. an hour . to be a good carpenter doing residential work , you also need to know and understand the needs of the other trades. When my Mechanical tradesmen were telling me of their great importance , i reminded them that without the Carpenter they have no place to hang the pipe, run the wire or ductwork Remembe ALL WORK IS HONORABLE
@davetaitt15283 жыл бұрын
You are few and far between, and I'm sure you already know that.
@dabigisland13 жыл бұрын
You are correct, I have worked as an electrician and a carpenter. Both jobs are hard and they need each other.
@Colbychristie3 жыл бұрын
Only 60?
@bookreaderson3 жыл бұрын
As n hvac i conquere
@hi-tech553 жыл бұрын
I am 65 in the UK. Still up for it. I have never pitched myself as fast or slow. Good or bad does it for me every time. Horses for courses I say.
@YouAreAsleep Жыл бұрын
I tried to get into the trades. Getting in was impossible. I gave up after two years. Just taught myself what I needed to know by working on my Mom's house. Might not have been perfect. But I learned a lot. A real shame. Most people don't have time to just sit around and wait to be selected. The trades are losing a lot of good folks by being so restrictive.
@mishadoesthething Жыл бұрын
I agree, I learned a lot of what I know from my father and the rest from research and trial and error
@savage.4.24 Жыл бұрын
Learned alot from my father and grandfather cousins uncles we ran a ranch. Fixed our own roofs and put up fences. We built barns that stood in 100 mph winds....i got experience but 'im a woman'
@CarburetorThompson Жыл бұрын
My cousin just got into the plumber’s union after years of waiting, and his father has strong connections to the highway dept. If it was difficult for someone like him, it’s pretty much impossible for most
@keithbrown3875 Жыл бұрын
Let's be clear. You had trouble getting into a trade UNION not the trade itself. Anyone who is not afraid of doing the hard work can get a JOB in a trade craft. Then you turn that job into a CAREER and before you know you are a skilled craftsman.
@ajgraves8016 Жыл бұрын
@@keithbrown3875I was just about to say this
@chandruseneviratne97843 жыл бұрын
This is just my personal experience. I used to work as a carpenter's apprentice. I loved the actual work but I generally hated working with my foreman (not just one but multiple companies). I wasn't the best but I really wanted to learn at one point but getting yelled or insulted for almost every mistake you make along the way isn't fun. Yeah work isn't supposed to be "fun" but when you're lifting heavy materials all day in the sun having someone yell at you just makes it 10x worse. I left the construction industry and I will never look back
@jdizzle63243 жыл бұрын
Keep your head up dude. Ive quit so many framing jobs I lost count. I'm not going to work my ass of for you, making you money and be treated like shit. I promise, they all missed me. Its a rough crowd, stand your ground.
@thomaswhite30593 жыл бұрын
Okay real talk why shouldn't work, the thing we devote 50+ hours of our weeks to every week for 2/3rds of our life, be something we enjoy?
@stormreach12343 жыл бұрын
@@thomaswhite3059 True, that's kinda the whole point. Don't waste your life doing something that you'll get paid for but won't satisfy you. Especially in this day and age where skillsets are so specialized that it can be hard to switch paths once you're set; unless you purposely set yourself up for flexibility early on.
@chandruseneviratne97843 жыл бұрын
@@lab6895 $11 an hour? Jesus man. The only time I ever got "respected" on the job was when I confronted my foreman about his attitude. Just asked him if we had a problem and why he was being aggressive. The next couple of weeks were fine but still not a great feeling to have to do that on the job. Foreman have gotten mad at me for asking questions too, really dumb when you think about it. It's literally the only way you learn.
@werewolf43583 жыл бұрын
@delreydavid What a boomer ass take. There's a difference between being willing to work for a living and not letting someone treat you like you're less than human.
@isitwindy21 Жыл бұрын
I was a carpenter for over 20 years, I started my career in Oregon when I was a teenager. The pay was shit and the only way to demand more money at that time was to become a master level carpenter by learning basically everything but the older guys “gate kept” their knowledge out of fear of being replaced. I can’t even remember how many times I asked a journeyman to teach me how to build stairs on a jobsite just to be laughed at. Then one day the construction calculator was invented so I went out and bought one for like $100 which was alot of money for a kid back in the 90’s who was making $12 hr. But once I bought it I soon realized that I had no idea how to use it, but I knew if I studied the manual long enough Id get it. So I studied the manual every night for a couple hours and would build houses on paper and in my mind until my fictitious measurements and divisions would “pencil out” and I became confident enough to be able to tackle a project without embarrassing myself. As time went on I did a few stair cases and learned how to do hip and valley cuts on roofs until one day I asked my boss for a raise. After all I had learned I thought $5 was fair he offered $2 so I quit and moved to California and was immediately hired as a foreman making $25. I quickly realized that there were “good cities” and “bad cities” to work in as a carpenter and with that knowledge in hand I moved to many great cities on the west coast eventually moving to Hawaii, by the time I quit the industry I was in my early thirties, working 3-4 days a week and made 150k a year (which was barely getting by in Hawaii) my advice to apprentice carpenters is to not stay at any one company for too long, instead of waiting for a raise just apply at another shop and get that raise immediately. And also be willing to move where the money is. It doesn’t take a rocket surgeon to know that the pay in Honolulu is going to be considerably more attractive than the pay in Eugene Oregon
@jowo8862 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! This is motivational
@LenKirin Жыл бұрын
All the young people know to job hop every couple years to maximize earnings. It's the only way to diversify your experience and make the most out of any skill/trade.
@TheCarrShow Жыл бұрын
I'm an electrician and I learned very quickly that the easiest way to move up (get a raise, learn more, take on more responsibility) was to move on to another contractor. Right now I make $46.01/hr working on government contracts as a non-union sparky.
@purplegirl8036 Жыл бұрын
@@LenKirinyou only know because we told you 😂. We showed you how to do that trick.
@JRileyD Жыл бұрын
It's the difference between working with a union and working without. I don't like unions, but they definitely get you the pay you deserve.
@kevinsiggins623 Жыл бұрын
It seems like the quality of carpentry has gone down too for similar reasons. My house was built in 1959 and when I look at the framing in the attic everything fits together perfectly. My garage was built in 2016 and there’s massive gaps, especially anywhere that involves an angled cut. I think a big part of that is because we prioritize cutting costs via labor which pressures workers to rush rather than take the time to do things right.
@davidcurtis5398 Жыл бұрын
To a lot of companies it is speed and not quality that counts. Many years ago my father had lots he wanted to sell and no bank would give a mortgage on an empty lot. He hired a company to build houses on each lot (one at a time) and in the contract he stated that the construction was to be to his satisfaction. Each evening he went to the house and checked that the walls were plumb, straight, and all work was top notch. Several times he had to halt the job to have the carpenters remake an un-square wall or have them tear a wall down because the timbers were all over the place.
@Rust_Rust_Rust Жыл бұрын
You can thank the customers for that. They want cheap quick labor. Good labor is not cheap and it's not quick.
@bobbyhillthuglife Жыл бұрын
The thing with angled cuts is, and i'm not being sarcastic here, this is a real issue: most carpenters can't do basic trigonometry and mess up the angles.
@alexsmith-ob3lu Жыл бұрын
Aside from some community colleges and trade schools that still give trade certificate training. There is no where else to properly learn the hands on and theory needed for a skilled trade. So a lot of younger guys have no choice but “eye ball” everything and assume it’s gonna work.
@davidcurtis5398 Жыл бұрын
@@alexsmith-ob3lu There are many trade schools that train people in the trades. My son went to a 3 semester school and now after 10 years out he is making just short of 100 thousand dollars. Or try to find a good independent carpenter and app with him. The other way is to find a union program that you like in electrical, plumbing, carpentry, or any other trade and go through their schooling. A person willing to work hard in the trades now can make a great living.
@patoneill37083 жыл бұрын
I’m 26 and have been working for a local custom builder for 2 years. There is no formal training for carpentry in my area like hvac and plumbing. The carpenters I work with have little patience and are very proud. There is little incentive for builders and carpenters to train a rookie they just want to finish the job as efficiently as possible and start the next one.
@artguti15513 жыл бұрын
That's true...my uncle use to yell at us novices with we were learning..."You're costing me money" by being a bit slower to finish a job. Not a good leader or helpful in for a young rookie to stay in the field!
@merkinyall3 жыл бұрын
Fake it til you make it. That’s the training method. I’m a framer and I get new guys that stick around every once in a while. These jobs aren’t for everyone. Only the stubborn survive
@tommak65163 жыл бұрын
@@merkinyall "Fake It" on a construction job? I wonder if you ever have been on a construction job (might work on a union featherbedding job).
@merkinyall3 жыл бұрын
@@tommak6516 oh boy. That’s a popular phrase in the industry. I’ve been building custom homes for over 25 years. Not union.
@tommak65163 жыл бұрын
@@merkinyall The popular phrase I am familiar with on constructions sites is not 'Fake it' but 'F*ck it'.
@caseconstruction24593 жыл бұрын
As a 22 year old independent carpenter, electrician, handyman, etc. I work everyday with 2/3 people who are 45+ years old, and have kids my age. This video was very accurate.
@eazysaidit_didit25893 жыл бұрын
Good shit bro , get to that bag 👍🏽👍🏽
@Babbycomebackk3 жыл бұрын
I feel you bro. Im 21 years old and i hardly ever see anyone my age in the trade.
@anthonystallworth4743 жыл бұрын
@@Babbycomebackk 23 & majority guys I work with have been doing it since before i was born ha,
@SinnisjInsulator3 жыл бұрын
I'm a 33 year old insulator, mostly work in attics so I can relate to hard work, good luck to you all.
@draxxx_exe3 жыл бұрын
I’m 27 and I’m right there with ya boss
@tb5985 Жыл бұрын
Dude… this video is spot on, you’ve got a new subscriber now… I’m 38yrs old, got out of carpentry bc of the 08’ recession. Sold my soul to a local factory that’s been in business for over a 100yrs. I now do “handyman stuff” on the side and could damn near go full time and have less than 50-100 clients. When my 11yr old son helps me out I tell him “be an electrician”. Crazy accurate video, well done sir!!! Well done!!
@tilemaster20003 жыл бұрын
Im 61 and have been in the trades since age 20. I have had people ask so many times " you want how much ?" Yet they sit behind a computer and make three times the amount.
@JohnQPublic3453 жыл бұрын
Human nature. I'm proud to say "yep...that much." ...now, after 3 decades of experience
@luckyrockmore27963 жыл бұрын
They can go do it their selves then! 👍👍
@izgizgiugiugihizvizgihvkvi20993 жыл бұрын
You are absolutely right sir! What can you do, media tells the young kids that everybody can be a rap star and make millions.....
@ratj47153 жыл бұрын
And think they got it so much worse than you. They wouldn’t last a week.
@Suicidekings_3 жыл бұрын
I just tell them "skilled labor isn't cheap, and cheap labor isn't skilled. Hire a cheap tradesmen, but remember, I charge double to fix someone else's mistakes".
@randywilliams8473 жыл бұрын
As an old guy of 76 who raised five kids on a carpenter’s wages… you are right on. After pounding nails for twenty years I had an opportunity to sell houses instead of building them. Fifteen years later I was able to retire comfortably. I loved carpentry but was constantly broke and sometimes on food stamps.
@thomaswhigham56103 жыл бұрын
Happy for you Randy !
@wtfwtfomfg3 жыл бұрын
Surprised a 76 y/o is on youtube...
@KaoruGoyle3 жыл бұрын
@@wtfwtfomfg why tho? My grann is 83 and she whatsapp me, shares pics, is on facebook, and uses youtube, wouldn't put past her to comment in a video if she was interested.
@Phatboy4143 жыл бұрын
What did you do to sell Houses?
@bvnseven3 жыл бұрын
It's not Skilled Labor's Fault, it's the fault of the greedy business owners. If skilled trades professionals were paid what they are truly worth as opposed to the owners who Think they are worth more, you wouldn't have a shortage of good labor. Besides, in a shorter time than you think, skilled labor/DIYers will be a thing of the past. Then you will be stuck with JUNK for a price that only the rich can afford. It has already started.
@thesolarsailor3 жыл бұрын
I am one of those that got out of construction in 2008, bankrupt & depressed. Went into facilities management where I use all the skills I learned along the way, don't have to deal with homeowners and make double the salary with benefits...I strongly agree that we need to bring the trades in parity standard of living wise & reintroduce them in shcool.
@tramenari3 жыл бұрын
What does a facility manager do?
@tallswede803 жыл бұрын
yes, what does a facility manager do?
@M.TTT.3 жыл бұрын
@@tramenari manage facilities
@Joseph-XRP Жыл бұрын
A facility manager, manages a facility.
@IRLlosersQ Жыл бұрын
Here in France, trades are making a huge come back. I think people realized that most degrees aren't the "guaranteed job" tickets they maybe used to be. Meanwhile trades demand is sky high, pays well, and there are plenty of people hiring. My cousins became carpenter and plumber and they're making bank and love their job lol. I hope that 2 years after you made this video, something similar is happening in the US... And that your ol knee is doing okay too!
@Brutaga3 жыл бұрын
I am from New Zealand and I trained as a carpenter. During the earthquake that hit Christchurch, the shortage of carpenters became very apparent, so I went back into building. Moreover my son came with me and became an apprentice carpenter. He is now qualified and I have retired. The reasons for there being a shortage is simply because carpenters are not appreciated and undervalued.
@IroncladIndustrial3 жыл бұрын
In 1989 I was making $15 per hour as a framer/carpenter. A couple of weeks ago I saw an ad in the local newspaper for framers- $15-$24 per hour depending on experience. The cost of housing here in North Idaho is 8-10 times more than in 1989. I agree with you Honest Carpenter, we are undervalued. I’m 62 now and I still take on a few small jobs, but I tell young people to become an electrician, plumber or hvac guy.
@thomasalison61883 жыл бұрын
What a rip off, offer $15.00 - $24.00/hr for experienced carpenters?! Then he will complain about he can't find any help, everyone is too lazy, Gawd!
@landoncrosby3 жыл бұрын
I spent the last 10 years watching wages evaporate from 45$/hr(10 years ago) to now 25$/hr as I have worked towards becoming a carpenter, now there are no carpenters just labourers doing carpentry. Its a real problem when you actually want to be a carpenter
@landoncrosby3 жыл бұрын
@@thomasalison6188 story of my life
@TheChainStay3 жыл бұрын
FYI, $15 a hour in 1989 is $31.82 in todays money (2021). Worse, as you said, housing is way more, healthcare is way more. So is anyone wondering why there aren't any more carpenters? Because people are getting underpaid more often than not.
@stillness46103 жыл бұрын
When balconies, etc. start caving in, a lot of people will ask for carpenters and will be given directions to purchase a hammer, nails and a hardhat with a "good luck 👍" instead.
@jodywhitehead91733 жыл бұрын
A good carpenter makes every other trades life easier. Poor ones create nightmares.
@QuantumMech_883 жыл бұрын
@Jody Whitehead - Said perfectly .
@TheHonestCarpenter3 жыл бұрын
So true, Jody. Ask any plumber who’s found a joist right beneath a toilet flange location 😬
@tootall55593 жыл бұрын
@@TheHonestCarpenter when I started contracting my first job was to correct all the things some bozo did to a sweet lady's house. Whoever it was had no idea what he was doing. The idiot did things like cutting the nailing flanges off custom made windows. the joists were all under size, and not on 16 inch centers. His idea for fixing a leak in the garage was to puit up sheets of thin plywood and caulk the edges. I could go on, but just say it was such a mess it cost more to undo than it would have cost to do it all right in the first place. I could not do much about the widows with the nailing flanges cut off, all I could do was seal around them and put on tight fitting trim. (the lady didn't want to pay for custom fit windows all over again, and I don't blame her.)
@losferwords1003 жыл бұрын
@@TheHonestCarpenter Plumber here, we deal with that all the time. Most framers are terrible; crooked studs, twisted floor joists, every hole you drill you hit nails, etc. The difference it makes when you get good framers vs. bad framers is night and day. We did a house about a month ago and the framer actually moved the joist over a few inches because he knew the toilet was going there. I've never seen a framer actually do that before and look out for the plumber like that compared to the house we're doing now which had terrible framers and the joists were dead center where the toilet flanges had to go... on all 3 toilets in the house. The framers were still on site finishing up so we ripped them good. Of course, all we got out of them was 'no habla ingles'.
@tzk1213 жыл бұрын
Very true, I run into that issue a lot.
@arisoninc Жыл бұрын
There's been a labor shortage since 2010; one of the reasons I got out of the business. I lost tens of thousands in contracts because I couldn't get the job done quickly enough.
@ZybakTV3 жыл бұрын
Welder here. I specifically got into Welding due to the shortage. It was a great investment because I have a pretty good paying job and only went to school for one semester. My current company is having a really hard time hiring and keeping welders on board. The reality is they're just going to have to pay us more if they want to keep people. It's not a bad job but we certainly do work. Finding someone willing to actually bust ass when needed is a shortage in itself much less the welding part.
@troygarza57203 жыл бұрын
The drug test for weed is what's real killing the industry more than anything tech industries and other places don't test for weed abs you know what I know of your in the building trades. Meth and cocaine use is worse than weed because of that. And yeah I to took a welding trade school. And I don't mind working my ass of issue is if I'm not smoking weed or one pharmaceuticals for bipolar (their expensive around 1500$ a month) I get violent easily. So I'd rather be free and pour than risk my freedom from a job.
@jonathangarzon27983 жыл бұрын
@@troygarza5720 yeah no I don't think weed should be illegal but you show up intoxicated to a shop running heavy tools and none wants you around. You're a liability
@jdh0233 жыл бұрын
@@troygarza5720 Fact is doesn't matter what you think. It's what the guy writing the check says. If you don't like...start your own business and things your way. That is BUSINESS with alot of other people to consider.
@cjhebert943 жыл бұрын
GC (Non-union)I work with a plumber who's been looking for an experienced plumber for a year. No dice.
@troygarza57203 жыл бұрын
@@jonathangarzon2798 first you're assuming that what I'm doing on my free time is carrying over to work. Second the united States military gives drugs and stimulates to it's soldiers while deployed this includes downers and uppers just saying. Third you say that your against weed but let's be honest cocaine and meth use are rampant because of how fast they leave the system. Witch is probably more dangerous a guy been up for two days on meth because he can still pass that test or a dude who was high the night before went to sleep and got up sober?
@DEADMOOSE233 жыл бұрын
I have been a carpenter my entire career. I am 28 and there's a lot of factors to the problem facing the industry. the older guys leading crews have a real issue that's hard to navigate. they need young guys but they want to pay you poorly because you are "less experienced" but the reality is we are in high demand. pay isn't just skill based. its also necessity based. if you want young carpenters you need to make the job desirable and profitable. most importantly you need to value them. the attitude in carpentry is that young men haven't "paid their dues". this short sighted attitude is why you have 70 year old men on there hands and knees. if you want young guys you need to treat them well. because its no longer the economy of working for one company your whole life. people my age are not afraid to jump jobs for more money or a better situation. the problem here is almost entirely the employers. I hope they can rethink there ways before it really hurts the entire country.
@anonnine99943 жыл бұрын
Its the employers issue because competition isn't always good for an industry. Once you start trying to bid for jobs and you get outbid by somebody who is willing to give up all his profits then you have to make decisions on where you take the profit from. First it will be the materials, then the tools, then its your employees. The entire construction industry, at least from what I've seen in the areas I've lived in America, is way past the materials and the tools and is deep in shorting the employee base. It only gets worse when you start looking at states that dont require licensing. Its ultra bad when you're either remodeling or you are the last part of the house when the owner starts to pinch pennies. I've moved on though now and I'll never look back.
@my2cents493 жыл бұрын
@@anonnine9994 they're going to pay for it eventually. If they don't wise up to the fact that paying tradesmen poverty wages is a real life problem (especially since many jobs or trade schools won't touch a trainee below the age of 18 anymore), they're going to look up one day and realize there isn't anyone left to do it, then all those people living in big houses or paying bottom dollar on work needed in their office buildings are going to be confused as to why there's no one to call. I used to wonder why there were so many shoddy carpenters and independent tradesmen out there, until one day someone told me that if they stayed around long enough to do the job the way it needs to be done, they wouldn't be able to get enough work in to feed themselves because the clients don't want to pay them what they're worth, even though some of these skills are built over a decade or more rather than plowing through a 4-year degree... Changed my whole perspective on it.
@anonnine99943 жыл бұрын
@@my2cents49 oh I 100% agree with you. I told a client one time that me and my father were artists in the work that we do. They laughed and said yeah you all do amazing work for sure and then I said but what do all artists have in common? They starve. The prices that we were having to compete with were so low that it wasn't feasible to even try. Its become more and more of an issue in almost every field outside of major degrees and even those are adding on masters and doctorates to degrees that used to be associates and bachelors. Its a multitude of issues that have built up over time and we see where they are going. Look at China and its buildings that have collapsed on people because cutting corners is how you put up stuff fast.
@bboobb11223344553 жыл бұрын
I’ve been in concrete construction for almost 40 years, and what you describe I partially agree with. Do we need the “young guys”? Sure, us old guys can’t do what we use to. So the hopes are, they can take our place and be what we once were. Problem I see……the young guys can’t even keep up with the old guys, much less do what we did in our past. There just seems to be a lack of heart, grit, pride of working a hard days work. It’s too cold, it’s too hot, why do I have to work overtime? What? You want more money, but won’t work for time and a half? We pay well, $18 for labourers, to start. 28 for carpenters 34 for rod busters. And don’t walk up to me with a hammer and some nails in your pocket and say your a carpenter, most of these young guys don’t even know what a carpenter is. My experience is, as the pay goes up for most of the young guys, the less they show up. Seems they just want that certain amount of money a week and they’ll show up that many hours a week to get it, that’s all
@DEADMOOSE233 жыл бұрын
@@bboobb1122334455 despite what you think the pay is average and not at all enticing or anything to hold over someone's head. When adjusted for inflation it's much less then you made when you were in your youth. I'm sorry if you were convinced it's normal to work more than 40 hours to make ends meet but it isn't. 40 hours should enable a person to start a family and buy a house. Like people did in your youth. The truth is you don't realize how much inflation has left wages in the past and you think "these wages are good enough you're just not motivated". That's not going to cut it and that sort of thinking serves only to help you sleep at night.
@Cruzer9090 Жыл бұрын
As a veteran carpenter in Canada, you just summed up my conversation with every client I’ve ever had. We too are tradesppl and deserve as much respect/ money as any other trade. Our scope of knowledge is so much greater than other trades and yet we are the dogs of the industry. Our kids may see the rewards but at 56 I’m doubting Ill see it in my life. Great video !
@DioTheGreatOne Жыл бұрын
Blame the smug urban elites for demonizing and dehumanizing trade jobs while at the same time worshipping higher education.
@Andrew-qc8jh Жыл бұрын
having worked on a few large jobs when I was an apprentice electrician. The job from my outside perspective was that it is a bit mundane and repetitive. Does that mean carpentry as a whole is? No. I even left a comment earlier that if I was exposed to the more craftsmen side of carpentry when I was younger. I might have considered taking up the craft. As out of all the trades, to me. Being a carpenter allows one to have much more fun with the skill set outside of the job for personal projects then plumbing, electrical, or of course elevator work.
@averyrushing1103 Жыл бұрын
I'll be real it's time for everyone to move on, let the robots fuck up so bad they need us
@edwardskeyara Жыл бұрын
If you let that happen there will be no recovery. I can't find any teachers and I'm balling on a budget. I'm just graduating as an mechanical engineer for a paycheck, i dont even have a job yet. But but trades are my passion. The only option I have is KZbin. Right now but years down the line I might be able to learn. Now imagine the people who don't have a degree making no money minimum wage, the same passion. When all the masters die from old age its just gone all the knowledge. Theirs only so much you can learn from videos and books. Not to mention the "common sense" that years of experience only gives.The robots take over and eventually fail decades down the line there is no repository, it's all been made redundant by robots.
@iron-farmer Жыл бұрын
The carpenters scope of knowledge? Lol what drywalling or setting concrete forms? U can teach a 20yr to do that in like a week
@ryanmccabe10363 жыл бұрын
You know, everyone says there's a labor shortage, but try getting a job fresh out of trade school right now. No one's hiring welders unless you've got 5 years experience.
@sicknastydabdab27113 жыл бұрын
Apply anyway. Lie if you can
@thegodyiestjg73833 жыл бұрын
this world is nuts not trying to train people dumbass!
@benaldo1383 жыл бұрын
Carpentry isn't welding...
@AmericanTestConstitution3 жыл бұрын
Shipyards will hire
@eribertososa51563 жыл бұрын
Why would you hire someone who doesn’t know what they’re doing that’s why you become an apprentice smh ......
@missleemarie33 жыл бұрын
As an older millennial, all of my classmates in highschool were pushed to do math and science and computer sciences. So, not being told about trade work probably hasnt helped the industry.
@Fabianwew3 жыл бұрын
If there were more people in the trades they would be complaining about even lower wages. Why work twice as hard for half the pay?
@SilverDragonEyess3 жыл бұрын
Getting into programming before 2013 was a way better choice than the trades. It's now over saturated and all the big paying positions are for people sitting on that 8 years + experience
@spaghettimonter133 жыл бұрын
As a 27 year old carpenter with very high functioning autism that most people do not pick up on unless I spend significant amount of time with them I really lucked out when I was able to go to a high school trade program that taught carpentry. It wasn't however when I was actually in high school but when I got sent over to a specialist autism program that teaches autistic people how to be more self-reliant. I owe that program everything and I owe my high school absolutely nothing
@thechops20003 жыл бұрын
I don’t know about other states around the country, but in my city they removed all technical programs from schools. Wood shop, auto mechanics, welding, everything. Some are available at an offsite location, but you have to apply for (a year in advance) and be approved for the program, so not many kids make it in. Both my son & daughter were very surprised they used to have these classes available, and wanted to take auto mechanics, but there was no room in the program. They instead had to take a bunch of BS classes (in my opinion) that gave them zero life skills. I took auto mechanics in high school along with wood shop. I do all of my own home repairs (some major) and I can still change the brakes on my car. Invaluable.
@miguelcastaneda72363 жыл бұрын
@@SilverDragonEyess i laugh at you push button boys know nothing tool geometry besides what a brochure says.. or diffearances in material..or machine reapair..or manual machine mill..lathe..surface grinder
@TheBestYouthWrestlingVideos3 жыл бұрын
Ex framer here with 25 + years and it is mind boggling people would want to pay you $20/hr to cut up a $30,000 pile of lumber 3 times a week and carry it on your shoulder and nail it all together(1st floor, 2nd floor, roof) with ZERO margin for error.
@bagelgeuse5736 Жыл бұрын
I'm a young guy who went to trade school for HVAC and worked in the field for about a year and a half. When I worked in the field I noticed that guys were making maybe a third at most of what they were charging hourly because of things like insurance costs, tool costs, and the amount of time you were driving as opposed to actually making money. This meant the only way to reliably make a ton was to start a business. Because of my physique (5'8" and 110 lbs) I physically cannot do most labor intensive jobs like furnace installs, condenser swaps, or attic ductwork myself so that makes it nearly impossible for me to start an HVAC business. I realized pretty quickly that if I wanted to make a lot of money I had no choice other than a 4 year degree so I got out of HVAC. The reality is it's orders of magnitude easier for me to make money with a degree than in the trades so I got out.
@davidwilson28012 жыл бұрын
Your assessment is spot on. I started in trades as a teenager, but soon learned that I was paid twice as much in landscape and trucking. I still learned the trades from some of the best I found ( I worked part time for them) . To this day I use it for myself and some friends but you are correct why get paid so little and get old fast, I make more doing less...strange. Carpentry is really underrated until a good one is needed. Many ask me , "could you blah for me?" Answer, "You can't afford me, I make too much at my job." Sorry, money talks...
@RayRayGrt3 жыл бұрын
36 year old carpenter here who feels like they just listened to themselves in your video. Thank you. Recently gave up my carpentry business to study and become a Florida state general contractor. You literally hit every nail on the head.
@thomaspayne1303 жыл бұрын
I learned carpentry from my father THERE IS ALOT TO LEARN !! YES WE ARE A DYING BREED THESE YOUNG KIDS JUST DON'T WANT TO LEARN ITS A DARNED SHAME THAT I DON'T HAVE ANYONE TO PASS MY 44 + YEARS TO PASS ON TO SOMEONE ELSE, I BUILT MY 1ST HOUSE @ 16 LOVED IT @ THE END OF EACH DAY!!!!
@UnknownUser.ar13 жыл бұрын
I honestly think carpentry is going extinct becuase there are better alternatives. In my country we dislike wood becuase it can’t resist moisture and it attracts small animals. In my country we only use carpenters for interior doors but recently we have started to use plastic interior doors (PVC) and it’s made by machines. We use cement for footings, columns, slabs and walls. And the rest is similar between us like electricity, plumbing and paints. I think the problem with carpenters is that they are associated with one material and not with their skills. For example, plumbers don’t care what new materials come to market from copper to plastic. Also, plumbing can’t be automated by machines because it’s highly personalized and customized. I really wish that US parents ask their kids to continue seek engineering, IT and finance jobs. Becuase these city-based engineering kids are the ones who are inventing these machines to make carpenters and other jobs go extinct. So they deserve the social and economical benefits. Love from Macca. 🤷♂️♥️
@remlya3 жыл бұрын
He didn’t hit any nails in the video. It was him talking. It makes no sense to say he literally hit every nail. That’s just an expression, it’s not literal.
@francismarion64003 жыл бұрын
@@UnknownUser.ar1 Plastics are becoming more expensive than wood and come from oil, which the Global Communists want to end.
@UnknownUser.ar13 жыл бұрын
@@francismarion6400 Plastics are irriplralacble now. Scientist are working to produce a liquid that degrade plastics. Don’t follow too much nonsense, there are people who just want to spread fears.
@Poverty_Welder3 жыл бұрын
There is an other reason, when i was working construction i was only getting paid 12 dollars an hour plus getting yelled at constantly. most people just don't want dehumanizing jobs.
@chieftigmos40183 жыл бұрын
when I was in the millwright union it was the same thing. apprentices are treating like garbage. one of the reasons I just walked in and quit one day.
@dieabsolutegluckskuche51743 жыл бұрын
Yeah, the rough tone killed me.
@Lurkingxx3 жыл бұрын
Y’all are just wusses you’re a apprentice just a glorified hand. Just suck it up do your job and get raises
@jacobrael98723 жыл бұрын
@@Lurkingxx lmao people like you are a really big reason rhe trades can't find labor, it not about being a wuss it's about knowing you don't need to put up with being disrespected
@shenanigansofmannanan3 жыл бұрын
@@jacobrael9872 just like an clueless FNG.... shows up knowing nothing, messing shit up and causing more work for the journeymen to repair, and can't follow simple directions if "the tone" isn't how mommy talks to him..... and you kids think you are a somehow entitled to the respect of Men.... quit your bitching and get something respectable accomplished and you'll actually earn some respect 🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂😂🤣 just because your mommy thinks you're talented don't make you shit on a jobsite of experienced men
@andrewkuebler4335 Жыл бұрын
Summer 2023, can confirm, the trades are still hemorrhaging. No hope in sight, companies still refuse to pay workers real wages. Company I used to work for signed a contract with homebuilders to install equipment in thousands of new homes, while just the previous year they didn't even get all of their scheduled maintenances done due to lack of technicians. Several new trainees left just months after joining for better paying jobs, or to go back to school. I left after they wanted to add more responsibilities to me for an amazing, wait for it, $1 raise. Guaranteed long hours, terrible benefits, and ever worsening weather. Unless you have a good union in your area, which is rare in the states, the trades just aren't worth it for young adults.
@Caesar-nq5if Жыл бұрын
Nothing is worth it in America. The medical system is all surgeries and pills( no cures) The arts are poisonous and college is expensive. Engineering jobs are few and far between. Having a 150 IQ in America and having to stack boxes is miserable. The taxes and inflation are never ending and always rising. America is a dead corpse of what European men built and left for us. Now the communist empire will begin and total slavery will ensue. I pray for America to end. God wipe this hell from the earth
@kaptivatingstudios6762 жыл бұрын
25 yo male here. Just recently went into carpentry to do all sorts of stuff, siding, framing, roofing, trim work, fine woodworking on the side. I found the biggest problem is training and trust. Speed is only so much if you don’t know what to do yet. Training programs are kind of sorely missing and carpenter unions seem like old boys clubs for younger folks. The older guys complain about the young ones but won’t teach, be patient or give visions of projects and then complain about slowness or bad work. I love building stuff. I like knowing I have made a shelter or an aesthetically pleasing object and doing the rough and tumble is fun. But some older carpenters seem to have no patience for the nuances of rough carpentry versus a fine woodworker and things like that. I want to keep doing it but the pay and just lack of making the labor less difficult in whatever way possible is detrimental to the trade, I.e moving 20 bundles of shingles by hand 100 yards instead of using a tool or cart or something to reduce fatigue and wear but it’s not “manly” to do those things
@awookiefromendor Жыл бұрын
Yeah they expect you to know stuff without any training. I was a laborer and I would tell off my company all the time about how they are dumb and incompetent. I hope they enjoyed the 3 thousand in damages I caused because they were to cheap to train me.
@sigurdtheblue Жыл бұрын
I am enthusiastic about farming because it is a vital part of existence, just like carpentry, but even the holistic and spiritual people in it can be slave drivers. Then again, there is no money/budget in pure farming. There are tons of volunteer opportunities too, but I fear there will be no difference in the expectations of work. The main way to survive in farming is internships which give food and housing to some extent. There still is not much of a logical way to survive the industrial era of farming using hand techniques, in terms of profit. It feels like everything needs the Internet to supplement it. I want to change the culture around farming to lose the "hard work" reputation while not relying on industrial machines. But my family really makes it impossible. I may be a genius through training and capable of developing further, but I feel like my parents are my enemies while I also feel hopelessly dependent.
@viralencore85 Жыл бұрын
The funny thing about what you said about something not being “manly” happens all the time on a work site, but those old hypocrites will also tell you to work smarter not harder. I don’t miss trade work at all.
@CheezMonsterCrazy Жыл бұрын
@@awookiefromendor This is an issue with the labor market in general these days. Everyone expects to get a fully trained, fully compliant worker with no relevant experience so they can pay them less. Its unrealistic. But training costs time and money, so they throw you to the wolves instead. Not willing to pay for experience, and not willing to pay to train the inexperienced.
@bluefish4999 Жыл бұрын
It was the opposite for me, always had the old men telling me - "take care of yer back you only have one" my reply - "yeah whatever old man", yeah those words come back to haunt me now that I'm older. Problem with young people is - they think they know everything - and I'm saying this for any generation, however in tougher jobs you have shop talk, otherwise, you can learn what the old men know but your going to take some shit to get it, its called tough love, and I guess the days before you could sit around all day in air conditioning in your underwear playing video games or on the internet, that tough love went a long way. Learn the trade and start your own business, if you walk into a job and just drone out you go nowhere, learning how much materials cost and how to price a job is where the money is, and believe me the trade industry has a lot of people that know what they're doing but can't price a job.
@kurainoneko23 жыл бұрын
It all starts with a kid holding a flashlight, when you learn some manual labor not only are you a step closer to be self sufficient but also learn to appreciate someone else's labor, and pay what is worth. Too many confortable people that can't change a light bulb to save their life, will forever be thankful with my dad that put me on flashlight duty when I still had to hold it with both hands and mom that always encouraged and appreciated the little thing one can do around the house.
@justinallen24083 жыл бұрын
Ahhh the great and false blame the young people bullshit cx it's hilarious that so many blame young people for an education that they didn't get.
@yuuzang3 жыл бұрын
Im 29 and as a kid i used to get dragged by my gramps to almost every job he did during the summer. Hated it then, but looking at it now, everything i learned by helping him was worth it. Sadly though my joints are going south on me already.
@SSStevie3 жыл бұрын
I never really had a dad that taught me anything like that and I was pretty void of male figures throughout my childhood, as soon as I got old enough to do something I went to get a tade apprenticeship I got told my hands were too soft and I never wanted to do a trade ever since
@MediHusky3 жыл бұрын
In my area "welder wanted, at least 5 years experience, red seal, 18$/h" same job posting probably also has "please provide your own argon and o2 as well as materials needed for various client projects. Please provide a shop or garage also. And clients"
@euphoricfantasy23383 жыл бұрын
under paid
@KkevrockK3 жыл бұрын
Lol 18 for a red seal, red seal means you can work anywhere in North America and no matter what trade that’s at least 40.
@MediHusky3 жыл бұрын
@@KkevrockK I'm exaggerating but not by much.
@mimi1girl2dempsey33 жыл бұрын
When I was a welder, a friend of a friend was looking for a part time welder for his company. A few evenings and Saturdays. I called him up and he offered me $15 an hour contractor pay. Are you well?????
@RedboneUnincorporated3 жыл бұрын
laughable, that's $30/hour minimum.
@projectkamikaze1325 Жыл бұрын
I really think the shortage is due to the ‘live to work attitude’ & toxic workplace. I’ve seen apprentices get dropped for the stupidest of things to the point of just journeyman not liking them. I feel like all that has to change.
@user-zu5do6ri6r Жыл бұрын
It's a trade. We aren't friends. You have to be good enough to make up for the people not liking you.
@wmpx34 Жыл бұрын
@@user-zu5do6ri6rFor $25 an hour? Fuck that, you can make that driving a forklift and wearing headphones all day not dealing with salty fucks
@pinesandtraplines Жыл бұрын
@user-zu5do6ri6r The issue is gatekeeping. There are people who arent given a proper chance to learn the skills, and so they cant get good enough. If someone isnt given the chance to learn properly, then youre creating your own issue of a labor shortage.
@Exspazament Жыл бұрын
@@pinesandtraplinesbasically our whole society in a nut shell. Everything you can learn is hidden behind a gatekeeper or a fucking pay wall.
@MeloncholyKay Жыл бұрын
@@user-zu5do6ri6ryeah that’s why no one likes tradies. Die alone
@annasbanana7293 жыл бұрын
My father is 62 and honestly one of the greatest carpenters alive. Started in a specialty cabinet shop in highschool taught by oldtimers with all hand tools. Became a jouneyman later as a carpenter building homes in monterrey area then resorts in Tahoe and traveling around fulltime building. Later became a contractor doing concrete, plumbing, electrical , framing, you name it. Today he supervises construction for the state but he runs side jobs all the time doing custom cabinetry and addons ect. It's amazing how he literally knows everything.
@chrishayes57553 жыл бұрын
that's what I wanna do. I only know roofing at this point. gonna be a long road..
@charlesberry48933 жыл бұрын
I try to tell people a real carpenter does and knows what your father does but at 20-40 bucks an hour in Missouri it's not worth the physical and mental that comes with the job. Your dad is tough as nails and has my full respect to be going still
@-reydensetsu-60673 жыл бұрын
As a 22yr old who has been taught carpentry very young. I can tell you that i have only ever met a very few amount of people my age. I've always been the youngest in any company I've worked for. I hated it at first, but i thank my father now for teaching me how to survive.
@frosty_cupp48853 жыл бұрын
Nice profile , I go to a trade school for welding but man I wish knew more of carpentry.
@TheoSmith2493 жыл бұрын
You have a father with wisdom! You will prosper.
@michaellandry22273 жыл бұрын
Ah, my father was a great carpenter and a talented teacher. I learned a lot from him but I preferred to run with my friends and missed out on a lot. I've used what he and guys he used to work with taught me, but I sure could have learned much, much more.
@Miracleman2273 жыл бұрын
Your not alone I'm pushing 23 years old and I have learned to well, learn everyting to do with crafts. Stuff like carpentry, welding, masonry, plumbing, and even cutting edge computer stuff like CNC and 3D CAD designing will never become useless skills and never go out of style. Companies love to know when you spread out your knowledge to different styles of building, fixing and creating things. Glad to see there's more of us young guys out there doing this stuff.
@carminedecicco17533 жыл бұрын
As a 74 year old “perfectionist “ carpenter ( ….still working in the field … ) I absolutely agree with you …. and I APPLAUD you….for every word and sentiment in your video !!! I charge ALMOST what I think I’m actually worth , and my clients get great value for what I’m paid …. that’s why I’ve always had a “word-of-mouth “ waiting list . …very impressed with you and your channel …. kudos to your parents too … looks like they’ve done a great job .
@motim923 жыл бұрын
If there is a waiting list, then you don't quite charge as much as you are worth.
@stevelundt64983 жыл бұрын
Nothing a 3D printer can't do and if your taliking about being a perfectionist you can't get anymore perfect that a 3D printer!!
@SergeantSquared3 жыл бұрын
@@stevelundt6498 *yes you can.*
@rjay70193 жыл бұрын
My friend has 40 year's experience in carpentry and cabinets he can do amazing things with scrap's. But people balk at paying him $15 hr. Yet they're not worried about the burger flipper's which takes little skill $15 hr.
@themonkeyhand3 жыл бұрын
@@rjay7019 I'm fine paying a burger flipper $15 a hour. If they're worth any salt they're certainly worth a wage that can provide a roof over their head. Besides, they're making the food I put in my mouth. I want them to be able to afford soap and taking off a day when sick. Not sure why you'd hold down a burger flipper because your friend can't negotiate rates with people probably too cheap to pay a burger flipper $15 a hour.
@Wierdcrap Жыл бұрын
Man I had the luxury of working with a master carpenter but I only did for 6 months. I never had much chance to work with him since my role at our place was a assistant to hvac. 63 years old this man was and 64 now since that was last year. And man no one worked harder than him but man when he got to work. Pure art. Never got mad at how bad I did something and always showed me how easy mistakes were to fix and properly fix, not some half ass shit. He’s been a carpenter all his life. Possible one of the best. Made his whole kitchen and would correct work when he was building his home and hired framers. Danny you’re the best man
@crosses1013 жыл бұрын
Not just carpenters, ALL manual labor skill trades. Especially something as Technical as such.
@Nikletheman3 жыл бұрын
yeah but in a year or less, you can hire those new wall climbers that just keep coming ...
@crosses1013 жыл бұрын
@@Nikletheman My friend even even here in south Florida we have a shortage of low voltage techs that actually want to work. Even if u pay them what they ask for. Especially since the government currently pays them more to stay home than what most small businesses can pay them. Society frowns too much upon people who do manual labor and gives too much praise to brown nosing office workers.
@noirto23 жыл бұрын
getting into a job that can bankrupt you with medical debt isn't what most people would consider a good idea, and the more careful you are, the more likely you are going to get fired for going too slow.
@csmlyly57363 жыл бұрын
Carpenters are only useful to people who can afford homes anyway. Is it really a big deal for a rare industry to have a rare workforce?
@crosses1013 жыл бұрын
@@noirto2 Hence why he said not to charge per hour and to just charge for the project. That's also how I prefer to work as well, I hate per hour pay.
@mikec.43432 жыл бұрын
I graduated trade school in '84 as a machinist. The year I graduated landscaping companies were paying more money to push a lawnmower than any machine shop job I could find. Not only was I expected to know my job, it was also expected that I walk in the door with thousands of dollars worth of my own precision tools. As each shop folded, I had to take a new job that paid less. I delt with that cr@p for a decade. Finally smartened up. Went back to school, got a business degree and sold all my tools. Now I'm a buyer, sourcing machined parts from China. I make 4x the money I ever made as a machinist and ya, I get to waste several hours a day watching KZbin videos. I do tour domestic shops occasionally and I laugh when the foreman tells me he can't find any young machinists!
@ia46872 жыл бұрын
Sales is where the money is at.
@dantheman19982 жыл бұрын
I'm looking to get into Machinist trades because I love metal work and CNC machining and want to be a CNC programmer but all I hear is horror stories like this. I'm joining the Air force to learn the trade but I'm worried that when I get out, there going to to offer me like...$30 an hour. I just can't see this type of pay for the amount of skill and ONJ training to be sustainable for anyone who wants to get into Machining especially with all the old timers retiriing
@mikec.43432 жыл бұрын
@@dantheman1998 you won't have any problem finding a job (unless the economy completely tanks) but I don't think you'll see any big money like the plumbers and electricians are making. What's worse is that a new machinist is expected to show up on day 1 with several thousands of dollars worth of precision measuring tools.
@binski59862 жыл бұрын
I was a highly skilled machinist 42 years. I would not recommend it to a young person.
@matthewgarner8728 Жыл бұрын
I'm 36 and have been a millwright since school. I calibrate, refurbish and install machine tools now ( just started a year ago) I find it insane when I go into these UNION shops and these 55-65 y.o. guys are only making 30-40$ an hour.
@ericschwegler75142 жыл бұрын
It's amazing what 40 years of saying "go to college, you don't want to be flipping burgers when you're older do you?" Will do to a country
@garyhomanick6129 Жыл бұрын
It’s criminal that millions upon millions of parents bought into those lies and pushed their own children into the hands of predatory colleges and their promotion of loan-shark lending practices through banks and Federal Institutions. Nobody should need to mortgage their future in order to be a productive member and contribute to society.
@Mrfinch9999 Жыл бұрын
We live in a country where women sell bottles of farts for 95,000+ per year while some of the most important jobs for the country require you to work 80+ hour weeks and you do not even make 80,000. This countries idea of what should be valued, rewarded and incentivized is messed up.
@tino5735 Жыл бұрын
Yup. When I was growing up, the message was that a college degree was the only thing that could set you up for success. Now I've got a fancy degree and a corporate American career that's driving me nuts. I've thought about changing up and being a tradesman, but I don't know if the pay cut makes sense. Do I muddle along for the sake of a paycheck, or try to find something I can actually be passionate about and really enjoy doing? We might need to rethink our definition of success.
@dergunter1237 Жыл бұрын
thats not the issue. The issue is high inflation, high taxes and low pay. 50 years ago the average assembly line worker could afford a new car every year and every 5 years a new house. Meanwhile today as a teamleader engineer making more than 100k a year you can barely afford a decent car after 5 years and a house never. The "go to college or you will be flipping burgers" is a bit incorrect it should say "go to college and manage to get one of the degrees that get you one of the highest paying jobs or it wont make a difference how much you work cause you will have nothing anyway"
@Mrfinch9999 Жыл бұрын
@@dergunter1237 That is a symptom of the problem, not the problem itself. The cause of that problem is that we are producing less value then we are using. This results in everything you described. Big corporations are still producing value, but that is because they are sending productivity offshore and are hogging the value to themselves. They are still producing less overall value then before too. They relatively just have more value then the rest of us. And why is that happening? Because we are relying on old archaic systems to maintain order from over 200 years ago. We just keep it functional via bandaid fixes but those are inefficient and have diminishing returns. Just look at how outdated copyright is and look up how bad monopolies are right now. They get around laws via stealth companies that you do not even know exist. Like what company owns 90+% of porn? the media? Fuck, Fox News and CNN are owned by the same person. Like you cannot create the new McDonalds because the laws will prevent you from doing it. Software was the last bastion of hope for a decade or so, but now the laws are resulting in a few big companies owning everything. You cannot be the next bill gates, google steals the credit for your inventions and ideas now. All you can do is get ahead via entertainment and that is also becoming saturated. Our system also undervalues productivity and overvalues pleasure. A onlyfans model is worth more then a irreplaceable software developer. Since atleast the 1990s, we have been decelerating at a exponential rate. We just had a lot of previous built up momentum that kept pushing us forward. So we did not even start feeling it until the mid 2000s. And the solution is to fix the system. No, not socialism. Just an update to what we have to make it functional with technological advances in mind.
@kolonarulez5222 Жыл бұрын
I was always impressed by those who build/fix their own things especially home improvements. Half my family are a bunch of diy folks and I feel I was done the greatest disservice growing up by not learning from them. Just had new floors in our house and the entire time I wished I knew how to do it ourselves and save so much money
@duanescot3 жыл бұрын
Being a carpenter should really demand a higher pay rate, the amount of flexibility you have to have, and the wear and tear on the body, truly justifies a much, much higher income...
@johnparla62523 жыл бұрын
The carpenter made more cash then most men on a piret ship
@GNARLOUSE3 жыл бұрын
GENERAL STRIKE NOW! Then form a union immediately after.
@siggimikki51103 жыл бұрын
I'm learning carpentry in Iceland and they teach us every part of building a house. We don't have special trades for drywalling, roofing etc. If you are a carpenter in Iceland you do everything and get paid accordingly. which brings me to his point that money is the biggest motivator, new carpenters get paid 100 an hour minimum.
@GNARLOUSE3 жыл бұрын
@@siggimikki5110 thanks Siggi for reminding us we are living in the third world! Sad thing is we are supposed to be the first world among the first worlds. But our democracy has been hijacked so a handful of dbags can buy more uber expensive sht they don't need.... Iceland 2022!
@virginiamoss70453 жыл бұрын
I asked a commercial building contractor I worked with if he knew of a finish carpenter for some work at my house. He said, "You'll never find him because I will find him before you do and I ain't found one for years."
@slanesimpson Жыл бұрын
You are right at 66yrs old I usually charge $40 - $50 hr and I often have folks at the end of the day who just don’t feel that like it’s worth that. Everything I do is guaranteed both labor and material. I often don’t charge for picking up material except on big jobs and give my knowledge to doing exactly what they wanted often when they don’t even know themselves. Thanks for the good words and advocacy for the guys who do the work.
@TheHonestCarpenter Жыл бұрын
Thank you for writing in with your experience, Scott!
@bobwild9995 Жыл бұрын
Scott - Right there with you, I do mostly specialized commercial work, but people don't seam to relize what we are worth, and when they need service on their vehicles, they don't bat a eye on paying $125+ an hour for labor. Most of the people that hire you don't think that cause they make $50 an hour in a office job, with bennies full time all year, with free coffee in the office, think your in and out in a week or two, they should pay that kind of money. When were done with our work, they can sit back and see something and enjoy it for years to come.
@zell863 Жыл бұрын
Same numbers here. My min is 45$. Carpenter, 59 years old.
@CheezMonsterCrazy Жыл бұрын
@@bobwild9995 Not that many people make $50 per hour at an office job. That's 104k per year. Not that a carpenter's time isn't worth that (and more), and there is more risk involved so its not a 1:1 comparison; but its understandable that most people find that to be a lot of money. Heck, less than 20% of individuals in the US make that much alone, and only 35% of entire households do. Even the average carpenter makes only half that according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
@cthulawha Жыл бұрын
here in the north east(massachusetts) unskilled laborers are being billed out at 75-90 an hour with skilled laborers at 125 and a liscensed carpentor or GC billed at 150-200. these are the rates companies are charging not what guys are being paid, right now a guy with hand tools and a drivers liscense with minimal skill sets is getting 20-25 while a skilled framer\carpenter is pretty much capped out at 35 maybe 40 if you are buddies with the owner. Its small wonder anyone with a brain is bailing on these trades lol
@raybrensike423 жыл бұрын
Remember the housing crisis of '08? I was a carpenter and kept taking cuts in hourly wage just to be able to work, and it took 10 years to get back to the wage I was making in '08, but Sub sandwiches were no longer 5 dollars.
@WesleySnipes3568 Жыл бұрын
AMEN BROTHER!! Truer words were never spoken!! I got licensed in 97’ and just hung it up this last year after double knee surgery. Balls out carpenter/ 90’s era framer. It is in my blood but I pulled a major switch to an organic farmer this year and I’m loving it. I needed to hear this today! Much Love🤙🏽
@mattdonna96773 жыл бұрын
Spot on. I lost my construction job the spring of 2009 due to, a lack of business ( the economy collapsed) . we did copper, slate, and tile roofing, mostly churches.. The owner let go of 3 out of 4 crews and kept the most skilled and family members. I was 51. Every thing you said is true. , as a nation we have been betrayed by the greed and shortsightedness of people with wealth and power. I enjoy your channel, sorry to hear about the knee at such a young age.
@TheHonestCarpenter3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for writing in, Matt. It was devastating to see what happened in the aftermath of the market crash. My parents lived in Reno at the time, and a city with about 1,000 active builds became a ghost town overnight. All those frame-ups just rotting in the sun. Such a waste of everything. I appreciate you watching the channel. 🙏
@jayarecallens3 жыл бұрын
@@TheHonestCarpenter I know a Carpenter, he teaches math for a living now. I work in a skilled trade and not many people are interested in trade work. It’s frowned upon and the white collar tech job is what is most sought after now. Your knowledge is what will make you income and a living. I agree, being in a cool job isn’t good enough. The pay and job protections are the only things saving trade work.
@jum52383 жыл бұрын
The Essential Craftsman said that work done below the neck isn't valued. He turns people to electrician or plumbing trades.
@donaldlee67603 жыл бұрын
@@jum5238 - interesting advise. I assume the Essential Craftsman is implying mostly manual labor like paint, drywall, (maybe carpentry too?) is low salary, but licensed electricians and plumbers must graduate college (or it's trade equivalent) and additionally pass a test, and therefore getting paid lots of money? Carpentry can be many things, but I'm guessing people don't typically go to college or the equivalent for a carpentry career and there is no test or license to pass?
@mavenfeliciano17103 жыл бұрын
@@donaldlee6760 I think Ju M was referring to the KZbin channel “The Essential Craftsman.”
@meetontheledge1380 Жыл бұрын
Every large maintenance shop I have ever worked in (with a full spread of tradesmen and apprentices), it was the master carpenter who was shop foreman! As an apprentice, it was not just a STEEP learning curve, but it was vast. Felt like the only jobs we didn't have to do was plumbing, and electrical. EVERYTHING else, we were expected to be able to do on a professional level. There were days when I had to run the damned backhoe!
@rayzerot Жыл бұрын
It's kinda funny because commercial HVAC guys feel like we know a bit of every trade except carpentry. We're constantly arm deep in live 460V, we run copper, steel, and PVC pipe for hydronic systems and condensate, and we do masonry lite whenever we run refrigerant line-sets through exterior walls. No other trade can do HVAC though 😁
@meetontheledge1380 Жыл бұрын
@@rayzerot That's a fact- so much so that I didn't even think of HVAC when I listed the ''only'' trades we weren't supposed to know! I have cut the *&%# out of myself on sheet metal and have utmost respect for you guys!
@frankfraticelli29673 жыл бұрын
As a former building engineer, we used to sit in our monthly meetings and realize everyone in the room was close to retirement...no young people.
@tommak65163 жыл бұрын
They may be not be as close to retirement as you think if retirement is defined as 'work until you die.'
@OlovMetal3 жыл бұрын
What is happens, WHEN YOU EMBRACE reganomics, and destroys the unions, now everything usurped. Hahahahaha Le sigh
No dude, corruption within unions, specifically trade unions, is a blight on the industry, and a BIG part of the problem. It's why every job site looks like the old boys club. Can't get in unless unionized, can't get in the Union unless you're friends with someone already in. Maybe if you ruin your reputation and unionize your employer against their will they'll throw you a bone... Then when that job ends you're unhirable anywhere else. Or they'll take your Union dues for years and never provide a job. Tl;dr. Unions are dirty, actual labor laws is the answer, not unionization.
@quinnrivera50753 жыл бұрын
@@TheMistyBlueLounge sounds like you’re either a guy that never went to his union meetings and then called to get a job from the hall when you got laid off. If they don’t know who you are they won’t put you to work first. That being said , the trades in Chicago are and have been having signups for their apprenticeship programs. And FYI. I came to Chicago in 1989, didn’t know anyone here. And I got into the Carpenters Union. It took me a year to get in. Then I walked into a one day job and asked a Chief Engineer if he was looking for a carpenter in the Recession in 2008. And that’s how I got into the IUOE. Local 399 I’m not Irish either. And the Irish control both locals I have been a member of. So your whole rant is false. I’m living proof
@bujmoose3992 Жыл бұрын
30 years ago, Roofers in my area made about $16. Since then, the roofing industry now uses mostly undocumented workers and they now make $16 or less. Undocumented workers will depress wages in all sectors.
@dalesworld13083 жыл бұрын
Someone asked me to paint a room addition. That turned into painting, finishing the drywall, trimming the room out, mortising hinges and locksets and hanging doors, hanging handrails, insulating the crawlspace in 25 degree weather, tiling and grouting part of the floor, installing a toilet in the bathroom, building a wall mounted desk and some other assorted things. At 62 I'm about ready to call it a day.
@b1_ferg3 жыл бұрын
You got that all done in a day? Wow
@dalesworld13083 жыл бұрын
@@b1_ferg Okay - I see what you did there....
@tommak65163 жыл бұрын
I like to randomly knock holes in the walls to look for hidden treasure, especially in older houses.
@VinegaryDeer12 жыл бұрын
I’m 21 and I’m carpenter and I consider this regularly but part of me thinks that by the time I’ll be seasoned and knowledgeable I’ll be able to charge whatever I want because everyone else will be worn out and retired.
@Yarblocosifilitico2 жыл бұрын
exactly! I'm just getting into carpentry with that mindset. Also, being able to build my own house at some point, in a small, remote plot of land.
@VinegaryDeer12 жыл бұрын
@@Yarblocosifilitico my one advice Is make sure you know your worth. Don’t let anyone take advantage of you because they will if you let them. And don’t be afraid to change companies for a couple dollars more!!
@geminicam11562 жыл бұрын
@@VinegaryDeer1 how's the field going? I'm thinking about going into Carpentry and joining an apprenticeship and the union after I graduate high school this year.
@geminicam11562 жыл бұрын
@@VinegaryDeer1 Man, sounds like you had a helluva time. I attended a Carpentry program that my school offered, and I loved loved loved the math and hands-on work we did there. They also said during a tour of the building that they also raised the salaries for Carpenters in hopes to get more in the field. Doing that plus joining the union - I feel like that would be great for me.
@VinegaryDeer12 жыл бұрын
@@geminicam1156 fuck yeah if you like math you like working with your hands you’re in the right place. Don’t ever settle for less company’s ride on the backs of those doing the work the right company will give credit where it’s due. If you’re smart and can learn how to read prints that can give a good upper hand. Also one tip I never did go through with it but suggested by my neighbor when I bought an online osha 40. TAKE CLASSES THE BIG WIGS ARE TAKING AND YOU’LL MEET SOME PEOPLE WORTH KNOWING IN THE INDUSTRY!!!! Like all the certs foreman and supervisors use. Always add things to your marketability. And better yet find a company that will pay for it
@Backertothegrave3 жыл бұрын
I'm the youngest carpenter I know and I'm 28. I've been working on my own for 4 years now on the finish carpentry side. the carpenters I have met weren't career carpenters, they were "I should have went to college but I didn't so here I am..." which I purposely went into carpentry as a career choice. I have too much work, and basically charge whatever I want. I realize that having a passion for the trade has allowed me to accelerate my learning process more so then someone just trying to get beer money. I specialize in cabinetry, wainscoting, coffered ceilings, accent walls, all the artsy stuff. I also build custom tear drop campers and "posh" Outdoor furniture which does well where I live, it has afforded me to basically tell people to fuck off and make my own hours... I still work 6-7 days a week because I just enjoy building shit.
@christopherroyal24893 жыл бұрын
Same story here
@joshuaharris2433 жыл бұрын
If I could work with u I would
@DenHenson3 жыл бұрын
I’m 29 and finding impossible to get a carpentry job in California because, presumably, I lack relevant experience. I’ve worked as a career bartender for 6 years and want to learn a trade. How can I help? Where do I have to move? Where’s the demand?
@DenHenson3 жыл бұрын
@@joshuaharris243 same
@joshuaharris2433 жыл бұрын
@@DenHenson from what I searched up you have to either go to trade school, find. A apprenticeship, or I think join as a laborer
@melissatuason2395 Жыл бұрын
Here's my 2cents. My husband is 61 He was licenced in California in almost every field of Construction. They are Engineering, Building & Builder contractor, Plumbing ,hvac, electrical etc. He was constantly learning new ways in building ,products etc. So he semi-retired and we moved to the Southern states. Took a break for 6 months to do handyman work, now on the very first call he did to do a plumbing repair this is what happened. He went ( viral) in our area and that was 3 years ago, he is very easy to talk to and very neat, tidy and very professional and does not leave a mess at the end of the day. He is quite organized and so is his trailer very methodical. Works alone because no one seems to be conscientious about the work period. He calls himself a former carpenter and you are right the responsibilities are larger on a carpenter contractor. Great video
@Makebuildmodify3 жыл бұрын
Exactly! I just crawled off of a custom concrete form job (yes, we help the masons too). Similar to you I've been in the trades since I was 14. I've been very lucky with my body and had few accidents. But I'm tired and my area is poor (around $30/hr for highly skilled carpenters). There's no draw to the carpentry trade at all. It's just me and a bunch of old guys building and maintaining homes.
@SergeantSquared3 жыл бұрын
@huhhman *its a carpenters market.*
@Charles-mv7sv3 жыл бұрын
Reminds me of my dumb ex-employer that hasn't raise the price on his food in 20 years. Raise your prices. Sea Food pasta plate 26$ is still 26$ and the dude complains about not making more because less people come in. Raise your price. But he is ruled by fear.
@Makebuildmodify3 жыл бұрын
@@Charles-mv7sv well, I'm an employee. So I guess I could ask for a raise. But back when I was a licensed to contractor I did raise my prices and priced myself out of the market. I found the top and it's not enough. Your friend might be ruled by fear; not sure though. He may know his market better than you do.
@Charles-mv7sv3 жыл бұрын
@@Makebuildmodify I think the problem lies with pricing the work or product, when you should be pricing the client. kzbin.info/www/bejne/iHy7i2qqlLechac "Pricing Design Work & Creativity" I know it applies to physical products too, I've sold $450 Kirby Vacuums (probably $250 from the factory) for $2,800 and profited $1,500 after paying my dues, some customers payed $900 on credit card ( I'd make 50$), some financed 3k and I made $1,500. Same work, same product, different customers.
@Makebuildmodify3 жыл бұрын
@@Charles-mv7sv Thanks for the link to the video. That's a great talk. I'll give it some thought.
@Garthock3 жыл бұрын
my grandfather spent his entire life working trades, mostly as a mechanic but he could do almost anything. He told me all the time to do anything but a trade, to find a job that doesn't destroy my body. So it's not just about the pay. If others experienced what I experienced, there was also an entire generation told to do something better than trade your health and body for a paycheck.
@Laneous142 жыл бұрын
Now we're swinging back. Luckily, I get to work my passion that my college degree allowed, but if I was stuck in some office I'd want to kill myself. Everyone I know my age working as a tradesman is happy, flush with money (because they can do their own work on their home instead of paying people), and feel fulfilled. Most the people I know working in office settings do nothing but bitch about it on Facebook all day. My father is a carpenter so he taught me to do many things. We just screened in my front porch, something that would have cost me 1,200 dollars instead of 500 dollars in materials. That is an insane money savings (we built a sunroom for my old house that was appraised at 25,000 and it cost me 8,000 to build since we did it ourselves).
@alieosharp30832 жыл бұрын
My Dad is the one for me. He always said "Whatever you do, don't end up in construction." He'd even get angry at his bosses and other people if they ever even suggested it.
@ricknroll9632 жыл бұрын
I am reading here as a 35 year old working in IT sitting by my dad who is a 60 year old trader laying on the hospital bed waiting for bypass surgery. He is a strong man, eats home food that my mom cooks but hard labor and age eventually caught up to him...
@Belloc_The_Hallow3 жыл бұрын
In 2019 i started working as a electrical helper after taking a course to teach me the basics both my parents are college graduates. I started this job at a local small company there were 3 of us on job every day. My boss was unorganized constantly all over the place freaking out screaming and throwing tool at us. I pushed thru dealing with him for 4 months then i quit in the beginning of august and enrolled in college. Its companies like that, that push people away from the trades
@M.TTT.3 жыл бұрын
very true, its horrible to work for a boss thats just stupid
@Blkmermaid8233 жыл бұрын
Thats the thing. I want to go to the electrical trade but I wont be making much. Money is not every thing but low staffed and not guaranteed that you will get into the union has me seriously thinking of what to do. My dad tells me when he was in construction in the 80s he was 19 and he use to make $1600 (in todays money) a week 5 days a week and only 7 hours a day. Now a days your lucky to get any where near that especially in the trades. I really like doing this type of work. But for the pay...im second guessing it. This is going to effect the trades alot. I use to hear that trades people use to make alot of money. But after going deeper into it. Its not alot at all. My friend works in carpentry building houses only makes 15 an hour non union. But his dad is a foreman still only makes 18 an hour. Yes its non union but still. All this work seems like very little pay. Unless you own your own company and get more money that way. But still you have to pay your workers a good paycheck.
@mentalphilanthropist353 жыл бұрын
This sounds like my summer, did you work for a lying pr!ck too?
@Belloc_The_Hallow3 жыл бұрын
@@mentalphilanthropist35 if you consider hey lets start at 5am so we can get home for dinner a lie then yeah. Sorry bud we gotta stay till the job is done
@mentalphilanthropist353 жыл бұрын
@@Belloc_The_Hallow Every time my check was wrong he blamed his mommy!
@reecewilliams3991 Жыл бұрын
Yes, our prices need to go up collectively! I have work booked for a year out and people are willing to wait that long.
@VirginiaRican3 жыл бұрын
My dad's a carpenter, charges $90 an hour, and gets it. A large portion of his business is fixing what they guy before him did wrong.
@knokname64663 жыл бұрын
Sometimes this is true, but most often what one "old timer" sees as being done wrong is due to not understanding or knowing the new fed codes.
@brianperry48153 жыл бұрын
When I was a mechanic then later a cable/satellite installer I had to fix other people's screw ups. I know how he feels.
@TheDragonfriday3 жыл бұрын
@Michael Davidson tell me more, since I'm soon will heading to the welding field once I finish my college degree in few months.
@Truthseaaker3 жыл бұрын
Illegals aren't good carpenters
@jamesbutler21303 жыл бұрын
Geez I know all about that I spent years doing that correcting others mistakes. Someone that was unlicensed and unskilled.
@leevidmar3463 жыл бұрын
As someone that just bought a house and started doing the work myself, I can say a good carpenter is worth every penny! Sure, I can do it, but it might not look great, AND it will take forever. It's not as easy as it looks! Great video
@garyring83063 жыл бұрын
problem is most so called carpenters these days are hacks even the old timers you have to be careful who you hire too many horror stories from personal friends of so called carpenters and their king midas prices for jobs that were total crap.
@danielcervantes39603 жыл бұрын
I’m a carpenter General contractor & I refuse to charge less than $100 per hour but homeowners are constantly refusing to pay my wages. I understand how tough my job is & how valuable my knowledge is. I’m just waiting for people to eventually figure this out. It’s coming. The time is near
@DonaldAJr3 жыл бұрын
That's why all the Mexican people are here working (Please look at my second paragraph). I have no ill will towards any of them and I know they're trying to make a living for their family here and in Mexico. People have got to do what they got to do, when our government does what they do with drug enforcement. Now here's the crux of the matter. Due to the fact we have all the Mexicans here doing construction, It Has Cut The Knees Out From Under The Labor Force With Hourly Wages. As everybody knows labor is an hourly pay job. It's not a salary job and give it a few more years, Mexicans will be doing all the air conditioning work next. Mark my damn words.
@DonaldAJr3 жыл бұрын
@Jake Stockton I'm not sure what you mean by The Quality Isn't The Same. If they have guidance or had guidance, the quality should be pretty close to the same (maybe not 100% as good but I believe it would work just about as good). Now in the bigger picture all that is besides the point. Due to the way our government is and big business is, the rate of inflation has way surpassed the amount of hourly wage the normal everyday person earns. Think Walmart employees, gas station employees, hotel employees, grocery store employees, doctor's office employees (not the doctor), and just about everybody you can think of. Please think about it, $7.25 or even $10.00 an hour isn't a living wage and it would never allow somebody to pay anybody $100 an hour to do anything. If 75% of the country can't afford a $500 expenditure without going deeper into debt, it is not possible. Now let's put the $100 an hour in perspective for my personal life. I'm paralyzed from a construction accident and the fact Workers' Compensation is as screwed up as it is, I have not had a pay raise in 22 years. So what I could have afforded 22 or even 20 years ago, I couldn't dream of doing it today. I make $21k a year, my house payment is $800 a month ($9,600 a year), then after food and utilities it would never give me that ability or 90% of the people mentioned above. Hopefully that gets people to expand or broaden their thinking. p.s. I don't know any Mexicans and I don't have any in my family. In some ways I wish I did but I don't speak Spanish and that's a detriment to myself.
@coastalgaming15943 жыл бұрын
Daniel, what state do you live in? I have the same title as you with a handyman back ground and do many trades myself. I'm at $60 per hour, I do not advertise, I'm in southern CA, been in business for 18 years, no employees. People don't seem to bat an eye at my price but I've been thinking it's time to up the hourly price this year. The local plumbers and electricians are easily at $75 or up in the area.
@SwanBaby103 жыл бұрын
Who can AFFORD to pay $100 an hour?
@DonnyBoy2863 жыл бұрын
@@SwanBaby10 people that want it done right.
@nickduggan3084 Жыл бұрын
I'm a union electrician in Boston. Worked a year non union as well. The only way to come close to being financially independent is to either A) build your own business which could take 5-10 years, or get in the union. No other alternative.
@Joseph-XRP Жыл бұрын
I was local 3 IBEW, we went on a labor strike, and the only people who kept their jobs, was the people who crossed the line.
@vaakdemandante8772 Жыл бұрын
@@Joseph-XRP what other way would you imagine? You either work for yourself or you're working for others, can't see any third way really. The problem seems to be either the clients or the toxic atmosphere in the unions, but that is somewhat expectable - people are people.
@heru-deshet3593 жыл бұрын
We're quitting because people want to pay peanuts. I'm a wood worker now, building, resorting and repairing antiques and new valuable furniture.
@stephenburnage76873 жыл бұрын
I hired a crew to frame a large unfinished basement a few years back. Such extraordinary skill and energy. Moreover, they improved a lot on the original architects design by pointing out where doors, lights etc were better located..Finished in under a week and worth their weight in gold.
@jdh0233 жыл бұрын
So very cool you give props to the MEN that do a job they shook hands on. I hope you bought them a beer after. Proud you gave credit. I do my guys and damn proud of these MEN.
@philipmcgee84253 жыл бұрын
@@jdh023 Why are you writing men in all caps?
@rickh80933 жыл бұрын
Great points! I’ve been in construction for 30 + years. The first 20 was primarily siding and decks on custom new builds. With the 08’ recession and heavy competition I’ve felt much more in demand as a general carpenter lately. Notice I didn’t label myself as a “handyman”. That label gets the $25-50/hr rate. One thing I NEVER do is give an hourly rate, NEVER! I always give estimates for the needed work and if I run into unexpected issues I advise the client, get their okay and add on to the estimate accordingly. I’ve never had a client question an hourly rate after the job is completed. If you show up on time, look and sound professional and do a quality job, they will happy to pay for your services. And, more than likely pass your name to their neighbors.
@Vash.Baldeus3 жыл бұрын
More or less, you give them hourly rate you are asking for trouble with the client, instead if you give them an estimate for labor and material they're likely to agree, moreover if there are unexpected expenses along the way that you get the Okay for. You sir, doing it right.
@kevinmurphy5878 Жыл бұрын
First time I've seen the channel, but one thing is for sure, you are definitely an honest carpenter
@ernststavroblofeld74603 жыл бұрын
Watching this video felt like hearing myself talking about the carpentry trade. The only thing I’d add is with the diverse responsibilities comes an absurd need for many high-priced tools that see a lot of wear and tear. Relatively lower wages, many responsibilities, tired body, and high expenses - not a recipe for high workforce participation.
@TheBelrick3 жыл бұрын
$150k a year without a crippling college debt and earning can begin immediately rather than 4+ years wasted staying in school. Lower wages?
@ernststavroblofeld74603 жыл бұрын
Relatively low compared to plumbers and electricians. I should have been more clear. This wasn’t intended to be a comparison between trades and college, it was meant to compare carpentry with other trades.
@manubishe3 жыл бұрын
@@TheBelrick the administrative corruption of the academy, the white collars, and the wages for tradesmen, the blue collars, are apples and oranges. A disfigured face on campus is far more expensive than in front of wood, similarily to having a booming voice is more attractive in the field, but having all of the muscles attrophied is barely a bother for the highest of physicists. Go fix your humanities, and tradesmen will attend to the issues in their own field.
@seekthuth2817 Жыл бұрын
I can speak from experience, my dad was a carpenter for 20 years and he roped my brother and I into helping him for like 3+ years, but all of us quit after realizing we can make more money doing much less physically demanding professions, so we all quit. It's just flat out not worth the money to be ruining yourself like you have to and that kinda sucks.
@mertz3133 жыл бұрын
I remember I was working inside a huge million dollar house. There were 2 vans outside when I arrived. Inside the house were two old men, both in their 60’s cutting up wood. They were doing all the interior wood work stuff on the inside. They said they need more people, but cannot find anyone/retain anyone. Later in that year I was working for a home builder building a whole neighborhood. The average age of the workers had to be about 50. Really opened my eyes as to how fucked we are going to be in 15 years.
@cerberusnovaempire94833 жыл бұрын
And whit this new generation that cares more about their shoes and nails getting broken yeah construction and many manly jobs are doomed
@GNARLOUSE3 жыл бұрын
GENERAL STRIKE NOW! Then form a union immediately after.
@GNARLOUSE3 жыл бұрын
@@cerberusnovaempire9483 who wants to do construction at this pay rate when they can go peck on a keyboard for 4× the pay?
@the__man13 жыл бұрын
12-30 for a farmer vs 45-60 for a nurse what it is we haven't changed since the 90s on price my dad still made the same amount it's good pay but 10cents a loaf of bread vs nothing less then a dollar and lack of keeping you busy or paying on time Cheap and ok $10 Or Good and more expensive $15 Its always the cheap guy Lack of appreciation I own a construction company and I'm immediate when it comes to scripting in python Construction is harder
@GNARLOUSE3 жыл бұрын
@@thetruth6792 craftsman in Australia make 600-1000 a day fast food workers in Denmark make 20 an hour Italians enjoy paid vacation like 7 weeks a year or some sht ...are you a republican?
@ronmoreno9372 Жыл бұрын
Been a carpenter for 35 years , loved every minute of it except the money , I was non union but union carpenters make decent wages. But travel a lot and live in hotels. Only way to make more money was to get a state license which I did in 1994 . I built concrete forms for 2 years , framed 20 plus years , finish carpentry and build furniture. I was fortunate to attend a trade school for 3 years certificate in carpentry and drafting. This trade gave me the confidence to exit the Army after 3 years . I look back carpenters always been under payed ! The conditions we work under , I worked in central Florida as a framer making 12.00 per hour in 1994 working like a triathlete. Start at 7 am by 8 am so humid my socks were soaked from the sweat . Either you go on your own or work for the union . If you go on your own you have to have the courage to charge what your worth, took me years to do this !
@stanleyjenkins95433 жыл бұрын
My son is 15. My boss and i got into a argument because i insist on taking my boy to work with me on the weekends because he has to learn a trade. Now my boss put him on the payroll and he can out work most men i know. This is necessary for so many different reasons.
@viciouslady13403 жыл бұрын
Sounds like you have a young man not a boy they do grow up fast.Good father son bonding too well done.
@kurtdrehwing55523 жыл бұрын
This generation needs more career alternatives & apprenticeships. The skilled trades pay hasn't reflected the rate of inflation.
@jakebirkmaier57033 жыл бұрын
He was probably worried about the liability at first
@donkeyphukkkker3 жыл бұрын
@@kurtdrehwing5552 You're talking about generation columbine. We'll be lucky if they don't start killing all your customers.
@WarriorNotesLatino3 жыл бұрын
That's how it was a 100 years ago before liberals got into the government.
@harleyjetdriver19573 жыл бұрын
Another reason to add shop, and auto mechanics back to high school curriculum!
@TheRozylass3 жыл бұрын
My husband is a shop teacher specializing in woodworking. The students love him and his classes are in demand. We live in rural SW Minnesota. He retires in two years and we wonder where his replacement is going to come from.
@hernandezz49123 жыл бұрын
Highschool student from LA. Man I wish I had a shop class, it’s such a great learning experience for young people like myself to just get their hands dirty and create something.
@MrRightNow3 жыл бұрын
Mechanics will be extinct in few years when we all start driving electric.
@backthebadge40093 жыл бұрын
No we just need more Social Engineering Classes.....LOL!...You are spot on! Most kids coming out of High School don’t even know how to balance a checkbook, or where the money comes from to put into a checking account.....They can’t add, read or write....but they can sure tell you about the injustices of capitalism, and how to protest everything under the sun!
@drivinolered58353 жыл бұрын
Hate to say it, but the Boomer and and X generations have made things too easy for the current generations to be “soft”. I’m in my 40’s and most people my age or younger can’t even swing a hammer or do basic home maintenance let alone anything requiring any carpentry or mechanical skills. Take pride in being able to be self-sufficient. Learn basic trade skills, even if only for your own use or help out in your community. You’ll feel more confident in yourself and be able to complete some pretty rewarding work you can say you did with your own hands.
@shopkidadventureclub41403 жыл бұрын
“They ain’t no more young guys”. That says it all. I tell clients “ If you don’t already have a carpenter then you have a problem.”
@johnmartin15553 жыл бұрын
The are living in mom's basement and somehow think its okay.
@StarboyXL95 ай бұрын
@@johnmartin1555 It is quite ok. Pay us more and stop gatekeeping old fart!
@vincentperratore4395 Жыл бұрын
You're absolutely right! I grew up in the 50s and attended a vocational high school early in the next decade. They taught everything in that school and gave the students 4 exploratory shops to study during the first year. I eventually decided upon the Machine Shop course. What I'm driving at is that today, there are no trade schools in this country! Now, why is that? Who decided upon this species of stupidity? One of the answers at least was the chronic shortsightedness and corporate greed that beguiled the thinking of CEOs fifty years ago, when they decided upon quick profits to be gained overseas by means of cheap labor, thereby selfishly depriving the young American worker of his right to study and learn a worthwhile trade, such as carpentry for instance, a wonderful trade, but worse yet, settling a dangerous trend for future American workers; a severe shortage of those in particular trades that are necessary for this country to function properly. I could go on and on, I guess. Thank you.
@bigbud8182 Жыл бұрын
You benefited from a lot of those “evil” big government programs that FDR helped bring in. Amazing what investing in the population does. Thanks to Ronald Reagan most of that shit is gone or a shell of its former self. I graduated high school in 2014 and I remember when we would watch a educational video they would roll in the old ass TV with the vhs player and watch a video from late 80s-early 90s along with text books from that era lmao. At the time I didn’t think much about it since that was normal but looking back on it it’s fuckin disgusting.
@MedicalAutonomyProject Жыл бұрын
Telling a kid they are trade material and not college material is a mortal insult nowadays.
@G1993_3 жыл бұрын
As a former young automechanic, it wasn’t worth it. Trying to get started, they don’t want to give you a fair shares work, it’s always the older dudes who get the lions share and I pick the scraps nobody else wants. The pay wasn’t good for the back breaking work I was doing in open air shops with no a/c. I ended up switching to personal training for less money, but am way happier mentally. It was hard to do but well worth it. The tradesmen jobs are behind the times and need to start treating their workers better
@ThePortadump3 жыл бұрын
Current auto mechanic apprentice here. You described it. Big jobs go to the old guys why you’re left with nothing and shut pay “hey I want more money” “we’ll all the jobs you do are just little ones” “well you won’t give me a shot at the big ones” “well that’s risky you’re not experienced enough” “well I came here to get this experience” endless circle. Everyone wants something but no one wants to give. Myself included I don’t wanna waste my time not learning and working for nothing but bosses don’t wanna risk losing money.
@paulspurlock5993 жыл бұрын
@@jasonjrf This has been my experience as well. Anytime you need a job done that is even remotely difficult and/or not the standard cash grab job like tire changes, it's like they can't be bothered to fix it. Why actually do work and fix my leaking gas tank when they can spin off 5 bolts on a tire and slap some new ones on?
@jurupa3 жыл бұрын
Why exactly should the new kid get the big jobs? You and others don't at all understand you need to gain experience if you want to take on more. You all want to be at the finish line and all without the effort or work to get there.
@Jrock420blam3 жыл бұрын
@@jurupa because they aren't building space shuttles, rebuilding an engine isn't rocket science. The work isn't that hard, just time consuming which is why the old fossils want it for the commission. Has nothing to do with experience.
@maxmeier5323 жыл бұрын
@@jurupa because the point of an apprenticeship is to educate the younger generation in the trade so the trade exists in 20 years from now. If you fuck them over so badly they leave after a couple of months everyone loses. The consequence will be as in many other sectors that you have just a huge industrial complex that is about buying and throwing away with just a niche for artisanals who do the manual work for enthusiasts who can afford it.
@austindixson6764 Жыл бұрын
I'm a 36 yr old carpenter working for my dad. He has shown me lots of tips and tricks of the trade. He's given me the knowledge that I need to build homes. He is towards the end of his career and his knees are shot. He has always been the foreman or boss on his jobs, always figuring roofs and all kinds of geometry stuff that hurts my brain. I honestly don't think I want to continue this work once he retires. I make $20/hr and I could make more money doing less strenuous work. Thanks for your videos!
@ryantascone Жыл бұрын
Where are you from? I live in Philly and I’m in the carpenters Union here. I’m 36 years old journey man and my rate is $50.71/hr plus benefits. Your pops is ripping you off.
@JorgeSorianoUplifts Жыл бұрын
yikes your dad is straight upripping you off
@andreww3621 Жыл бұрын
@@ryantascone Yeah, same in Jersey. Local 254 pays $54.54. Goes up another $2.25 next year.
@bobwild9995 Жыл бұрын
Austin - depending were your located, part of the country, your really selling your self short, I'm working in central Ohio now, and the company I'm sub-ing to pay guys with 2-3 years 22-23 an hour. Know your worth. When your Pop's retires, fill his shoes, but get the pay that you deserve. In this part of the country, with your experience you should be in the $30+ arena.
@bobwild9995 Жыл бұрын
@@andreww3621 Yea, unions are great.......at one time, but you do realize that they are billing you out for $130+ an hour for your "benefits" and their "overhead" Plus your "due's" and paying your BA. It's all great until you retire and get 1/2 of your pension because they invested it wrong, it happen to guys I know years ago. So.......What skills do you know, metal studs and hanging drywall?? Can you layout a set of finish stairs?
@fabriceizzo29223 жыл бұрын
They used to have on the job training. Most of the older carpenters and other manual workers were hired in the 70s,80s and 90s with zero experience and no high school diploma. They were trained and paid a livable wage (in those days) around $13 per hour. Now they want at least 3 years of experience and a starting pay of $15 per hour. Some even require a bachelor's degree in engineering.
@goshawk43403 жыл бұрын
Even engineering firms dont want to hire new engineers with little experience. Paying new engineers 60-70k a year with the expectation of work alot of over time.
@lilcourtny083 жыл бұрын
@@goshawk4340 you will make half of that starting out in construction as a apprentice
@dominickjustave35583 жыл бұрын
True
@M2L11T53N3 жыл бұрын
Heck, McDonalds is paying $15 per hr.
@yeboscrebo44513 жыл бұрын
Minimum wage laws does this
@ArthurDentZaphodBeeb Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of a carpenter who ran a crew of rough carpenters - very good, experienced. We paid above top dollar to get him (stole him away from another builder). After framing several large high-end custom homes for us, he told me he was hanging it up. I was really surprised since he said he had made the most money working for us than he'd ever made in his life. He was in his early 40s and truly a master of his trade. But he said the stress got to him and the money he made with us was his way out. Guess what he ended up doing? Buying a small franchise to install shades and blinds, which morons can do. I talked to him a few years later - said he missed working for us - he was making less money and dealing with retail nitwits all day was far more stressful. But he didn't plan to go back - said his body couldn't do it any more. Carpentry/masonry/laboring is a young man's game and think it's why wages are lower - experienced folks find another trade/job out of necessity because their bodies wear out fast.
@makojuicedaniel9307 Жыл бұрын
A morom could do? Framer, brick layers, roofers etc, all shit morons can do. There really isn't that much to carpentry.
@willyjordan89973 жыл бұрын
This is true, I'm 36 and been in construction for most my adult life, I'm on a framing crew right now. it just ain't worth it in the long run, I don't wanna be a cripple when I'm 60 I already had a back surgury.
@sillililli013 жыл бұрын
As a carpenter's daughter, I grew up on job sites, my four brothers are all carpenter's, taught by Dad. He was tough on them, having them tear it down if it wasn't done right. Dad always said, "If you're going to take the time to do something, do it right the first time." Dad went onto becoming a builder/developer of hundreds of homes.
@cryptoauspicious68363 жыл бұрын
I've also heard 'If you don't have time to do it right, you don't have time to do it twice'.
@sillililli013 жыл бұрын
@@cryptoauspicious6836 Exactly, makes sense to me.
@whitechris7203 жыл бұрын
If you don't think it's worth doing once. You sure won't want to do it twice.
@Meleeman0113 жыл бұрын
I would not get along with your dad. i'm a prototyper at heart.
@Grumpy_old_Boot3 жыл бұрын
Yup, for me it was : _"If you don't do it right the first time, you have to do it twice!"_
@kyleconnor2759 Жыл бұрын
It’s amazing that the scarcity of good carpenters isn’t able to drive up their perceived value. Should be making so much more.
@ML-sc3pt9 ай бұрын
Its all the hobbyists charging pennies on the hour
@chrisgraeter3733 жыл бұрын
Dead on, As a Carpenter and builder myself I can echo everything you just touched on 100%. The simple fact is that Carpenters run the job sites. We are the builders. other trades are specialists and preform a specific job. We have to not only know our own trade but something about every other trade as well.
@michaelmortag35363 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣How's that wooden basement? If it wasn't for us bricklayers, cement finishers,you carpenters wouldn't have a solid foundation to build on. Nice try you carpenters don't run diddly but your mouths. Coming from a 30+ year professional bricklayer finisher. You boys can't handle our work. If you could, we wouldn't have a job.
@artguti15513 жыл бұрын
It's the same with Doctors...the specialist like cosmetic and such, earn more money that the regular family physician!
@moisessanchez92533 жыл бұрын
@@michaelmortag3536 I'm actually a carpenter, a rough carpenter. I run with a crew of about 10 or 11 people. And we do a pretty good job down here in Georgia. About 4-5 of us knows what to do and the rest knows Jack shit. I seen some pretty awful cement foundations that would turn your eyes inside out. I had about a foot of concrete missing going perpendicular on one the foundations on a site not to long ago. We found out that the foot that was missing was on the other side of house, because the God damn cement people couldn't read a God damn plan. And sometimes when we put our treated wood on your foundation the bolts were outside the 2x6 concrete wall. Please try to actually learn the plans of house and set the foundation right
@tallswede803 жыл бұрын
@@michaelmortag3536 "How's that wooden basement?" The "wooden" basement consists of the "wooden" form work used to define it's shape.