Title: Workforce Development Initiatives in Houston
1Workforce Development Initiatives in Houston
2Houston Business Roundtable
- Non-profit Business Association.
- Organized in 1973 as an association of
construction users to be the Owners voice in the
construction industry. - The Mission of HBR is to develop, share and
promote best practices that improve industry
performance in areas of safety, health,
environment, workforce skills, work quality,
productivity and costs. - 26 Owner Member Companies Including most of the
major refining and petrochemical companies in the
greater Houston area (including Texas City and
Freeport areas) - 111 Subscribers Including most of the major
industrial contractors - Workforce focus is on Contractor Craft Labor
3Workforce Development in Houston
- Area Workload Projections
- Future Skill Shortages
- Workforce Development Resources in Houston
- CMEF Training Statistics
- Current Initiatives in Houston
- Future Plans and Ideas
4HBR Craft Labor Forecast
5Forecast Comparison
6Future Workload Expectations
- HBR member company workload expected to be high
for next two years - Golden Triangle Business Roundtable predicts the
need for 20,000 additional craft persons to build
Motiva and Valero refineries, LNG projects and
offshore work - Eleven new power plant projects planned for East
Texas - Recovery and rebuilding in hurricane impacted
areas has and will continue to draw some labor
from Houston
7HBR Key Points of Agreement
- Voluntary Agreement recommending that Owners
- Use Contractors that are committed to Workforce
Development. Pre-qualify and audit to verify. - Endorse the NCCER/NCCCO skills programs.
- Require craft persons to become qualified through
formal or upgrade training, certified through
written testing and performance verified in the
field or lab. - Maintain gt10 of all site craft positions for
helper-trainees. - Include six cents per hour for all site hours in
all labor contracts to support CMEFs education
and credentialing programs. - Apply the KPA to all Maintenance, Construction
and Turnaround work.
8National Center for Construction Education and
Research (NCCER)
- NCCER is a non-profit education foundation that
develops and maintains industry driven
standardized craft training programs with
portable credentials. - 28 different Craft Curriculums and Skills
Assessment tests (written) and 18 Craft
Performance Verifications (demonstration of
skills). - Houston Contractors played a major role in
creating and funding NCCER and supplying Subject
Matter Experts for program development. - Board of Trustees include representatives from
several major Houston Contractors and Owner
Companies, including Fluor, KBR, Zachry,
ExxonMobil and Shell - Forty percent of all NCCER training and skills
assessments have been administered in the greater
Houston area.
9Construction/MaintenanceEducation Foundation
(CMEF)
- Created by HBR and ABC more than ten years ago,
replacing the former Merit Shop Trust. - Non-profit Education Foundation and the
accredited Training Sponsor of NCCER programs in
Houston. - Collects and distributes funding and administers
formal and upgrade training and skills
assessment programs. - Audits all programs and submits records for NCCER
credentialing purposes.
10Current Training Credentialing Programs
- Formal NCCER training for helper-trainees is
available at night at five area community
colleges - Lee, San Jacinto North Central,
Houston Community and College of the Mainland. - Upgrade training for journey-level craft workers
available at HASC or at Plant Sites large enough
to justify - Written Skills Assessments administered at three
Safety Councils - HASC, TCCSC, ISTC Baytown and
at CMEF Office and on-site. - Performance Verifications completed at work sites
with Accredited Evaluator. PV Lab at Lee College
has been piloted for Electricians. - The goal is for all industrial craft persons to
be trained and become certified-plus, i.e., pass
the written Skills Assessment test and complete
Performance Verification
11CMEF Statistics
Estimate
12CMEF Statistics
Estimate
13CMEF Statistics
Estimate
14New Initiative - Basic Training for Future Craft
Professionals
- Brings new recruits into construction and
maintenance and provides accelerated initial
basic training, including NCCERs core modules
(including soft skills), basic safety
orientation, introduction to craft specific tasks
and a formal mentoring program. - Owners coordinate with site Contractors and
commit to placing new recruits on site in a
helper-trainee position expected to last one
year. - Contractors recruit qualified candidates for
specific crafts, screen and hire prior to
starting training and assign experienced person
to mentor new recruit on site. - Candidates attend two week, eight hour per day,
Basic Training class and commit to continuing
their craft training at a community college. - Mentors meet with assigned trainee and receives
day of training. - Trainees are mentored and progress monitored for
one year.
15Basic Training for Future Craft Professionals
- Participating Contractors Owners to Date
16Basic Training Trainees
17Basic Training for Future Craft Professionals
- June Pilot Class
- 23 of the original 27 Candidates are on the job
and attending craft training classes. - August Class
- 28 of the original 28 Candidates completed
training and all but one are currently working on
sites and attending craft training classes. - Future Plans
- Class scheduled for Nov 27 Dec 8
- May expand to other colleges and hold classes
more frequently
18August Basic Training Class
19Texas Workforce Commission Grant
- HBR and CMEF initiated a Skills Development Fund
Grant through Lee College for 780,279 and was
approved for 18 months starting in September - Grant will focus on craft training of incumbent
workers and performance verification - Will allow CMEF some budget freedom to support
other initiatives
20Greater HoustonConstruction Careers Initiative
- Joint HBR/ABC/CMEF Effort
- Formed to address craft workforce shortage
- Reduce duplication of effort
- Focused on attracting people into our industry
and bringing people into the existing training
pipeline of CMEF/NCCER programs
21Construction Careers InitiativeStructure
- Construction Careers Executive Leadership Team
(CCELT) - Construction Careers Industry Marketing Committee
(CCIMC) - Construction Careers for Youth Committee (CCYC)
- Each team and committee has an Owner and
Contractor co-chair
22Construction Careers Initiative
- Some Initial Ideas
- Develop a centralized database of new recruits
for construction and recycled workers that
Contractors could access and search - Develop effective marketing tools and materials
that will emphasize careers in construction - Two tiered approach for commercial industrial
- Targeted recruiting relationships (family,
friends, associates), returning military, college
drop-outs, underemployed (food service, etc.) - Increase presence in area high schools
- Increase training scholarships at community
colleges -
23Use of Non-English Workers
- Survey Results (March)
- Thirteen Owners responded and two Owners already
allow non-English workers on site - Several companies indicated they were considering
this option - Barriers identified Safety procedures,
training, signage, work permits, emergencies - No company indicated they were planning to
translate site training materials, plant signs,
emergency communications, work instructions or
work permits. - The two companies that allow non-English workers
require bilingual workers in crews. - None are currently providing ESL for Contractors.
24Non-English Workers, Follow-up
- Nine Owner companies met and most indicated they
were seriously considering use of non-English
workers and several have active task groups
developing plans requirements. - The severe shortage of skilled labor is causing
more companies to consider this option. - Several companies indicated they were getting
push-back from their safety departments. - The member company that has been using
non-English workers for years has applied this to
all crafts but most have been soft craft
workers. One of their contractors routinely has
10 to 20 non-English workers. They also
reported that no incidents have occurred where
non-English was a factor. - Another member company reported they had just
implemented a non-English program in July through
their scaffolding contractor. They are very
interested in determining if the Contractor can
deliver skilled labor as promised. - The group has asked HBR to be a clearing house of
information about this issue. Plans are to meet
again in December to check progress made. Â
25Other Initiatives and Future Plans
- HBR sponsors an annual Excellence Award program
to recognize Contractors and Owners that support
and are actively involved in KPA and WD
initiatives. - ABC/CMEF/HBR is sponsoring a Construction
Exhibition and Craft Championship at Lee College
on October 27. 400 high school students are
scheduled to attend. - Solicit more TWC funding to support Basic
Training classes and other training initiatives. - HBR/ABC/CMEF are joining a larger coalition of
Houston businesses, associations and colleges to
address shortage of skilled workers in refining
and petrochemical industry.
26Other Initiatives Impacting Workforce
- North American Substance Abuse Program
Standardized industry program implemented in 2004
and now over 100,000 Contractor employees
enrolled with 6 excluded from working at
participating Owner sites due to non-negative
results. - North American Background Screening Consortium -
being developed between Houston, Baton Rouge
New Orleans with plans to implement in early
2007. Data from other programs already
implemented indicate that 5 to 10 of workforce
might be excluded from participating sites.