July-August 2007

Tomorrow's Workforce

No matter how you slice and dice it, finding, landing, and keeping good people is a daunting task.

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By Amy R. Ramos

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Parker of the NSWMA advocates a similar approach to developing the skills of entry-level workers. His list of fundamental skills sounds similar to the competencies for manufacturing workers developed by the MSSC: English language skills, computer literacy (for effective operation of increasingly high-tech trucks), interpersonal skills, and reliability. “All organizations,” he declares, “need to promote those skills and help their workers develop them. We need to be proactive.” Gartenlaub of the California Community Colleges takes a similar view. Managers, he says, often don’t know the skill levels of their employees—or else overestimate them. He urges employers to assess the skills of their current workers and invest in training to provide them with the skills—math, analysis, interpersonal—they need to succeed in their jobs. Some tools are already available.

Sharon Miller, the director of academic and technical education for the US Department of Education’s Office of Vocational and Adult Education, points to two programs launched by her office, the College and Careers Transition initiative and the Career Clusters initiative, that have brought together representatives from secondary education, postsecondary education, and the employer community to ensure that students who have completed academic or technical training possess the skills that employers expect of their entry-level workers.

Many solid waste industry jobs, such as driver, equipment mechanic, and engineer, are represented in the 16 clusters (www.careerclusters.org).

What will those future workers look like? Parker believes that, as succeeding generations of solid waste managers—better educated and more sophisticated than many of the mom-and-pop operators of past decades—rise to leadership positions, there will be increasing diversity in the management ranks. Figures from the BLS indicate that—although the number of Latinos working in the solid waste industry has increased—their proportion of the workforce as a whole remained constant from 2000 to 2006. However, Parker cites anecdotal evidence of an increased Latino presence in the solid waste workforce. Even if BLS figures don’t bear this out yet, a 2005 ETA report indicates that the foreign-born workforce has been increasing at a faster rate in the US than the number of native-born workers. Because so many immigrants come from Mexico and elsewhere in Latin America, it may simply be a matter of time before this demographic shift becomes more readily apparent in the solid waste field.

To address the issue of limited English proficiency in the immigrant workforce, the NSWMA—with help from a federal OSHA grant—has produced a series of safety videos in English and Spanish. While creating a culture of safety for all workers is critical in the solid waste field, the experience of the manufacturing industry indicates that such types of communication may be only a first step. Gartenlaub explains that a vocational English as a second language (VESL, pronounced “vessel”) program grew out of the effort to teach the manufacturing skills standards when it became apparent that many workers needed a better grasp of English in order to learn other required skills. VESL is targeted at workers who have already achieved an intermediate level of English proficiency and is generally tailored to a particular employer or group of employers.

A different concern relates to women in the solid waste field. Although Macenas of the EIA Women’s Council notes that women have been represented in the industry for a number of years, their numbers have been small—and may actually be shrinking. The percentage of women in the waste management and remediation services workforce decreased from 18% in 2000 to less than 14% in 2006, according to BLS figures. If it continues, this trend could spell trouble: A February 2006 report by the White House Council of Economic Advisers warned that a decrease in the number of women in the workforce may limit economic growth, noting that women—who now constitute a majority of undergraduate and graduate students—are some of the nation’s best-educated workers.

Flexibility in scheduling and creation of a supportive workplace can be key practices to retaining women, according to the Center for WorkLife Law at the University of California’s Hastings College of the Law—and can also be appealing to a new generation of workers, both male and female. Macenas points out that the EIA Women’s Council began as a social organization but evolved into a professional network for women in the solid waste industry to acquire (or act as) mentors and to exchange ideas.

The council emphasizes professional development, hosting conference calls on a variety of topics as well as an executive roundtable and educational programs at conferences, which are open to all members of either association.

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Ultimately, it will be the establishment of professional communities and opportunities for continuing education and skill development that keep employees engaged in their work and committed to their organizations. The solution, as Desi Reno puts it: “The manager has to be charismatic—has to keep people interested and curious. You have to make them see that their skills can be applied to a greater mission.”

Reno, who worked in the private sector for a major waste hauler for more than 17 years, stresses the stewardship role that he believes is paramount in the public sector. It’s the manager’s job, he says, to put employees’ work in context—to show them the “higher purpose” of their work and make them realize that they’re “preserving a part of the earth.”

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