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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Academics and cultural commentators may disagree about whether the impending wave of baby boomer retirements and smaller growth in the workforce will actually lead to the labor shortage predicted by many observers. But Desi Reno, the integrated waste manager for San Joaquin County (CA), is certain of one thing: “I cannot recruit diesel mechanics.”

Reno is frustrated by the difficulty of attracting qualified staff to operate his county’s active and closed landfills and transfer station. In that respect, he has something in common with a colleague on the other side of the country: Marcia Papin, the solid waste disposal manager for Greenville County (SC), finds herself plagued by a shortage of skilled trade workers, such as truck drivers, equipment operators, and equipment mechanics. Papin, whose agency operates a landfill, laments the “stigma” that she says seems to be associated with skilled trade jobs these days.

According to figures provided by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the number of people employed in the category of “waste management and remediation services” grew by 18% between 2000 and 2006. Determining how solid waste managers should respond—or even how much of a challenge industry growth and workforce demographic changes will present—is not a simple task, however. Managers’ experiences vary considerably according to labor market conditions in their geographic region, and their staffing concerns range from finding skilled trade workers to retaining innovative engineers to grooming effective managers. Yet in discussions with municipal solid waste managers from all over the country about the challenges of recruiting and retaining the solid waste workforce of today and tomorrow, several themes emerged: developing the skills of workers at all levels of the organization, burnishing the image of the solid waste management field, and the need for strong leadership to inspire employees and cultivate their loyalty.

That means all kinds of employees, although managers’ disparate experiences may make the problem difficult to define. For example, while Papin of Greenville County relates difficulties in recruiting equipment operators, Timm Schimke states that in his area, there is “no lack of people with heavy equipment experience.” Schimke, the director of the Deschutes County (OR) Solid Waste Department, acknowledges that he is “always training” because he is rarely able to hire people with solid waste experience, but he notes that he typically gets a large applicant pool because the county is considered a desirable employer. There is a similar lack of consensus with regard to professional jobs in the industry. Bruce Parker, president and chief executive officer of the National Solid Wastes Management Association (NSWMA), says the interesting and challenging work, competitive pay, and career mobility make hiring engineers to work in the solid waste field less problematic than recruiting skilled workers such as mechanics. Papin—blessed with a location near “a couple of fine engineering schools”—concurs with Parker’s assessment. On the other hand, Jeremy O’Brien, director of applied research for the Solid Waste Association of North America (SWANA), says that association members are having problems attracting engineers to design landfills and leachate systems. This conclusion more closely matches the experience of Reno of San Joaquin County. Newly minted engineers, he says, tend to be more interested in building bridges and highways—not the landfill gas systems he needs. Meanwhile, Brian Tippetts, director of the Solid Waste Department for La Crosse County (WI), expresses greatest concern about hiring effective managers. “As key people leave,” he explains, “you go out to the marketplace to hire replacements and realize you can’t find people with exactly the right skills.” He attributes the limited pool of managerial employees to a lack of alignment between university curricula and industry needs.

From Landfill to Executive Suite, a Skills Gap
Although the jobs of equipment operator and manager are considerably different, leaders in the solid waste management field seem to agree with Tippetts’s assessment that a “disconnect” between the educational system and the industry has exacerbated the problem of recruiting and retaining staff. Papin says her most skilled equipment operators attended a yearlong program at a local technical college to learn their trade but notes ruefully that the program was discontinued in the mid-1980s. According to Papin, the basic skill sets she looks for—math up to geometry, reading (parts manuals, articles) and writing (accident reports, performance evaluations), operating diagnostic tools, basic construction surveying—haven’t changed drastically, but the number of people with those skills has decreased. She attributes the change to the emphasis that high schools now place on a college preparatory curriculum, which she says has come at the expense of vocational education. And San Joaquin County’s Reno says flatly, “I think it’s remiss of the educational system not to have shop class.” Marshall Gartenlaub, statewide director for applied competitive technologies for the California Community Colleges, sees a different problem: While modern workplaces frequently require employees to work collaboratively in teams—replacing the individual producer model of years past—students at the high school level are generally expected to work on an individual basis. To address the shortage of qualified workers, Reno believes the solid waste industry may need to follow the lead of companies such as Toyota in training its own.

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Indeed, in the area of skilled trade jobs, solid waste managers may be able to learn from the experience of the manufacturing industry, which has been undertaking a broad-based effort for the past 15 years to develop the skills of its workforce. Leo Reddy, chief executive officer of the Manufacturing Skill Standards Council (MSSC), explains that the effort grew out of a survey conducted in 1990 by the National Council for Advanced Manufacturing, which generated strong responses from participating manufacturers about a growing skills gap in the workforce. (The concerns of manufacturers will sound familiar to solid waste managers: A third of the respondents to a 2005 National Association of Manufacturers survey reported insufficient reading, writing, and communications skills in their labor pool.) Reddy says reports of the death of the US manufacturing sector—widespread in the general media—have been greatly exaggerated, noting that manufacturing represents 13% of the nation’s gross domestic product. While Reddy acknowledges that manufacturing lost 3 million workers between 2002 and 2004, he says most of those people were working in jobs that do not require a specific skill—many of these jobs became automated—and that there are plenty of manufacturing jobs for skilled people. To that end, the MSSC has partnered with the Employment & Training Administration (ETA) of the US Department of Labor to develop a set of required competencies for skilled manufacturing workers and a certification program to be administered through community colleges. Reddy says the standards—including math, science, information technology, adaptability, reliability, and communication—are applicable to all sectors of manufacturing and all occupations within it; the industry’s long-term goal, according to Reddy, is to have 40% of the manufacturing workforce certified.

Jim Warner is concerned about upgrading the qualifications of employees at the other end of the spectrum as well. Warner, executive director of the Lancaster County (PA) Solid Waste Management Authority and a member of the SWANA board, is working toward updating the training the association offers, in recognition of the new skills needed to succeed in the solid waste field. “Business sense is increasingly important in hiring management staff,” he says. “There seem to be many more business challenges than there were a decade ago. And there are business opportunities to be captured—you want managers who are going to go out and find them.” For his part, Warner says he tries to keep his top staff well-rounded in their knowledge and skill base, rather than allowing them to be “pigeonholed” in a technical area. He cites the need for one of his managers to become conversant with the intricacies of carbon-emission trading as an example of the industry’s dynamic environment and says the true skills test may boil down to the question “How adaptable are people?” Tippetts of La Crosse County echoes Warner’s views, saying that a background in engineering or hydrology should be considered secondary to management skills. “The business side is very important,” he emphasizes. “Oftentimes we hire for niches—we should be looking for what management potential [job candidates] have.” Next Page >

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