Mike Rowe “We Talk About Millions Of “Shovel Ready” Jobs For A Society That Doesn’t Encourage People To Pick Up A Shovel.”

May 12th, 2011 (7) Posted By Angelia Phillips.

Discovery Channel
Mike Rowe’s Testimony Before the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation

Chairman Rockefeller, Ranking Member Hutchison and members of this committee, my name is Mike Rowe, and I want to thank you all very much for the opportunity to testify before you today.

I’m here today because of my grandfather.

His name was Carl Knobel, and he made his living in Baltimore as a master electrician. He was also a plumber, a mechanic, a mason, and a carpenter. Everyone knew him as a jack-of-all-trades. I knew him as a magician.

For most of his life, my grandfather woke up clean and came home dirty. In between, he accomplished things that were nothing short of miraculous. Some days he might re-shingle a roof. Or rebuild a motor. Or maybe run electricity out to our barn. He helped build the church I went to as a kid, and the farmhouse my brothers and I grew up in. He could fix or build anything, but to my knowledge he never once read the directions. He just knew how stuff worked.

I remember one Saturday morning when I was 12. I flushed the toilet in the same way I always had. The toilet however, responded in a way that was completely out of character. There was a rumbling sound, followed by a distant gurgle. Then, everything that had gone down reappeared in a rather violent and spectacular fashion.

Naturally, my grandfather was called in to investigate, and within the hour I was invited to join he and my dad in the front yard with picks and shovels.

By lunch, the lawn was littered with fragments of old pipe and mounds of dirt. There was welding and pipe-fitting, blisters and laughter, and maybe some questionable language. By sunset we were completely filthy. But a new pipe was installed, the dirt was back in the hole, and our toilet was back on its best behavior. It was one of my favorite days ever.

Thirty years later in San Francisco when my toilet blew up again. This time, I didn’t participate in the repair process. I just called my landlord, left a check on the kitchen counter, and went to work. When I got home, the mess was cleaned up and the problem was solved. As for the actual plumber who did the work, I never even met him.

It occurred to me that I had become disconnected from a lot of things that used to fascinate me. I no longer thought about where my food came from, or how my electricity worked, or who fixed my pipes, or who made my clothes. There was no reason to. I had become less interested in how things got made, and more interested in how things got bought.

At this point my grandfather was well into his 80s, and after a long visit with him one weekend, I decided to do a TV show in his honor. Today, Dirty Jobs is still on the air, and I am here before this committee, hoping to say something useful. So, here it is.

I believe we need a national PR Campaign for Skilled Labor. A big one. Something that addresses the widening skills gap head on, and reconnects the country with the most important part of our workforce.

Right now, American manufacturing is struggling to fill 200,000 vacant positions. There are 450,000 openings in trades, transportation and utilities. The skills gap is real, and it’s getting wider. In Alabama, a third of all skilled tradesmen are over 55. They’re retiring fast, and no one is there to replace them.

Alabama’s not alone. A few months ago in Atlanta I ran into Tom Vilsack, our Secretary of Agriculture. Tom told me about a governor who was unable to move forward on the construction of a power plant. The reason was telling. It wasn’t a lack of funds. It wasn’t a lack of support. It was a lack of qualified welders.

In general, we’re surprised that high unemployment can exist at the same time as a skilled labor shortage. We shouldn’t be. We’ve pretty much guaranteed it.

In high schools, the vocational arts have all but vanished. We’ve elevated the importance of “higher education” to such a lofty perch that all other forms of knowledge are now labeled “alternative.” Millions of parents and kids see apprenticeships and on-the-job-training opportunities as “vocational consolation prizes,” best suited for those not cut out for a four-year degree. And still, we talk about millions of “shovel ready” jobs for a society that doesn’t encourage people to pick up a shovel.

In a hundred different ways, we have slowly marginalized an entire category of critical professions, reshaping our expectations of a “good job” into something that no longer looks like work. A few years from now, an hour with a good plumber – if you can find one – is going to cost more than an hour with a good psychiatrist. At which point we’ll all be in need of both.

I came here today because guys like my grandfather are no less important to civilized life than they were 50 years ago. Maybe they’re in short supply because we don’t acknowledge them they way we used to. We leave our check on the kitchen counter, and hope the work gets done. That needs to change.

My written testimony includes the details of several initiatives designed to close the skills gap, all of which I’ve had the privilege to participate in. Go Build Alabama, I Make America, and my own modest efforts through Dirty Jobs and mikeroweWORKS. I’m especially proud to announce “Discover Your Skills,” a broad-based initiative from Discovery Communications that I believe can change perceptions in a meaningful way.

I encourage you to support these efforts, because closing the skills gap doesn’t just benefit future tradesmen and the companies desperate to hire them. It benefits people like me, and anyone else who shares my addiction to paved roads, reliable bridges, heating, air conditioning, and indoor plumbing.
The skills gap is a reflection of what we value. To close the gap, we need to change the way the country feels about work.

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  • mike3481

    I heard Limbaugh one day talk about how since the late 70’s it’s almost impossible to flunk out of college, cuz if you screwed up, the school of humanities will design a curriculum for you and you’ll get a B.A. with the word “Studies” in it.

    And it’s a bullshit degree, need proof? Breitbart confirms it in is book.

    I dated a redhead in the early 80’s that was getting a B.A. degree in recreation, yeah, no shit, and she thought her future was golden until I asked her what she was going to do with it and she replied she could do anything she wanted cuz she had a college degree…and the blonde was dating the next day…

  • http://HBCIndy.com Dr. Jerry

    I like Mike Rowe…he can get dirt on his face with a smile and blisters on his hand with a grin…we need more Mike Rowes teaching young men how to do the same!

  • SlimReed

    I don’t know about your parts of the country, but it’s impossible to teach skills here in Minnesota. All the good folks at the various and sundry agencies that would protect us from ourselves, have virtually outlawed kids learning how to plumb, roof, bend nails, and mechanic. I say “virtually,” because if you farm or own your own business your kids (but not nieces and nephews) under the age of 18 can do what those kind social experimenters call “dangerous work.”
    An anecdote: When my son was 15, 5’10″, 190, he wanted to get a summer job roofing, which would have meant slogging bundles of shingles up ladders. The guys with the business were in their late-30s, and hired guys in their 50s for the work. The state doesn’t let 15 year old children climb ladders over seven feet high. Fortunately, son grew up in the country, and had been climbing ladders–and using axes, and even sawzalls–since he was able. By the time most kids hit 20, they’ve never learned to work let alone get dirty or sweat.

    • MinneSoCold

      We’re in a nanny state ran by urban lawyers and trust-fund babies which have huge social-guilt issues, neither which have ever gotten dirt under their fingernails or calluses on their hands outside of the occasional charity event. Our state fosters the idea that it’s “educated citizens” are above those careers, that manual labor is for the “under- & uneducated” and immigrant (legal or illegal) population, with the exception of farmers and ecologists.

  • checkers

    Why can’t this guy be President, or a Senator? Oh, yeah, he has morals and convictions. my bad.

  • Atilla Kahuna

    I work at one of those jobs that doesn’t look like “work” – I am a programmer and systems analyst.

    At the same time, though, I own a small farm, and teach my kids – all 8 of them – the value of hard work. I teach them the concept that, if you want something, you should plan on working for it, and that means HARD work. We sweat, get dirty, get blisters, build callouses, and all the other things that I love about “Dirty Jobs”.

    Keep speaking truth to those who don’t know what it sounds like, Mike!

  • http://www.fullcirclethinker.com Fullcirclethinker

    Mike Rowe for Secretary of Labor!