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Moving up the ladder
Hispanics play increasingly prominent
role in Virginia’s construction
industry
by Garry
Kranz
for Virginia Business
May 2006 Luvin Ramos arrived in Virginia 17 years ago, a 19-year-old
with dreams and not much else. He found work as a laborer
with Southland Concrete Corp. in Dulles, where his godfather
had advanced from a framing carpenter to a supervisory
role as carpenter foreman. With any luck, Ramos hoped
to at least earn a pile of money to help support the
parents and siblings he left behind in his native Guatemala.
Upon his arrival, Ramos knew little
English and was not skilled in any particular construction
trade. But he
did possess something that caught the eye of Southland
President Randy Green: leadership instincts. “Luvin
had the ability to see the big picture. He started out
with us by putting in foundations, but it was clear that
he understood how important it was for the different
tradesmen to work together and be kept on schedule. Mainly
it was his persistence to grow,” says Green.
Southland paid for Ramos to take courses
at a local adult education center so he could master
English. It also
ponied up for blueprint-reading courses at local colleges.
Just as important, Green and Executive Vice President
Greg Kohlhaas encouraged Ramos when he expressed a
desire to learn more about the industry, even allowing
him to
take home blueprints. Each night after dinner, Ramos
would spread the architectural drawings across his
living room floor and pore over them for hours, sometimes
falling
asleep right on the plans. “Every little chance
I had to read blueprints, I jumped at it,” says
Ramos, now 35 and an engineering superintendent.
Ramos’ hard work, and Southland’s
investment in him, is paying off. Ramos has settled comfortably
into a typical middle-class American lifestyle since
leaving Guatemala nearly two decades ago. A side benefit
to those company-paid English classes: That is where
he met his wife, a U.S. citizen who is originally from
El Salvador. Today the couple own a house in the suburbs
where they raise their three school-age children. Ramos
occupies one of the more pivotal jobs at Southland,
a
medium-sized company that generated more than $60 million
in projects in 2005. He sketches in the structural
elements on blueprints that work crews use to build numerous
projects
along the Northern Virginia-Washington, D.C., corridor.
Once dominated by white Southern men,
construction in Virginia increasingly is populated by
an ever-growing
number of Hispanics. Southland’s experience is
typical: Of the firm’s 600 full-time employees,
about 500 (83 percent) are of Hispanic origin. This trend
is national in scope, fueled by a worker shortage during
a sustained building boom in both commercial and residential
construction. According to the federal Bureau of Labor
Statistics, Hispanics make up about 14 percent of the
U.S. construction work force. Exact figures for Virginia
aren’t readily available, but it is generally believed
that Virginia’s percentage of Hispanic construction
workers exceeds the federal estimate by a fair amount.
Those numbers are expected to grow
in coming years despite political tension over illegal
immigrants. On Capitol
Hill, the issue has drawn heated debate with some members
advocating tougher laws for illegals and others pressing
for changes that would grant temporary worker status
and eventually citizenship to immigrants who have lived
and worked in the U.S. for at least five years. A compromise
on what would have been the biggest immigrant reform
legislation in years fell apart just before Congress
broke for its spring recess last month. In Virginia,
the issue surfaced during last fall’s gubernatorial
campaign with Virginia Republican Jerry Kilgore — who
lost the election — taking a hard line against
a proposed day-labor center in Herndon. In March, Virginia’s
U.S. Sen. George Allen also took a stand against illegal
immigration, arguing that people here illegally should
not be granted amnesty but rather returned to their
native countries before applying for legal residency
in the
United States.
The debate has prompted massive demonstrations
by immigrants nationwide who are threatening a work boycott
on May
1 to publicize the need for reform. It also has raised
concerns among Virginia’s Hispanic population. “The
tonality of a lot of laws [discussed] is that Hispanics
are not welcome in Virginia,” says Michel Zajur,
president and chief executive of the Virginia Hispanic
Chamber of Commerce, referring especially to Kilgore’s
comments during his campaign.
Speaking the language
Few states have as acute a need for construction workers
as Virginia, especially in the greater Washington area,
where commercial building remains red hot despite a slowdown
in the housing market. To keep up, construction companies
rely on an abundant supply of Hispanics with a reputation
for industrious work.
“Our state economy couldn’t
exist without the Hispanic work force. It would come
crumbling down,” says
Jim Cronin, vice president of operations for L.F. Jennings
Inc., a Falls Church retail contractor that employs
400 people, roughly half of them Hispanics.
In fact Hispanics, who represent nearly
5 percent of Virginia’s population, exert significant
impact on a wide range of industries, both here and across
the
country. A recent report by the U.S. Census Bureau
found that the growth rate for Hispanic-owned businesses
from
1997-2002 was three times higher than that of other
U.S. companies. It also noted that nearly three in 10
Hispanic-owned
firms in the U.S. were in construction and construction-related
industries.
For Virginia contractors, Hispanic workers are arriving
at a crucial time. Labor shortages have handcuffed the
industry for years, causing companies to lose out on
contracts or take smaller jobs. Experts say the industry
also suffers from a poor image, with young people believing
the jobs are either too hard or too dangerous.
A majority of American-born high school
students are being steered into white-collar professions
using computers
and technology. “Because of that, this industry
faces a work force shortage that will continue for years.
There is job security in construction,” says
Angie Lynd, vice president of the Associated Builders
and Contractors
of Virginia, a construction trade group.
And there is even greater job security if you are Hispanic
and can demonstrate initiative. Construction firms here
are responding by rolling out special apprenticeships
and other training programs to groom Hispanics for leadership
roles, well aware that a rash of retiring baby boomers
in the coming years is expected to deplete management
ranks.
Old Dominion Insulation Inc. in Richmond,
which runs an apprenticeship program for promising talent,
has promoted
10 Hispanic workers to supervisory positions, with
another 10 undergoing training. The company provides
commercial
services relating to installation and removal of insulation
products. “We’ve got a couple of young Hispanic
guys in their late teens who speak English as well as
I do. They are the ones who are going to make it to the
next level, because they are talented, work hard and
can communicate with everybody,” says company
President Roddy Davoud, whose 275-employee work force
includes
about 140 Hispanics.
Companies also are trying to help Spanish-speaking
workers assimilate into American culture. Many construction
companies
have in-house Hispanic advisory committees of bilingual
leaders to provide advice to workers about crucial
issues such as paying taxes, registering children for
school
or obtaining a driver’s license. Like many firms,
Old Dominion sponsors a soccer team made up of Hispanic
employees.
Yet the large influx of Hispanics poses some daunting
challenges as well, most notably communication relating
to safety issues. Since many Hispanics are still struggling
to learn the language, safety notices must be put up
in both English and Spanish. Construction accounted for
the third-highest number of job-related fatalities (42)
in Virginia in 2004, according to the Virginia Department
of Labor and Industry, although the information is not
broken down by number of deaths of each ethnic group
or race. During the building of the Route 895 road project
in Chesterfield County, two Hispanic construction workers
died on the job, one in 1999 (when reinforcing rods collapsed
while he was working on a bridge) and another in 2001,
when a 500-pound support beam fell from a nearby crane.
Helping Spanish-speaking workers learn
English is a high safety priority among contractors.
Centex Corp., a Dallas-based
contractor with a strong presence in Northern Virginia,
pays for its Hispanic laborers and crew leaders who
want to learn English as a second language. Also, English-only
crew leaders or others in supervisory positions are
taking
classes to learn how to translate basic construction
terminology —words like nail, hammer, tools, etc. — from
English into Spanish. “We want supervisors to be
bilingual so they can better assess a person’s
knowledge and skills, and also so they don’t hurt
themselves or somebody else,” says Steve Smithgall,
Centex’s vice president of operations for Virginia.
Documentation of workers
Clearly, the
biggest headache comes with making sure Hispanic workers
are in the U.S. legally. Executives
of construction firms bristle at the suggestion that
large numbers of illegal workers are on their payrolls.
In fact, contractors must do a lot of legwork to comply
with federal regulations or face severe fines and other
penalties, not to mention the fallout of losing high-dollar
contracts if they are found in violation.
Three forms of identification are required
to verify if a person is here legally, with companies
needing to
check as many as 19 residency requirements before they
hire foreign-born workers. To handle the workload,
some contracting companies are looking to add bilingual
human
resources professionals to attack the issue. Says Lynd: “Commercial
construction companies are very concerned that the people
they hire are here legally, because they have a lot to
lose if they aren’t.”
But a recent report from the Pew Hispanic Center, a Washington,
D.C., research organization funded by The Pew Charitable
Trusts, points up how pervasive the problem of illegal
workers actually is across the nation. Of the 7.2 million
illegal workers employed in March, 14 percent work in
construction, the group said in a recent study.
Questions remain on how long Virginia construction companies
can continue to attract top talent without significantly
boosting wages. The state added nearly 12,000 new construction
jobs in 2005, a one-year jump of 5.3 percent, according
to the Center for Urban Development at Virginia Commonwealth
University. Although construction wages rose 5 percent
last year, Hispanics looking for careers in construction
could easily earn more in other states.
Virginia’s
median wage of nearly $41,000 a year remains about $1,700
below the national average. “It is an increasingly
competitive market and there is a lot more emphasis being
placed on health packages, 401(k) plans and retirement
benefits than just a few years ago,” says Smithgall
of Centex.
Such is the price of running a construction company.
And while it is sobering news for construction companies,
to Hispanic workers talk of higher wages sounds nice
in any language. |