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John Trotti Grading & Excavation Contractor Editor

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GX Contractor Editor's Blog

December 15th, 2008 1:39pm PST

Keeping Pace with Workforce Change

Posted By John Trotti Comments

Whether it’s about weather or business, climate change is getting all the big play in the news, served up to us by “experts” who, beyond railing about their pet concerns, are as helpless to cure things than you and I are...less, in my humble opinion, when you consider that many of the most vocal among them earned their expertise stripes in the creation of the problems they now deplore. So unless you have a solution for curbing the surge in global population rise, or have a trillion-or-so dollars sitting around with nothing to do, then I suggest we both leave the earthshaking stuff to folks with nothing better to do and focus on a change much closer to home…workforce change, and how best to take advantage of it.

Right now it is estimated that more than 50% of the construction workforce in the US is Hispanic, with the percentage continuing to grow, and that’s a change is right here, right now, and one that you have to deal with each and every day.

So for starters, how about clicking here and then indicating on the poll the percentage of Hispanics that comes closest to your company’s situation.

Then I’d like you to think about how many of them have sufficient command of the language to guarantee they can be counted on to understand instructions given them in English.

Since communication is not merely a matter of words, but the transmission of values and underlying assumptions as well, in these days of tighter and tighter budgets, think about how many supervisors you have who are genuinely bilingual and able to give and receive instructions unambiguously.

Now turn your attention to those in supervisory positions who aren’t bilingual and consider what potential health, safety, legal, regulatory, and productivity issues this lack opens you up to.

If what you come up with leaves room for concern, have you implemented a plan for doing something about it? If so, how about posting a comment in the section below, letting the rest of us know what it is, how it’s working, and what problems you’ve faced in implementing it?

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