Pubdate: Sun, 08 Apr 2007 Source: Corpus Christi Caller-Times (TX) Copyright: 2007 Corpus Christi Caller-Times Contact: http://www.caller.com/commcentral/email_ed.htm Website: http://www.caller.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/872 Author: Dan Kelley, Caller Times JOB SEEKER DRUG USE MAY BE EXXAGERATED Surveys Among Employers Don't Bear Out Concerns In a city election in which job creation is an oft-cited issue, a new argument has surfaced. To hear some say it, plenty of jobs are available - if only the applicants had the necessary training and could pass the drug test. "We have 1,500 jobs with employers like Kiewit (Offshore Services Ltd.) and Corpus Christi Army Depot that cannot be filled because our kids don't have the job skills or cannot pass the drug test," Councilwoman Melody Cooper told the Caller-Times in a recent interview. Cooper isn't the only local official who has been repeating this statement as fact. Verifying it is difficult. Skilled blue-collar jobs are tough to fill. That's true throughout the country - nobody interviewed for this article disputed that. There is a concern that politicians and other public officials are hyping the problem to deflect criticism for slow local economic growth. "I'm not denying we have a drug problem. I'm not denying we have an education problem," said Butch Escobedo, who has served for two years on the Coastal Bend Workforce Development Board, a state-funded agency designed to link job seekers to companies. "Those problems are not unique to Corpus Christi. Look at the Valley, they have the same problems and they're growing faster than us." Susan Groves, owner of Paul's Fabricating, declined to discuss her hiring practices but said demand for skilled workers is high in her industry. Commenting on drug use in the workforce, she added, "I wouldn't single out any industry, or Corpus Christi. I don't think drug abuse is partial to income." It's difficult to pinpoint where the concern over drug use among local job applicants became a campaign issue. Cooper and others cite Roland Mower, CEO of the Corpus Christi Regional Economic Development Corporation. He said in an interview that he was relying on information provided to him by business leaders and from an existing industry survey compiled by the EDC. Kiewit Offshore Services Ltd. did not return several calls for comment to confirm the figures. Mower said the company has since corrected him, saying the company could hire that many, but doesn't have that many openings. The EDC's survey asked 21 companies if the local labor supply was adequate - 15 responded "no." All 21 gave explanations of the types of workers it is most difficult to recruit. One company responded "technical, people to work off-shifts, drug-free people." Far more respondents to the survey cited lack of job skills than problems finding drug-free workers. That survey stands in contrast to another one performed on behalf of the EDC. In 2003, the EDC hired Dallas-based Pathfinders Group to study the availability of workers in the area. The 2003 report found that 53 percent of companies in Corpus Christi considered the availability of technical workers to be "Excellent" or "Good." For skilled workers, that figure rose to 60 percent. Corpus Christi fared better than other communities surveyed. "We've seen a slow buildup of the economy since that time period," Mower said. "Any time the economy is stronger, more available labor is put to work." The most recent survey did not specifically ask employers any questions regarding drug testing. Mower said that will be included on next year's survey. Mower, however, didn't start the debate over a skilled workforce in the Coastal Bend. His predecessor, Ron Kitchens, claimed in 2003 that the high school dropout rate in Corpus Christi cost the area more than $100 million in lost wages. Concerns over an absence of skilled workers in the Coastal Bend have been part of the public discourse for years, and generally have spurred calls for new training centers - such as those at Del Mar College or the Craft Training Center of the Coastal Bend, which recently began an expansion. Such claims have sparked calls to market job training opportunities to high school students rather than open new centers. Bob Parker, president of Repcon Inc., a contractor to refineries along the Gulf Coast and a participant in the Craft Training Center expansion, said he and his competitors hire from a common pool stretching to Baton Rouge. He said that because refineries along the Gulf Coast tend to require turnaround contractors at about the same time, demand increases during certain parts of the year. Once employers start reaching past a core group of skilled workers, failure rates on drug tests might hit 50 percent. "I don't think it's substantially worse in Corpus Christi than it is in Houston," Parker said. He said the labor pool in Corpus Christi is small enough - and Houston so large - that if people fail the drug tests at the same rate, it might have a bigger impact in Corpus Christi. But there do not appear to be any definitive public numbers comparing how often applicants fail drug tests. Practices at some local programs suggest that even if those figures were available, it might understate the extent of the problem. Rachel Ballou, director of education at the Craft Training Center, said when students are told they will be drug-tested before classes begin, some leave the building and don't return. Even so, she said, it isn't unusual to lose two or three students out of about 105 through random drug tests. Cooper said she has no ulterior motive for pointing out the problems of drug use in Corpus Christi and that she has seen the results of drug abuse and unemployment through her work as a lawyer. "It doesn't matter if it's a problem somewhere else," she said. "It's a problem here, and it needs to be addressed." She called for a campaign to market the wages of some blue-collar jobs but said the city has no plans at this time to do so. District 3 Councilman Jesse Noyola also has taken up the fight, telling constituents that jobs are out there. But he isn't sure about the extent to which drugs are a drag on the local economy. "Not everyone is on drugs," Noyola said. Mike Carrano, business manager for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 278, said there are many explanations for the labor shortage. Local wages took a dive in the 1980s during an economic slump. Those wages deterred new workers from entering trades. The entire shortage, he says, is compounded locally by rebuilding efforts in parts of the Gulf Coast affected by hurricanes. "People have predicted for a long time that there would be a shortage of qualified manpower," Carrano said. "(Hurricanes) Rita and Katrina sped it up by a few years." He said the union had about 500 members, but 250 have gone to other locations for more opportunity. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath