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January 2005

January 25, 2005

Single women household triples

Fact #336:  Since 1970 the percentage of U.S. households containing five or more people has fallen in half.  In 1970, 21 percent of households had five or more people; in 2004 the number has dropped to 10 percent.  (Source: US Census Bureau)

Fact #337: Since 1970 the percentage of U.S. households containing one or two people has increased from 46 percent to 60 percent.  (Source: US Census Bureau)

Fact #338:  The number of households consisting of single women 30 to 34 has tripled since 1970.  (Source: US Census Bureau)

Fact #339:  Mother's are juggling work and family: 5.5 million stay-at-home parents, 5.4 million are women and only 98,000 true stay-at-home dads. (Source: Current Population Survey)

Fact #340:  20 percent of stay-at-home moms lived in households earning $100,000 or more, while 2.3 percent were in households earning less than $10,000.  (Source: Current Population Survey)

January 19, 2005

Hirings Up, Workers Down

Fact #331: Three of four companies are not confident their current talent pool will meet future needs. (Source: RHR International, 2004)

Fact #332: Half of companies will lose half of their current senior management by 2010. (Source: RHR International, 2004)

Fact #333: Approximately 50 percent of privately held, women-owned firms in the top 50 metropolitan areas collectively employ 9.5 million people and generate $1.3 trillion in annual sales. (Source: Center for Women’s Business Research) More Women-Owned Business

Fact #334: Almost half of Canada's workforce will be over age 45 within a decade. (Source: WarrenShepell Research Group)

Fact #335: Workers age 50 years and older experience about 60 per cent more workplace stress than in 2003 and twice the level of workplace conflict. (Source: WarrenShepell Research Group)

Click here for more information about the Perfect Labor Storm.

January 08, 2005

Teachers Short on High Tech Skills

While 9 in 10 children between age 5 and 17 use computers, students of almost any age are far ahead of their teachers in computer literacy.  Teenagers use the Internet at even higher rates for school related work.

The good news is that virtually all U.S. schools are connected to the Internet, according to a Department of Education report.  The bad news is educators still lack training and understanding how computers can be used to help students. 

This schism between the skills that students need to learn and use and the ability of our aging teacher workforce to teach them is a problem.  One of the solutions that comes up in every plan to head off The Perfect Labor Storm is better education of students.  You can't do that without having the students skilled in the use of technology.

"Education is the only business still debating the usefulness of technology," says Rod Paige in the National Education Technology Plan.

What's a solution?  One student says " I think that teachers should be required to go to a technology course." 

January 03, 2005

73 percent of FAA controllers will retire by 2014

The FAA plans to fill 12,500 jobs at radar screens across the country to offset the retirement of more than 11,000 veteran controllers, 73 percent of FAA controllers,  who were hired to replace striking controllers fired by President Ronald Reagan two decades ago.

Better later than never.  FAA Administrator Marion Blakey finally decided to abandon his traditional hiring practices - which were geared mainly at only meeting attrition instead of building a strong bench for the future.  Not only does the FAA have to replace the retiring controllors but to keep up with demand for air transportation will increase it field from 14,800 today to about 16,200 controllers when the hiring is completed in 2014.

This may be easier said than done. We all know training is the most costly line item in bringing new people on board.  Currently the FAA wash-out rate of trainees is 40 percent. So in addition to just finding enough qualified candidates, getting them to complete training and stay on board is an issue too.

The air traffic controllor situation is just one more example of impending Perfect Labor Storm.

January 02, 2005

More Worker Shortages - The Chickens Come Home To Roost?

While billions of dollars of aid flow into tsunami ravaged

East Asia

, two things stand in the way of the victims receiving much needed food, supplies and medical aid.  First is the lack of access. Many of the locations were remote in the first place and with access roads washed away, the survivors are isolated from the rest of the world.

The second source of frustration is a problem that keeps coming up again and again – the lack of workers.  The supplies are coming in so quickly that there aren’t enough people available to process the aid.  We can’t get all the donations out of our countries and once in their homelands to their neighborhoods. Once again, this is another example of why The Perfect Labor Storm is here and its effects will be felt over and over.

The magnitude of recent events and increasing complexity of our lives always seem to keep us waiting for service. Why? The answer is simple - not enough trained and skilled workers. Whether it is standing in line at a convenience store for milk and lottery tickets or waiting with hunger and desperation for relief aid, we never seem to have enough people available to serve us.  Months after hurricane victims lost their homes in

Florida

, many are still waiting for insurance adjustors to arrive and payments to be processed. 

Even when enough workers might exist, it doesn’t mean they show up.  Just ask one of the US Air passengers who were separated from their luggage over the Christmas holiday.

The outlook for aviation is not much brighter.  If things don’t change quickly, the luggage problem will be solved because travelers will be grounded.

·         Almost three-quarters of our nation's 15,000 air traffic controllers, most hired after President Reagan dismissed strikers in early 1908's, will retire in next ten years.

·         By 2010, half the controllers are expected to leave, mostly due to retirement. 5,000 are expected to leave by 2006. As many as 11,000 could leave over the next decade.

·         The rate of controller attrition is expected to be 150 percent to 200 percent higher over the next 10 years than it was over the previous five years.

·         Many potential retirees currently hold key positions as supervisors, work in some of FAA's busiest facilities, or both.

·         About 93 percent of current supervisors are eligible to retire by 2011.

Finding replacements for the brain drain is only part of the FAA problem.  Forty percent of the trainees “wash-out”.  As a result, the FAA needs to hire nearly 20,000 controllers, not 12,500, if its current hiring and retention strategies don’t improve.

To add more credibility that the Perfect Labor Storm is on its way, the U.S. Bureau of Labor projected a shortage of speech-language pathologists.  Currently we have about 94,000; by 2012 we will need 120,000.  Many areas are already feeling the effect. In

Texas

, nearly 60 percent of the positions were filled with contract workers, who make double and triple what most pathologists make, or unlicensed assistants.

As mentioned earlier, the shortages are not being caused by attrition alone.  Demand for services is growing.  Due to improvements in diagnosing speech impairments combined with higher rates of autism, Down’s syndrome and cerebral palsy, more people are eligible for speech language services.

And like every other profession and industry feeling the pinch, universities are having trouble recruiting and graduating enough students, who also need a master’s degree to be fully certified in most states.

As more and more managers catch on and target the limited pool of available workers, the intensity of The Perfect Labor Storm will grow stronger.

January 01, 2005

Speech Language Pathologists in short supply

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that the nation will need about 120,000 speech language pathologists by 2012 to meet increasing demand and replace retiring workers.  In 2002, only about 94,000 speech language pathologists were working. 

A survey of Texas state schools found 60 percent were forced to fill vacancies with expensive contract workers or unlicensed assistants.

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