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Workforce Challenges of Electric Sector Employers

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Photo courtesy of Snohomish County PUD. 30. Conclusions (Challenges) ... Photo courtesy of Bonneville Power Administration. 31. Conclusions (Challenges 2) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Workforce Challenges of Electric Sector Employers


1
Workforce Challenges of Electric Sector
Employers
  • Summary of
  • Research Findings
  • Alan Hardcastle
  • Senior Research Associate
  • June 26, 2008

Mossy Rock Dam Photo courtesy of Tacoma Power
2
Electric Sector Workforce Study Sponsors
  • Center of Excellence for Energy
  • Technology, Centralia College
  • IBEW Local 77
  • Lewis County EDC
  • Pacific Mountain WDC
  • State Board for Community
  • Technical Colleges
  • Tacoma Power
  • Thurston-Lewis-Mason
  • Central Labor Council

Stator units at Grand Coulee Dam Third
Powerplant Photo courtesy of United States
Bureau of Reclamation
3
Electric Sector Workforce SurveyPurpose and
Design
  • Needs assessment of the industry
  • Existing data insufficient
  • Understand workforce issues
  • Benchmark for HR planning
  • Boost responsiveness
  • 12 Regional employers
  • WA and OR
  • Industry composition
  • Five key occupational groups
  • Operator
  • Line Worker
  • Mechanic
  • Electrician
  • Technician

Line School Instructor Photo courtesy of Avista
4
Participating Employers
5
National Context Three Major Factors
  • Impending Retirements
  • Shrinking Labor
  • Pool
  • Knowledge and
  • Skill Gaps

Maintenance employees walk through the juvenile
fish bypass Photo courtesy of Chelan County PUD
6
Regional Context
  • Economic Impact
  • Workforce demographics
  • Future labor supply
  • Education and training

Workers service a wind turbine at the Nine Mile
Canyon Facility Photo courtesy of Energy
Northwest
7
High Wage Employment
8
Electricity Demand Increasing
  • Between 2003-2025 electricity demand in the
    Pacific Northwest is forecast to increase by
    around 40 percent (around 7,000 aMW)
  • Source Northwest Power and Conservation Council,
    2005

9
Electric Power Generation
Source U.S. Department of Energy, Energy
Information Administration, 2007.
10
Problem 1 An Aging Workforce
  • Nationally, the average age of utility craft
    workers is 50 years old.
  • Highest average age of any industry sector
  • Around 50 of U.S. utility workers are projected
    to retire over the next 10 years
  • 200,000 highly-skilled workers will exit
  • Source Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI)

Mobile Workstation Photo courtesy of Puget Sound
Energy
11
Workforce Demographics
12
Population Dynamics
13
Problem 2 Skill Shortages
Source Washington State Workforce Training and
Education Coordinating Board, 2006.
14
Problem 3 Workforce Supply
15
Workforce Supply Problem contd
16
Apprenticeship
17
Survey ResultsTopics Covered
  • Current and future employment demand
  • Employment levels and future hiring
  • Retirement forecasts and replacement
  • Hiring challenges
  • Workforce and succession plans, strategies
  • Partnerships with colleges, others
  • Apprenticeship/pre-apprenticeship
  • Outreach to K-12 schools, students

18
Current Employment in 5 Target Occupations
19
Staffing projections thru 2009
20
Retirement forecast thru 2011
21
Vacancies
22
Key Hiring Challenges
  • General shortage of qualified applicants
  • Occupational shortages cut across industry
    sectors
  • Increased recruiting and hiring costs
  • Filling the skills gap with subcontractors and
    overtime
  • Adjusting hiring expectations and processes
  • Work conditions as a challenge to recruiting and
    hiring
  • A lack of workforce diversity
  • Specific jobs Line workers, technicians and
    electricians
  • Engineering (EEs)

23
Workforce Succession Planning
  • Few employers have formalized processes
  • Internal/external drivers
  • Informal approach typical
  • Management focus
  • New commitment to planning
  • Effective models in use
  • Implementation challenges

24
Two-Year College Connections
  • Limited in number and scope
  • Apprenticeship
  • Recruiting/hiring priority
  • Internal focus
  • Notable partnerships
  • Reaching out

Control Center Photo courtesy of TransAlta
25
Apprenticeship
26
Apprenticeship Enrollments
27
Apprenticeship Issues
  • A Big Investment
  • For an apprentice, its a three year program, a
    half-million dollar investment. So were serious
    about making sure theyll succeed.
  • ROI
  • We need to spend the money to get them through
    an apprenticeship, but we also need to look at
    retention. We cant keep stealing from each
    other.
  • Expanding Capacity

28
Pre-Apprenticeship Training
  • Eight employers routinely hire new employees into
    trainee-level positions that are preparatory to
    various craft occupations.
  • High school graduates
  • Locals as trainees
  • Develop a pool for regular apprenticeships
  • Resistance/support from Unions

29
K-12 Outreach
  • Building a K-12 pipeline
  • More strategic
  • Specific recruiting goals
  • ROI
  • Competing priorities
  • Image problem
  • Skills and knowledge
  • matter

Setting a Pole Photo courtesy of Snohomish
County PUD
30
Conclusions (Challenges)
  • Labor shortages already here, will worsen
  • Recruiting and hiring challenges increasing
  • Workforce and succession planning informal

McNary Substation in Umatilla Oregon Photo
courtesy of Bonneville Power Administration
31
Conclusions (Challenges 2)
  • Two-year college connections limited
  • Apprenticeship capacity insufficient
  • K-12 outreach underdeveloped

System Control Map Photo courtesy of Grays
Harbor PUD
32
Implications
  • Retirement effect
  • Skills vacuum
  • Replacement churn
  • Limited labor pool
  • Wage pressure
  • Competitive disadvantage
  • Is Industry Prepared?

IBEW Local 77 Apprentices raise the US flag at
the Center of Excellence for Energy
Technology 2007 Energy Summit Photo courtesy of
Seattle City Light
33
Implications 2
  • Short and long-term strategies, solutions
  • Encourage employees to delay retirements
  • Re-hire retirees to fill skill gaps, train new
    workers
  • Restructure jobs, increase use of technologies
  • Expand internal and external training options
  • Increase use of incentives, pay and benefit
    options to attract and retain workers
  • Restore apprenticeship capacity
  • Expand college partnerships skills, innovative
    new programs, career options

34
Implications 3
  • To boost labor supply, grow the pipeline
  • Outreach to students, parents, educators
  • Build awareness, re-define the image
  • Reinforce skill requirements (STEM)
  • Work-based learning opportunities
  • The future workforce women, minorities
  • Expand education and training capacity
  • Coordinated action for industry support

35
Future Research
  • Engineering workforce Engineering workforce
    demand and skill requirements
  • Apprenticeship Analysis of apprenticeship trends
    and capacity issues for craft occupations
  • Succession planning Best Practices model for
    workforce and succession planning
  • Renewable energy and energy efficiency Analysis
    of current/future job demand and skills for clean
    energy occupations

36
Electric Sector Workforce Challenges
  • Next Steps
  • Disseminate Study
  • Presentations to Industry
  • and Stakeholders
  • Future Research and Action
  • Contact
  • Alan Hardcastle
  • Senior Research Associate
  • WSU Energy Program
  • (360) 956-2167
  • hardcast_at_wsu.edu

Bigelow Canyon sunrise Photo courtesy of Portland
General Electric
37
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