Mike Rowe's Senate Testimony

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Testimony of Mike Rowe
Creator, Executive Producer and Host, Dirty Jobs

Mike Rowe Testifies
Mike Rowe's Testimony Before the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation
May 11, 2011

Chairman Rockefeller, Ranking Member Hutchison and members of this committee, my name is Mike Rowe, and I want to thank you all very much for the opportunity to testify before you today.

I'm here today because of my grandfather.

His name was Carl Knobel, and he made his living in Baltimore as a master electrician. He was also a plumber, a mechanic, a mason, and a carpenter. Everyone knew him as a jack-of-all-trades. I knew him as a magician.

For most of his life, my grandfather woke up clean and came home dirty. In between, he accomplished things that were nothing short of miraculous. Some days he might re-shingle a roof. Or rebuild a motor. Or maybe run electricity out to our barn. He helped build the church I went to as a kid, and the farmhouse my brothers and I grew up in. He could fix or build anything, but to my knowledge he never once read the directions. He just knew how stuff worked.

I remember one Saturday morning when I was 12. I flushed the toilet in the same way I always had. The toilet however, responded in a way that was completely out of character. There was a rumbling sound, followed by a distant gurgle. Then, everything that had gone down reappeared in a rather violent and spectacular fashion.

Naturally, my grandfather was called in to investigate, and within the hour I was invited to join he and my dad in the front yard with picks and shovels.

By lunch, the lawn was littered with fragments of old pipe and mounds of dirt. There was welding and pipe-fitting, blisters and laughter, and maybe some questionable language. By sunset we were completely filthy. But a new pipe was installed, the dirt was back in the hole, and our toilet was back on its best behavior. It was one of my favorite days ever.

Thirty years later in San Francisco when my toilet blew up again. This time, I didn't participate in the repair process. I just called my landlord, left a check on the kitchen counter, and went to work. When I got home, the mess was cleaned up and the problem was solved. As for the actual plumber who did the work, I never even met him.

It occurred to me that I had become disconnected from a lot of things that used to fascinate me. I no longer thought about where my food came from, or how my electricity worked, or who fixed my pipes, or who made my clothes. There was no reason to. I had become less interested in how things got made, and more interested in how things got bought.

At this point my grandfather was well into his 80s, and after a long visit with him one weekend, I decided to do a TV show in his honor. Today, Dirty Jobs is still on the air, and I am here before this committee, hoping to say something useful. So, here it is.

I believe we need a national PR Campaign for Skilled Labor. A big one. Something that addresses the widening skills gap head on, and reconnects the country with the most important part of our workforce.

Right now, American manufacturing is struggling to fill 200,000 vacant positions. There are 450,000 openings in trades, transportation and utilities. The skills gap is real, and it's getting wider. In Alabama, a third of all skilled tradesmen are over 55. They're retiring fast, and no one is there to replace them.

Alabama's not alone. A few months ago in Atlanta I ran into Tom Vilsack, our Secretary of Agriculture. Tom told me about a governor who was unable to move forward on the construction of a power plant. The reason was telling. It wasn't a lack of funds. It wasn't a lack of support. It was a lack of qualified welders.

In general, we're surprised that high unemployment can exist at the same time as a skilled labor shortage. We shouldn't be. We've pretty much guaranteed it.

In high schools, the vocational arts have all but vanished. We've elevated the importance of "higher education" to such a lofty perch that all other forms of knowledge are now labeled "alternative." Millions of parents and kids see apprenticeships and on-the-job-training opportunities as "vocational consolation prizes," best suited for those not cut out for a four-year degree. And still, we talk about millions of "shovel ready" jobs for a society that doesn't encourage people to pick up a shovel.

In a hundred different ways, we have slowly marginalized an entire category of critical professions, reshaping our expectations of a "good job" into something that no longer looks like work. A few years from now, an hour with a good plumber – if you can find one – is going to cost more than an hour with a good psychiatrist. At which point we'll all be in need of both.

I came here today because guys like my grandfather are no less important to civilized life than they were 50 years ago. Maybe they're in short supply because we don't acknowledge them they way we used to. We leave our check on the kitchen counter, and hope the work gets done. That needs to change.

My written testimony includes the details of several initiatives designed to close the skills gap, all of which I've had the privilege to participate in. Go Build Alabama, I Make America, and my own modest efforts through Dirty Jobs and mikeroweWORKS. I'm especially proud to announce "Discover Your Skills," a broad-based initiative from Discovery Communications that I believe can change perceptions in a meaningful way.

I encourage you to support these efforts, because closing the skills gap doesn't just benefit future tradesmen and the companies desperate to hire them. It benefits people like me, and anyone else who shares my addiction to paved roads, reliable bridges, heating, air conditioning, and indoor plumbing.


The skills gap is a reflection of what we value. To close the gap, we need to change the way the country feels about work.

http://dsc.discovery.com/fansites/dirtyjobs/mike-rowe-senate-testimony.html
 

dlbleak

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nice peice, in 30 years as a automobile driver i have put my car in the shop three times. i deeply regreted every one of them. i knew i could do the job, just didn't have the time. in twenty years as a homeowner, i have called out a contractor three times only because i hate to shingle and do plumbing. makes up for ALOT of money that can be spent on cool **** like hunting,fishing, camping,boating,shooting and weekends with the family.

my dad gave me a tool set for christmas when i was 4. the symbolism of that tool set has saved me at least 20 thousand in car and home repairs, thanks dad.
 

JRSherman

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Hear Hear!! Every day I go to my machinist class at Tulsa Tech, I am dumb founded by the fact that they have to cancel some classes because not enough people sign up. If you go to Jobs on Craigslist-Tulsa, and type in CNC, there are pages of employment opportunities, and more than a few of them are offering to train you while you go to school.

As for myself, I didn't want to be a button pushing monkey(no offense meant to CNC machinists) I wanted to, and am, working in manual machining. I make parts from scratch, one or two at a time, and every day at work I learn something new and gain more experience. As a new machinist I almost cried that I was able to get the job that was exactly what I wanted, yet the company that hired me hadn't been able to fill the position for over a year, as no one would apply.

I sincerely hope Mr. Rowe's efforts are well received and duly praised, as he is absolutely correct.

Thanks for sharing this VM, it gives me hope that the following question may be delayed a little longer.


Who is John Galt?
 

RidgeHunter

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"Go to college; get a desk job. Don't be like your old man."

"Errr....uh....errr."

Mike Rowe is a cool dude, except of course for his Ford worship. But we all have our faults. I wish I had his voice. I'd just walk around blabbering nonsense all the time. Well, I do that now. But if I had his voice it would sound less like nonsense and more like awesome.

 
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RickN

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A whole lot of truth to what he said. I for one have always had more respect for those men and women who work with their hands over those behind a desk. I have done both and while I am stuck behind a desk now, I still enjoy tearing apart a wheelchair and rebuilding it for our charity side.
 

Pulp

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I wish he'd run for President.

I've been on both sides of the field. I was a science teacher for several years, then went to work in the paper industry. One of the things I learned when teaching was: just because a person has a degree doesn't mean they're smart. I reckon I'm proof of that. One of the things I learned in a paper mill is: just because a person doesn't have a degree doesn't mean they're dumb. It may be a different kind of intelligence, but it's a high degree of intelligence. I don't know if any of y'all have ever run a paper machine, but trust me, most college educated (me included) couldn't do it. But folks that dropped out of high school because they couldn't read or spell well enough to finish can make paper like there is no tomorrow.

I don't run a paper machine, I recycle old cardboard boxes into fiber the paper machines use. I work side by side with kids I taught science to many years ago. None were honor students, most were average "C" kids. Yet they learned the systems faster than I did. I finally did learn it, and I'm as good an operator as anyone else now, but it was hard for me. Different type of intelligence. Schools need to identify this type of intelligence and develop it, not try to make everyone fit into one definition of intelligence.
 

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