binki said:And you are right, people leave when it is too expensive as we have seen here. As for me, I will stay where I am unless something drastically changes in my part of town. Let market forces should take care of things. You can't force people into some fantasy model of living. They will just leave.
$15 an hour?? That was my starting wage in the sign industry over 10 years ago. The workers are there. The wages aren't.In the last 6 months I've went through 6 new hires to do finishing, cutting trimming etc. basic shop help at $15 with opportunity to learn and move up. No one lasted more than a week so I have up on hiring and buying a flatbed cutter which will free up my core employees. I think the labor shortages/unwillingness to work will lead to more automation and businesses figuring out how to get stuff done with less employees. Now hiring signs everywhere in my area. I had ask a 71 year old retired employee to help out until new equipment is set up and luckily she agreed.
I do as well but we're in a niche business not related to signs. We have a real good customer list which are pretty much all construction related. It's not 1 or 2 that are growing, it's all of them. I've hired extra people to try and keep up better but for the past 5-6 years it's been disappointing at best. The worker situation was like this well before covid and it seems like it's only the unemployable types that bounce around now. They're just a waste of time. There's also a lot of poaching happening.I have reservations about tying my business growth to one customer too much. All it takes is for that customer to hire a new marketing person that has their own preferred sign shop and we're out. Had it happen too many times. Wait a couple of years and they get another marketing person and we are back on the preferred list again. Haha We've also been fortunate to have only lost 2 customers I can think of in 20+ years that grew beyond our abilities.
Here in my town lots of young adults either can't get out of the small island town fast enough, can't afford to yet, or are trying to move in to their own little forest cabin (that they have to buy land and then spend money building before they can move in). I can think of three friends including myself who still live with their parents because the rent for a single bed apartment is so high, we can't get a multi at all, forget about houses, and none of our jobs (even the government jobs I know of) pay enough to afford the rent, food, power, and trash/recycling, and forget about having a phone or internet plan. The one down in the connected states has some serious health complications that sucks up the money she's been getting from her job, too.Here in Lawton some young adults are faced with the choice of continuing to live with their parents, rent a house or apartment in a bad part of town, or move away from this region. Many are choosing to leave town.
I would agree, it's definitely been an issue for the last 6 years. The biggest thing I thought was different this last time we hired was people scheduling interviews and not showing up. In the past it seems like we just wouldn't be able to get a hold of them.I do as well but we're in a niche business not related to signs. We have a real good customer list which are pretty much all construction related. It's not 1 or 2 that are growing, it's all of them. I've hired extra people to try and keep up better but for the past 5-6 years it's been disappointing at best. The worker situation was like this well before covid and it seems like it's only the unemployable types that bounce around now. They're just a waste of time. There's also a lot of poaching happening.
We've been using my oldest son for general labor, but now he's back in college. I can't decide if it's even worth trying to hire someone to do what he was. BY that I mean if it's worth the headache and frustration to even try.I only need a few hours of help every week, it's super hard to find people. High school kids are busy with sports, older people are already working. I had someone lined up this week to help me with a few bigger jobs ($25hr cash plus lunch - not good enough I guess). They won't answer their phone. Now I sit here waiting until 5 when my son is done with football weightlifting and working until who knows when tonight.
This is why I don't take on much more than I can handle alone. Pisses me off.
Texas_Signmaker said:Our city is one of the most restrictive on multi-unit residential allotment. They also have strict regulations on building materials and methods which drive up cost and "keep property values favorable". They don't build starter homes here... and just saw today we're the 5th safest city... so they are doing something right.
Taryn said:Here in my town lots of young adults either can't get out of the small island town fast enough, can't afford to yet, or are trying to move in to their own little forest cabin (that they have to buy land and then spend money building before they can move in). I can think of three friends including myself who still live with their parents because the rent for a single bed apartment is so high, we can't get a multi at all, forget about houses, and none of our jobs (even the government jobs I know of) pay enough to afford the rent, food, power, and trash/recycling, and forget about having a phone or internet plan. The one down in the connected states has some serious health complications that sucks up the money she's been getting from her job, too.
Sounds like gentrification to me. Where are all the people who staff the service businesses in that 5th Safest City living? Probably not there.
Unless you are going to law or med school, there is absolutely no good reason to be coming out of school with all of this debt. That's all from the ones that use the loans to live way above their means and refuse to get a part time job to offset their costs. I have no sympathy whatsoever for that.Young adults being stuck is a common problem. It's pretty absurd if someone graduates from college but has to move back in with parents because he's loaded down with student loan debt and can't start out making enough to live on his own.
College bound seniors should have to take a class for this as a prerequisite - for college.Adding to that: the naïve irresponsibility of students themselves, not fully understanding how loans, interest and debt works.
You can always go to college, get your degree in something like business or finance and then go on to be a diesel mechanic or any other trade. It will give you a big leg up for promotions down the road. Also, doing some of these trades while you are young is great but your ability to efficiently do a lot of the required tasks diminishes as you get older. It is nice to have the ability to move up to a position that is easier on your body. To me, having a degree and knowing a trade is the best route to success.Hell, I question the value of even going to college anymore. My brother is a diesel truck mechanic, has just a high school education, but makes a lot more per hour than many college educated people. Other skilled trades can pay pretty well. The inflation rate on college tuition is far above average income growth. Many fields of study, like being an elementary school teacher for example, are in job categories with pay so low it's not going to be worth the investment. Unfortunately so many students enter these fields of study without knowing up front they're a bad investment.
And then there is the scam many colleges run on students, requiring them to live on campus and do other things to incur all sorts of additional cost. Adding to that: the naïve irresponsibility of students themselves, not fully understanding how loans, interest and debt works. College loans are much more predatory now than they were 30 years ago when I was a college student. I could borrow only so much back then and had to work other jobs to make up the difference. Today we're seeing kids making the mistake of literally living on student loans for four years and digging themselves a really deep hole in the process. Sure, it's their own fault; they may not deserve any sympathy. But with little if any spare disposable income they're not able to contribute to the economy either.
Let market forces take care things? That isn't happening with these zoning setups...
Houston doesn't have zoning laws... and it shows.My point exactly. Government is picking winners and losers. They should zone commercial, retail, residential based on demand for those services. Residential, if R1 is preferred should be allowed. If high density is demanded and someone wants to build it, then so be it. Just keep in mind that in The PRC we have shortages of energy and water and adding even more housing will only make that worse. So what is the real point? How can more housing be added when basic services are not available to those that are already here?
No politics on this subject, just WTF is going on if on one hand you want more housing but on the other there isn't enough energy or water to support what is already here? Solutions encouraged.
You are right. When fist I visited Houston, my friend took me out to a bar that was a house in a residential area; we took a table in the house's (main bar was in the family room) kitchen and he told me the story of how his friends used to live there before it became a bar.Houston doesn't have zoning laws... and it shows.