quote "If the shortage gets too bad then potentially they could bring guys in from other countries that will work for less money and that would bring the scale down everywhere."
Here in the southeast that has been happening for a decade. Wages are frozen. My state is one of the easiest to get a drivers license. That's a big draw. Many jobs we have been on have a ratio of 80/20. 80% non-English speaking and 20% that speak English. The vast majority are illegal immigrants that do the work that Americans won't do. You know; weld, iron workers, plummer, sheet rock, masons, electrician. etc. I'm being sarcastic of course. It's like I'm the foreigner. It's frustrating trying to work in that environment. Safety is a huge problem. Coordination is another. The false documents provided to the hiring companies are enough to satisfy them. When craftsmen were becoming few and far between the imaginary gate was opened and the need was met with cheaper less experienced, less skilled workers. Some of the bosses treat them poorly, work them unsafely and like borrowed mules, knowing that they will not say much or nothing at all fearing deportation. A portion of these are good workers and good people, the other portion are not. In ten years the industry has drastically changed here. The military bases and nuclear plants do background checks but most other work sites are wide open. This was a G rated rant. The supply and demand thing was looking very good for the welder here about 10 years ago. Now to make the big money you will need to travel to get it.