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ACIT: ‘Gold-collar’ workers growing more vital in petrochemical industry

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My first visit to a Texas petrochemical plant felt like stepping into a little country — it has its own strict security borders (photo identification required); its own national dress (blue flame-retardant coveralls and hard hats); and even its own language (with words like ethylene oligomerization and polyalphaolefins), the Association of Chemical Industry of Texas published.

Workers pedal around tanks and machines on bicycles, following the country’s rules of the road by stopping for the occasional railroad car and white pickup truck. Clusters of employees tinker with machines towering sometimes 15 or more stories above them like a downtown district. Inside one plant office, an oversized map with intricate red and blue lines outlines the factory’s geography like an urban streetscape.

MSHS Group

To my foreign eye, the Chevron Phillips Chemical Co.’s Baytown plant looks like a sprawling maze of pipes, tubes and tanks. But what you can’t see at first glance is the dozens of people sitting several yards away who keep the plant’s machinery humming along safely.

They’re in an air-conditioned “blast-proof” control room behind a wall of computer monitors with moving diagrams and colored lines flashing like an automated game of Tetris. Called process operators, they sit in office chairs for 12-hour shifts tracking the computerized operations of each machine, pipe, tower and tank. They look for any sign of irregularity in temperature, pressure, timing and other minute changes.

They each hold two-year technical degrees — most likely with a fraction of the college debt of the average early career journalist, but with more than double the starting salary. The average plant operator with a two-year degree starts out with an $80,000 salary and usually grows to $100,000 or above, according to the American Chemistry Council, the industry trade group.

Around the industry, they call them “gold-collar workers,” a Chevron Phillips employee murmured to me. It’s not a common term, but one that is sometimes used to describe jobs that don’t fall neatly into the blue-collar or white-collar categories. Gold-collar workers need the “mind of a white-collar worker but the hands of a blue-collar one”, Harvard Business Review noted.

Think of the maintenance technician who repairs aircraft systems at Southwest Airlines; the manufacturing technician at Intel; and the medical technologist who operates laboratory equipment and analyzes test results at Memorial Hermann Cancer Center.

“You can’t just be a great craftsman,” says Peter Rodriguez, economist and dean at Rice University. “You have to understand enough not just to operate the system, but to be creative and solve a problem that’s non-routine.”

Rodriguez estimates these highly paid hourly technical workers make up about 10 percent or less of the workforce in the oil and gas industry, but he expects those numbers to grow, especially in offshore drilling, as fewer people work on the rig itself and more are in control rooms monitoring systems.

These workers fall into what some economists call the “middle-skills gap” — the mounting imbalance in the supply and demand for skilled workers such as welders, truckers, pipe fitters, millwrights, technicians and electricians.

In the Houston area, the industrial construction sector alone could have a shortage of between 5,000 to 10,000 “middle-skill” workers in the next four years, because not enough people are entering these jobs to keep up with the workers retiring, according to data from the Greater Houston Partnership, a business-finance economic development group.

Golden opportunity?

Many young people don’t think of these gold-collar professions when considering their options, notes Bill Gilmer, economist with the University of Houston.

“Aspirations have been set at a different level these days in terms of what you should do coming out of high school, which isn’t necessarily bad,” Gilmer says. “But they don’t explain that alternative of a gold-collar job or even high-paid construction job.”

Manufacturing companies want young people to know that gone are the days when working in a plant meant toiling over greasy machine, says Heather Betancourth, community relations representative for Chevron Phillips Chemical.

“We’re a lot more technologically advanced than people give us credit for,” she says.

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