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Chris Coleman is a member of the accounting firm of St. Louis, Rubinbrown’s Construction Services Group. Opinions are typical of the author.
In an already tight construction labor market, Incursions by United States Immigration and Customs Execution At jobs, they threaten to deepen the scarce of workforce, increase costs and create serious financial risks for contractors. By handing in the fall of these raids, construction companies will have to rethink their talent strategy to succeed.

Chris Coleman
Courtesy of Rubinbrown
U.S. building industry has faced the scarcity of chronic labor for decades, with a lack of 439,000 workers. Immigrant workers have helped close the gap and are now a considerable part of the workforce.
Nationally, is estimated 19% of all workers They are born abroad, according to the Office of Labor Statistics. But under construction, 34% of workers They are immigrants, reports the National Association of Builders. In some shops, think of dry land installers or plaster – this number Skyrockets in more than 60%.
Given these numbers, construction projects have become a Popular goal for immigration raids. Building owners care properly; Indiscriminate and detained arrests reports create a scary environment, even between Workers and legal citizens.
Although several industry groups have presented the Trump administration to adopt a more nuanced approach to the application of immigration, construction companies must now respond, managing their projects with a smaller and potentially less reliable labor.
Steps for contractors
The simplest thing the companies can do is do it auditing — to ensure the employment The verification processes and I-9 have been properly followed. Managers and leadership should also be properly trained in law.
But even then, these raids will still happen. When they do, they will cost companies time and money in projects that have been budgeted for a long time. To avoid exposure to possible contractual penalties, construction companies need alternative labor they can go.
In the short term, construction companies can be supported in groups in the local industry to cause workers quickly. Whenever these relationships have been cultivated, a labor union, a merit group, an industry association or specialized trade organization can offer a direct connection with qualified workers who need these projects. Similarly, a contractor may choose to supply work instead of self-independence to avoid labor challenges.
Although third -party work groups can be valuable sources of specialized talent, they are not an integral solution for each project. Consequently, it is essential to invest in the creation of a more resistant internal labor, characterized by greater withholding and greater operational flexibility. In view of the continuous volatility in the construction labor market, strategic investments in cross -training initiatives for employees you already offer offer a significant long -term value.
These programs allow employees to acquire complementary skills sets through learning during work, thus improving the agility of workforce and reducing confidence in specialized work. A labor force can be more efficiently deployed by various phases of a project, guaranteeing continuity and minimizing the loss of productivity in the face of billing or unexpected interruptions.
Pay
The other option is, of course, to spend more money.
It is something that many interest groups do not want to hear, but as the market narrows, the owners are paying more talent, even eating these costs to ensure that the project deadlines continue. It is an offensive work as defensive: in an industry where talented artisans are regularly achieved by competitors, paying the highest premiums on the market can be the only solution that companies need to solidify their talent bank.
The risk of construction companies is that paying more reduces the margins they expect in a particular project, which can have serious consequences for the general health of a company. A disruption of a project creates a cascading effect for future projects of a company and can seriously damage the reputation of a company.
Negotiate with the owners
No matter how hard a strong and diverse work can mitigate these problems, if the price of the contract for projects does not cover the cost of last -minute labor surfaces, the bottom line will suffer, no matter what it is. Given the realities of the current market, it is worth pursuing favorable terms for these unexpected labor premiums to be covered.
Obtaining completely flexible employment costs incorporated into a contract is unlikely, but partial cost-flat provisions can help cover some of the work costs of companies. As these contracts are based on the forecasts that are months in advance, they are critical of limiting cost exhibitions.
The problems of the labor is not new to the construction companies, but the uncertainty that ice raids cause a new urgency for companies to find solutions. The work is a fundamental block of construction and it must also be a block of the company’s strategy.
