Worcester Business Journal

April 20, 2026

Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/1544464

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 10 of 23

wbjournal.com | April 20, 2026 | Worcester Business Journal 11 concern: a shrinking workforce threatening the state's ability to build housing at the scale it needs. "One of the companies here today said the average age of their elec- tricians is 53 years old," said Jason Palitsch, executive director of the 495/MetroWest Partnership. "ere wasn't really an effective pipeline to really put trade and construction careers on the minds of young adults. In voc-tech schools, they would get exposed to some of this, but in a traditional high school, it usually isn't discussed that much." "It's going to be a real challenge." at pipeline problem is collid- ing with a housing crisis already dominating state and local agen- das. Massachusetts needs to build 222,000 housing units by 2035 to meet demand. Worcester alone will need more than 12,000 new units by 2033, according to the City's housing production plan. About 30% of Massachusetts residential construction workers are over the age of 55, a higher share than both the statewide workforce and the national construction industry, according to an October report from the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities. e state has roughly 18,000 residential construc- tion workers, down from about 20,000 before the 2008 foreclosure crisis. To fill the gap le by an aging workforce, the industry has become increasingly reliant on immigrant labor, which has become less reliable in the last two years. About one-third of construction workers say they've been impacted by federal immigra- tion enforcement efforts, as 92% of firms say they are struggling to find workers, according to an August study by the Associated General Contractors of America. ese workforce shortages impact housing production. e annual U.S. economic impact of longer construction times associated with labor shortages is $10.8 billion per year, leading to a reduction of about 19,000 single-family homes that would have been built in 2024, according to a June study from the Washington, D.C.-based Home Builders Institute. For contractors, those numbers translate into daily uncertainty, Lapin said. Salisbury Construction is already navigating rising material costs and stricter building codes. e labor shortage is having a chilling effect on the industry's ability to start and complete projects, he said. A 2015 graduate of Worcester Technical High School, Lapin works at the firm founded by his father, Jon Lapin, in the early 1980s, a time when he said many of his father's friends were starting their own firms. e 28-year-old says few of his fellow classmates ended up working full- time in construction. "When those guys retire, it's going to be a real challenge for me as a 28-year-old planning to run this business long-term," Lapin said. "e pipeline just isn't there right now." Casting a wider net Even with technological devel- opments, construction work still involves physical labor, but oppor- tunities in the industry oen defy stereotypes, said Greg Bunn, exec- utive director of Metro South/West Workforce Board. Exhibits at the Marlborough event tended to focus on technology, including a simulator allowing par- ticipants to take control of a virtual excavator and a VR headset allowing for the exploration of a virtual jobsite. e goal of the event is to cast a wider net through engagement with traditional high schools. Vocational high schools have been the clearest pathway into the trades, but demand for those programs now exceeds available seats, leaving students with- out access to hands-on training. Attendance at the Marlborough expo has grown from about 11 schools at the inaugural 2022 event to 24 schools this year. "What we're trying to do is help develop that workforce to build new homes and new accessory dwelling units," Bunn said. "A lot of workers are leaving Massachusetts because they can't afford to work here. A lot of folks are working or aging out of that workforce." e rise in schools' attendance has increased in the number of young women attending the event, a tradi- tionally underrepresented group in the construction industry that could help fill its ranks, Bunn said. Women remain underrepresent- ed in the trades, even as they make up 51% of overall employment in Massachusetts. ey account for 21% of workers in residential construction and 15% in specialty trade contract- ing, according to a 2025 report from the Gov. Maura Healey Administra- tion. "When we first started doing this event, maybe 2%-3% of participants were women," Bunn said. "Now we're up to about 15%. e schools have been a big partner in helping us recruit more effectively." PHOTOS | ERIC CASEY W Cypriankeyes.com ENJOY THE EXPERIENCE THE CHOICE IS CYPRIAN. 508.869.9900 info@cypriankeyes.com 284 E. Temple St., Boylston, MA. C O R P O R A T E EVENTS S O C I A L GATHERINGS G O L F OUTINGS Custom. Creative. Classic. Vendors at the Trade and Construction Expo in Marlborough used technology to showcase what the modern construction environment is like.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Worcester Business Journal - April 20, 2026