TESTING SHARK REPELLENT, MAGGOT FARMING, SEXING
chickens, painting airport runways, cactus moving, cleaning caves. It’s all
in a day’s work for Mike Rowe, the man who graces the cover of this issue
of DC VELOCITY. Rowe has willingly tried just about every kind of work
on the planet as part of his very successful television shows, “Dirty Jobs”
and “Somebody’s Gotta Do It.” And yes, Mike Rowe has also worked in
warehouses and driven trucks, so he understands the importance of the
supply chain.
We have written many times in DC VELOCITY of the increasing difficulty of finding skilled people to fill jobs in our industry. Mike Rowe
gets it. And that is why he is the subject of our ThoughtLeader interview
this month.
Rowe understands that blue-collar jobs are the backbone of our economy, and that without a skilled work
force, the supply chain stops. Rowe also realizes that
our work force is changing. There will be fewer jobs in
the future for unskilled labor, including those in our
warehouses. The move to greater automation requires
people with a solid technical education at a time when
workers with these skills are extremely undervalued.
To drive home this point, Rowe often cites a poster
that hung in his high school guidance counselor’s
office that read: “Work Smart, Not Hard.” It showed
a happy college graduate on the “Work Smart” side of
the poster, and a tired industrial worker on the “Hard”
side of the poster. The meaning was obvious: Get a
good education and you don’t have to work hard for
a living. But there is a huge disconnect to reality there, and it belittles
skilled trades and technical jobs as being suited only to those who are
“not college material.”
Rowe has since remade the poster to read: “Work Smart AND Hard.”
In the accompanying picture, a frowning Rowe is dressed in a cap and
gown to represent the many college graduates saddled with huge debt
who can’t find jobs in their chosen field. Meanwhile, the tired industrial
worker has been replaced with a photo of a smiling technician holding a
laptop, trained for the jobs of today.
His own foundation, mikerowe Works, is based on the principle that
“Fun and hard work are two sides of the same coin.” The foundation
strives to promote a skilled work force by providing scholarships for
technical and trade schools to those students who demonstrate a strong
work ethic and a desire to learn. To find out more about his foundation
and see the posters, visit www.profoundlydisconnected.com.
We applaud Mike Rowe’s efforts and the spotlight he shines on the
need for more skills-based education. It’s critical now and will be even
more so in the future.
bigpicture
Chief Editor
David Maloney
Chief Editor
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Karen Bachrach
Executive Editor - Features
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Mark Solomon
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Columnists:
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Art van Bodegraven
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Publisher
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Editorial Director
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Jim Indelicato
Group Publisher
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