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Trade chats - solving the apprenticeship problem
Episode 6419th May 2025 • Mindful Builder • Matthew Carland and Hamish White
00:00:00 00:46:36

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"Nobody wants to be a carpenter anymore." It feels like this rings true in the building industry today. We’re seeing a shift in Australia’s trades landscape, and it’s time to talk about it. We’re exploring why carpentry apprenticeships - once highly sought after - are now struggling to attract and retain talent. 

Whether you're in the industry or considering a trade career, the insights from this conversation may help you think differently about where this industry is headed.

LINKS:

Thanks to Hip Vs Hype for having us

Connect with us on Instagram:  @themindfulbuilderpod

Connect with Hamish:

Instagram:  @sanctumhomes

Website:   www.yoursanctum.com.au/


Connect with Matt: 

Instagram: @carlandconstructions

Website:  www.carlandconstructions.com/

Transcripts

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I think it's really important to jump on the topic of apprenticeships There's

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probably two, no better people to bring into this conversation than Jack from

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Nook slash Mbh and our good friend Brad, who's returning again to say hi.

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the first question I have for you guys is back in, we'll call it

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back in our day, which is what, 10, 15 years ago compared to

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Yeah.

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How do you think they've changed?

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I would say the structure of it hasn't changed massively.

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I think the dynamics changed as well when I started my apprenticeship.

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You were very lucky to get an apprenticeship and now you are

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very lucky to find an apprentice.

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I'm more making a, a general statement.

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I'm not really having much trouble getting help now.

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People are actually approaching me, even though I'm, I'm not looking for anyone.

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they wanna be involved in what I'm doing.

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but chatting to other.

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Other trades that yeah, maybe don't have a big online presence or whatever,

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they're definitely struggling to find people and find good people.

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So good people is a really good, good question because like, what

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do we define as good people?

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' I think if they're gonna reach out to you and have a good chat to you

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to potentially look for a job, that it kind of ticks the box already.

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For me.

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It's like, I, I'm, I'm big on passion.

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I feel like that's, and I said that before, if you can't show passion,

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like we can teach you anything.

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But if you don't, if you're not passionate or wanting to be passionate or wanting to

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learn, like we can't teach you anything.

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Yeah, definitely.

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I think there's a big difference between, you know, someone grabbing the bull by the

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horns and approaching someone for a job as opposed to, you know, a lot of, well,

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the last apprentice that I had, his mom cut the hair of my next door neighbor.

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And you know, they were talking one day during a haircut.

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Hey, my son's looking for an apprenticeship.

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Do you know anyone?

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Yeah, my next door neighbor's a carpenter.

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Sweet.

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that's how it worked out.

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You know, I think you're gonna find very different people in that avenue than what

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you're gonna find if they're actually seeking out the employment themselves.

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Was that successful, Brad?

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He is the only one that's ever finished his time with me,

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so I'd say it was successful.

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Oh, that's a good point.

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Yeah, because sometimes those things, you, you hear about 'em

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on the grapevine not shaking out.

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But I definitely think like passion is important and then through that

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projection from a company that that sends out what they do and what they're,

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they're passionate about, obviously that should circle back around and be able to

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attract, um, that same kind of passion.

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I think attitude is a little bit of a step left from that as well.

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I think to have a good attitude towards, towards life, towards work, towards

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human beings, um, is also a big thing.

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attitude and passion is so interlinked.

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Interlinked, but, but I think it's a step left.

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cause you can be passionate about something and perhaps you don't want

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that to be your day in, day out job.

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That could be a hobby.

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You

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And you could be incredibly passionate about things outside of.

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Work and not be passionate at all about anything work related.

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'cause work's just a means to an end for you.

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people say there's a trade shortage at the moment, I kind of don't have

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an issue with it because if we're starting to spin out, like there's

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nothing worse than spitting out.

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All these new tradies who don't know anything.

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And I, and I'm a big believer that you don't know anything

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until you probably have, what, six years experience, four years of

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apprenticeship plus your two years.

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I feel like that is a huge issue with the way people are learning.

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but in 2022, there was an 8.8% decrease in the number of apprentices and

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trainees at uptalk apprenticeships.

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Uh, that's a, that's a, that's a big change.

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What's that down to?

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Stigma culture.

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Like that's always been a, a big that I've certainly faced

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when we were leaving school.

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you know, it was a lot of white collar push out of school and the,

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the blue collar jobs were certainly with a bit of a broad brush of,

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of being a bit of a fallback.

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You didn't do well in school.

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So this is your next best bet.

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it's, it's a hard one because like, I come from a, like my family, my

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dad was an electrician by trade.

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There's my brother's a plumber.

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There's multiple trades through our family, so I. The natural

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Mm-hmm.

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likely a tradie.

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Uh, so been very sheltered from that for my whole life.

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and even

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I've got friends who are super successful that are like, their parents are like,

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uh, tradies run trade businesses.

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Um, and I think there's a huge stigma around, the average person

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thinking that trades are dumb.

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Like, yeah, they might not be academically smart, but I tell you what, their

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problem solving street skills is faster

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mm. Incredible.

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you find at any university.

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My parents didn't want me to be a trainee.

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not in the slightest,

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Have you asked them, like, how did that turn out for 'em and

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have like what do they now think?

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Yeah.

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Now they think it's the best thing ever.

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I built them a house.

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yeah.

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I've also noticed a, a lot, you know, like I doom scroll TikTok here and

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there, and there's a lot of young guys, you know, getting on their,

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you know, whether it's to rote people into their online courses and their.

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MLM schemes or whatever, you know, but hey, don't be a tradie.

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You don't get paid well, you ruin your body.

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You know, there's a lot of that stuff out there as well, which I, I think

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is a huge deterrent for young people.

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And then when they look at the wage and they go, oh, okay, well, I can do

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a, a carpentry apprenticeship or, you know, whatever, apprenticeship and get

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paid, between 20 and 30 bucks an hour.

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you know.

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I work physically hard or you know, I can probably get upwards of 30 bucks an

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hour driving a forklift in a factory.

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I think that's a big part of it.

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though.

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It's very short term thinking.

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I think that people days want instant gratification and success.

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think that is a huge issue where they don't want to put

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the hard yards in to get there.

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And I know brand just talked about pay.

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Yeah.

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The apprentice.

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Like this is a question I've got for you guys.

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Yeah.

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The apprentice system.

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You don't get paid the best, like let's not shelter away from that.

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But how are the, how else do you do it?

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Because as a business, you can't afford to pay someone as an

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apprentice, a crazy amount of money.

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to learn and make.

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And the reality is you make some mistakes.

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Like we made mistakes with apprentices.

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That's how we learn.

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you're not paying a HEC instead at the end.

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So financially you're probably 150 K in positive before you've like someone that's

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finished their uni degree and then someone that's finished their apprenticeship.

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Like you, you've earned money over four years, plus you don't have

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a 60 to a hundred thousand step.

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Yeah, I totally agree.

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But it's get, it's getting people to see that that's the, that's

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the way that it is, you know.

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And it's also short term pain there as well.

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Um, having that four year gap where you are receiving really low income.

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Um, and let's, let's be honest, it is really low in comparison

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to cost of living these days.

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Um, super challenging, and making things.

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be increased?

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I think it needs serious govern, government intervention and

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subsidies to actually be serious about rebuilding the workforce.

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'cause there is too much risk on, on small businesses taking on apprentices.

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and, you know, wearing mistakes and also paying them, you know,

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a, when I say a, a terrible wage, it's, we're not talking slave labor.

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but it certainly is a noticeable.

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coming out of a small business for sure.

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as builders, we do hold a lot of risk in, in taking on an

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apprentice in certain ways.

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so I think if there is a, a government wants to be serious about it, I

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think it also, it's, it needs to flow all the way down to small

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business and be able to prop it up.

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it probably leads me on to where I think there's a huge issue with our

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apprenticeship and got governments wanting to spit out as many apprentices

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on three year term because they can say you've got more trades.

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'cause there's a skilled shortage.

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Alright.

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anything that you do, if you spit someone out really quick, you're gonna

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get most likely very poor quality.

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Like, it, it, it's

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definitely.

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that the universities and TAFEs are completely incentivized by

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government just to spit 'em out.

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The course content that these go, like these kids get taught is so far

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beyond what is currently happening.

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Like I sit here and watch what my kids are, or my apprentices are

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learning and I'm like, this is, this just has nothing to do with building.

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Like there's terms that I'm having to Google and be like,

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I dunno what that means.

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I actually can't help you with that question.

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I have a personal opinion and it's my opinion how I think you could

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fix this issue is like, I think, and we'll talk carpentry 'cause

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that's what we, we, our trade is I think a carpentry apprenticeship

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should be for your apprenticeship.

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Then you finish, you have two years post that.

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So it's really a six year apprenticeship.

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Once you are in that, say, we'll call it the fifth and sixth year, you have

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to start doing your diploma that is created or some form of carpentry.

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Extra schooling is created by, say, the VBA, that teaches you to become

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a builder and a licensed trade.

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And at the end of it, you sit a test and then you become licensed.

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And that means that you can't employ any apprentice until you are

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physically licensed by in Victoria VBA.

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Yeah, I, I think making it more difficult for people to employ apprentices would

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certainly change a, a lot of things.

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'cause you've got people that.

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Finish and like, I know a, a real lot of stories where this has happened.

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You know, a fourth year apprentice gets qualified, goes out on his own,

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takes a second year, apprentice from the same business with them, and

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then they're out doing something together with no experience like that.

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Second year is now not learning anything.

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The qualified who's.

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Freshly qualified is not really gonna learn, is only gonna learn

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by making mistakes, you know?

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And then that chain continues where then you know, that second

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year becomes qualified, goes out on his own, employs someone as an

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apprentice, you know what I mean?

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And they just get worse and worse and worse.

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Do we think the quality of fully qualified has gone down over the past 10 years?

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This is

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No.

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because I'm, I, yeah, I don't think it has, 'cause the

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people that are approaching us

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Yeah.

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good

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Unfortunately we got a bit Yeah, we've got a bit of a sheltered, um, we do, yeah.

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We, we we're all very lucky in, in that kind of sense.

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the quality's good.

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Like the people I see are awesome

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Mm-hmm.

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I agree.

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I think now the ability to become educated about your trade.

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Without learning directly from your boss is better than it's ever been,

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and so people that want to be good are going to be good regardless.

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I think people are now a lot more aware of good workplaces that are out

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there, and they stay a lot less in bad workplaces, and the good people seek

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out good places and good people to work for, and they become good trades

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and the bad trades and the bad people.

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Are always gonna be that way because bad bosses will always be bad bosses and

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bad workers will always be bad workers.

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And we're just seeing a big shift now where good people find good people, bad

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people find bad people, and that's it.

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Yeah, and I, and that's, that's a really good point.

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the thing is, just because you're a good person doesn't mean

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you're gonna learn correctly.

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if you are keen to learn what you can see now, you know,

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on social media or whatever.

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It's very easy for young kids now to go, Hey, I'm not doing what I see

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other people on the interwebs doing.

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Am I being taught right?

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And they'll question it.

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Whereas when I did my time, I didn't know anyone that had.

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Social media for their business.

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So how would you have known?

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I only started to know things when I went to work with other people and

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I went, oh, I don't do it that way.

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I was lucky it was the other way around.

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I knew more than them.

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Uh, 'cause I got taught well, but taught well until I went to, yeah.

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Definitely

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No, but I, like, I was lucky.

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I, I lucked out and I did my apprenticeship with someone who

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was very good at their trade.

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And put a lot of effort into teaching me.

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Um, but I know a lot of people that didn't have it the same way.

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So we're saying potentially the idea of social media is, it sounds like this

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is a big part of this, this flourish of people finding their, you know,

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their, their area of work that they want to thrive in essentially, as opposed

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to, you are yours in the word luck.

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It's like, is luck now not really involved?

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Now that we have social media and we have a really good, you know, vision

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into what the industry looks like.

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And you can slip into anyone's dms, like you can quickly access

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like us through a quick message.

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Mm.

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get

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Yeah.

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messages minimum a day from someone asking a question.

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one of the questions I get asked more than anything, it's

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like, Hey, I'm an apprentice.

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I'm a second, third year apprentice.

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love what you guys are doing.

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I want to build better.

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but I can't convince my boss to build better.

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Like, what should I do?

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and So for example, like I've got someone that I'm chatting to today

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that's got the same thing, and he said, but I love where I work.

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The people are awesome.

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how do I actually learn what you're doing?

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Do I do the passive house course?

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I was like, no, the passive house course isn't gonna teach you anything anymore.

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was great when we did it, but now there's so much more information on

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social media that you can get for free.

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Like it is so accessible.

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And then led me to the conversation saying that like, the only way that

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you are going to learn is if you leave and go join someone that will teach you

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and that you get hands-on experience.

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You are not gonna learn this purely, uh, onsite where you currently are,

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unless you take the, the boss takes on that job or you get that job.

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And most likely it's probably a one-off.

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Then if you don't then take on that a job or learn the way that we potentially

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build you just become part of a cycle, and as the cycle goes, it's harder to break.

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Yeah, but it just depends.

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Like if you don't want to be a builder.

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You just want to be a carpenter, you know, you don't need to learn a

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lot of the things that that we do.

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And you might learn insane carpentry skills off someone who's just

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focused on purely on carpentry.

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Oh, I disagree because like for example, like let's just take

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a window sill, for example.

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If you're a good carpenter, like they should be like just tilt, tilting that

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seal at five degrees straight off when they frame like bang prep for the next

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Yeah, that's one tiny little thing, but do they need to know, know, everything

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else about building, you know, as a carpenter, you need to know enough

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about other people's trades to do a good job, If you're a carpenter framing

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for a passive house builder, you know California corners, you know, minimize how

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many studs you put in slope, the sills,

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Any build, whether you're building a volume back up, build up, why shouldn't

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you be falling with a, as a good carpenter framer, we, we do California

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corners to maximize insulation.

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Like that's how you create change.

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Be like that's how we're doing it, and that's gonna only

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benefit you as a builder.

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I'd be fairly confident that there'd be a lot of building surveyors out there

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that that work in the volume game.

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That if they walked into a joint that had California corners, they'd

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be like, what the hell is this?

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And they probably wouldn't pass it.

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if

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I agree.

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There's nothing in 6 16 84 that says you can't do it.

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It actually is completely fine.

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Matt, I've had some punch ons with buildings of a SA, like, like some, like

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some absolute doozies, like real doozies.

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You see everything from this little bubble that we operate in.

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You know, you've got, who is it?

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Permit approvals plus, you know, that are awesome.

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Like, I've had all sorts, all sorts.

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'cause I did nothing but work in, you know, volume development type of jobs

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where, you know, everyone was on the take.

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like a complete different, it's a complete different side of the industry.

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So the second you try and change anything.

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It's a debacle and it's easier to just be like, yeah, all right,

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that's how the surveyor wants it.

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I wanna finish the job and get paid.

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That's how I'm gonna do it.

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That's the reality of it.

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That's an issue in itself.

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Yeah, but it's, that's what I'm saying.

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It's not always as simple as like, oh, well you should just do it this way.

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You know different when you are the builder making these calls.

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But when you are a subcontractor who's on a price.

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Probably a crap price coming from like a volume builder, you need to

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get in and get out and make as minimal amount of return trips as possible.

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That makes it very, very hard for you to be in the driver's seat saying I'm

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the one that's gonna create change here.

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A fair point, but then I think about the apprentices that are doing like

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apprentice work in for the volume builder.

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Like can you even call yourself a carpenter if all you with

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frame as an apprentice?

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look at the industry in other countries, like American Carpenters, don't, you

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know, us in New Zealand are, you know, one of the only places where it's

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like, okay, yeah, carpenter just does everything, including all the things that

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all the other trades don't want to do.

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We're the only ones expected.

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Whereas like in America, you just do cladding, you just do frames.

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You just do, you know, internal trim and the processes that some

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of those guys have is insane.

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You know, like their processes and systems destroy anything that we do 'cause they've

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got the time to work on it and refine it.

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So this is where I'm getting at too, is like for example,

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a carpentry apprenticeship.

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I don't, I think that.

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you are licensed maybe as a carpenter and you work for builder, then you

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can be like, you can showcase a portfolio across multiple stages

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of a project from fixing to cladium to, uh, I know framing to subfloor.

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Then you can call yourself a carpenter.

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But if all you can showcase is framer and you may be the best framer,

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that's what you are, become a framer.

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And that's then, as you said, you can refine your skills.

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You get so good at framing that you are an expert in framing.

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I reckon that's potentially something that we need to do in our industry

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and break up carpentry as a term.

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but then why can't you just break up the licenses like it is in plumbing?

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a licensed roof plumber can't do general plumbing.

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you can do a job and you can get a plumber to do all the civils, a

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plumber to do all the hydraulics, and a plumber to do the roof.

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Three different plumbers, three different licenses, three different certificates.

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Carpentry can be the same way.

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I think it should be.

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you'd have foundations in the subfloor.

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You'd have a framer, you'd have claddings and like a lockup.

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You maybe have a internal carpenter and fit off a finished carpenter.

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It would, it would certainly make the education system a

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lot more streamlined as well.

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If you just had a framing, carpentry, apprenticeship, they would be able

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to hone skills instead of doing one week on hanging doors where we

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all know that hanging doors is a bit of an art, and can take quite

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a long time to, to master that art.

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what a carpenter is expected to know and learn in four years is insane

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compared to, you know, other trades.

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And it's like, you know, not to be completely disrespectful to plumbers

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and electricians, but there's a lot more repetition in those jobs.

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'cause it's like, okay, we're doing drainage, okay.

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Water flows downhill.

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Or we're, we're, we're,

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more than that.

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Plumbers out there, you do a lot

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I know that, I know there's a, I know there's a bit more than that, but there's

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a lot less variety in the scope of what they do, which allows apprentices through

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that time to really hone in those skills.

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'cause they're gonna do it a lot more repetitively.

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You know, I, the last couple of apprentices that I. Would've really

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struggled to learn a lot in the end because we were doing something different

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every day, and sometimes it wasn't carpentry, it was builder related.

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How do you hone those skills when every day, you know, it's like, okay, well

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now we're doing something different.

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Now we're doing something different now we're doing something different.

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Now we're doing something different.

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And I also think there's something kind of cool and old school about the

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plumbing apprenticeship that you go to.

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Yeah, you gotta go to night school and you do your gas license,

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you do your water license.

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I think that's like, it's showing the commitment to what you kind of

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want to do, where everything these days is just a quick online course.

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Bang, I've done it, finished off, I

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Mm, well carpentry is certainly curve.

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Carpentry is one of the most, it's just puzzling how intense and the understanding

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has to be to actually become a, a, a, quite a well-rounded carpenter.

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literally had this before recently.

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someone will email me or send an inbox message to my Instagram

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and be like, Hey, I've done my cert three carpentry training.

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I'm a carpenter.

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I charge $70 an hour.

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Can I get some work?

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Hey, have you ever me, have you been on site?

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No.

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they're technically a qualified carpenter, which is insane.

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that's a real fault in the, in the system.

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I I also think like you shouldn't be able to call yourself like an

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a grader, like an electrician.

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Like, and car carpentry falls into this unless you've Yeah.

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You've done like, I'm not a carpenter unless I'm licensed,

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we could have that, there's stacks of plumbers out there that aren't licensed

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plumbers that work for licensed plumbers

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that solves everything because they're learning from licensed

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people, or most likely they are.

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I feel like the apprenticeship system is broken and if we really wanna start,

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like, it, it, it's a cycle because if we start spitting out better quality trades.

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That are insured that have the liability against them, quality of work comes up.

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'cause they don't want to be sued.

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So you, you're picking, you, you're picking up from the ground up, which

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means long term from people's, like house insurance and they, they have

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a decrease on, on their contents and home insurance because been built by

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Quality of work's higher.

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should.

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needs to be a different pronged attack as well.

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We, we can't attack it from just a, a liability point of view.

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I think they're actually, as we're talking about people getting in and

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that and that attitude and passion, that also needs to be, backburning as well.

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We need to be able to create.

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Passionate people.

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Um, and how do we do that?

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I think social media's been probably the biggest expander of

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that over the past three years.

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but there's gotta be more there.

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There has to be like, uh, you know, America have these in incred used to

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have these incredible television shows.

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Like my old home, I think, was it my old home, Brad?

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What was it called?

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Yeah.

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This old house.

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the.

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like Larry Horn and.

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Yeah, yeah.

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The amount of, um, Americans that, that harp on about that incredible show, and

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that's where it all started for them.

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Um, we have the block.

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Like what a what a what a horrendous place to have to build a passion from.

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let's cut corners.

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Let's do things as cheaply as possible.

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Oh

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all the

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yeah.

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Let's like

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Let's not go into the block list,

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No, but it's a, it's an

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but it's

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The problem is

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a, it is, yeah.

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people from doing an apprenticeship

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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that and they go, I

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It's a negative, negative aura.

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Yeah,

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but the,

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Mm,

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it couldn't be so far from the truth.

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Just tell 'em to watch Grand Designs instead of the block.

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true.

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like I was never one that loved being on the tools.

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I think it's, it's also hard 'cause I, I see the pressure from young kids

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these days that come out of a high school that you must know what you

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gotta be, you gonna be a doctor or a lawyer or a psychologist, who knows.

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But at the age of 16, you're expected to know what career

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path you want when you're 50.

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so sometimes I think that, that, the same issue with us as apprenticeships.

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Like, just 'cause you're starting a carpentry apprenticeship doesn't

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mean you have to be a carpenter.

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It's an entry point into so many different jobs.

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And that could be to, to a building design.

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It could be into building, surveying, inspecting.

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It could be a project manager, construction manager, like even just

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sales construction company or who knows?

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But it is just a starting point.

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It's like a university degree.

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I feel like there's more and not to shit can anyone that does an arts

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degree, but I think there's more avenues from a, an apprenticeship

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than an arts degree is gonna give you.

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Potentially, but like that's could be the foundation of building that passion.

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So you do a carpentry apprenticeship and you are, you know, you're in the

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residential game or the commercial game, and then from there you

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see what you're passionate about.

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Like I know a lot of carpenters that have pivoted over to

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architecture and vice versa.

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the amount of architects that are interested in, in putting, um, in

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putting bags on and, and being on site and actually understanding what

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they're designing, , it's constant.

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Yeah.

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Which is great.

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so that is something which Liam spoke about from hit me hype about when

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he was studying to be an architect.

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You had to have onsite experience.

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And I'd love to know if that's still the case, because would bridge so many gaps.

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I'd be pretty surprised if that's required.

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It'd be good to chat with an architect about that.

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hours.

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Wow.

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just think about, and he made the example of like, he's detailing and

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his plans on how to install render.

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He's like, there's nothing more valuable than speaking to the

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renderer themselves because they'll

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Cool.

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and that was like this bigger ha moment.

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Or I also think for us, like imagine how good it would be if as a, as a carpentry

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apprenticeship that you could go sit on.

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Some form of an architect course to learn how to replan to

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understand what they're thinking.

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So we're bridging the gap a bit more here too.

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So there's a mutual respect straight off that when you're an apprentice

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carpenter you're speaking to an architect student, like you guys are

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starting to get along from the start.

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So there's that mutual, like they're both professionals here.

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you can have all these ideas and say, oh, these are all these things that

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we can do to improve apprenticeships.

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And it's sort of the same spin as when we say, oh, we need

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to improve the building code.

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We can just do these things without the, you know, the government

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implementing it, you know, like.

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Matt, you've got a good relationship with the architects that you work with.

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Surely they're coming out on site, which opens the door for your apprentices to

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have a conversation with the architect.

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It opens the door for the architect to have conversations with your trades

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while they're on site, you know?

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And then when that becomes something that people see on social media, they go, well,

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I want to go and work somewhere that I'm also afforded those same opportunities.

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And that in itself.

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Grows things to be better.

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It's also hard now.

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So if I went to an architect and said, Hey, can you have my

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first year for 20 hours to learn?

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Like that means it's 20 hours out of the architect's time to teach them.

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But imagine if that's like at, uh, universities slash TAFE level,

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that when the kids, I know they're a first year, but they go do.

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The plan reading or plan design.

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Ba. One of the basic courses or subjects you might do at architects,

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like during their degree, is you sit in on that part, that unit,

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and you learn the absolute minimum.

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But then on the same flip side is the architect might come in, they might

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come in and have to do, yeah, 20 hours of onsite laboring and they must

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cover something from a slab core, a a like a subfloor, a frame, just some

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basic on like backend documentation.

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Yeah, I just think some of it like is so easy to fudge if you do it that way.

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And then it's really dependent on, on where you end up going.

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So, you know, like I'm assuming we've all done work experience, you might be

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the work experience kid that, you know, really gets to, jump in the deep end.

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Or you might be the work experience kid that just stands on a broom, for

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it to make a substantial difference, like you have to be in the right place.

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Yeah.

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and if I was an architect student, the first thing I'd be doing is reaching

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out, not to an architect studio to learn.

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I'd go to a buildup, be like, can I do, is there some paperwork?

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Can I do onsite laboring?

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I feel like that is so much more important,

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I mean, that's pretty much what placement is essentially as well.

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Uh, doctors, nurses, they do all that kind of stuff.

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They can reach out to, they have to apply to certain, , hospitals and

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all that kind of stuff, and they get to, pick their poison in a.

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I was actually out for dinner with two of my best mates, like him

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and his partner, and he's, uh.

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Starting to be an ophthalmologist and she's just about to finish school

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and the amount of placement that med students have to do for free is cra.

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It's practically like two years of full-time work for free.

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But not only free, you've gotta pay a hex to, to go work in a hospital to learn.

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I get it.

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'cause you're dealing, you're not just doing home, you're

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dealing with people's lives.

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But surely there's something we can take from that model of like,

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oh, well, they're learning from.

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Walking around with doctors and surgeons and consultants, like valuable.

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How do we transfer that into our industry?

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That would be very, very difficult.

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'cause already quite a big sticky subject.

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Industry with apprenticeships.

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maybe it's 40 hours a year.

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If you can't find 40 hours a year.

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As a as is someone studying, you've got

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No, totally.

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You're

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Yeah.

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your time ever.

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one of these, I forget which one it was of you two that made the good point

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about carpentry apprentice is like, you kind of end up doing anything.

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Everything, like from an external wall wraps, putting in some

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insulation to cleaning the site,

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mentioned the idea of carpenters have to know other trades quite intimately.

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Um, it's very rare that a plumber or a uh, electrician Tyler has

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to know carpentry intimately.

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The good ones do.

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But I, I very rarely you come across those guys.

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, And we are very much expected, um, as you know, young carpenters, old

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carpenters to really understand plumbing, electrical, tiling, waterproofing,

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I mean, you name it, concreting.

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I could just list goes on and on.

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I.

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Oh, the first concrete sub I ever did was practically, I'd never seen a

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concrete sub, and all of a sudden I'm digging one out and pouring one and being

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like, I've got no idea what I'm doing.

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But you fake it till you make it.

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I should not have got my

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Yep.

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to be able to do that.

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But

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Mm,

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and I've learned from it.

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So on the flip side, why I say whilst I say we need to do all this education and

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it should be part of the apprenticeship, we are all probably very good examples

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of it also doesn't need to be that way.

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I think it's a bit prohibitive to be like, you have to learn all

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these, all these different things.

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'cause it's just, it's just too much.

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any apprentice come to you, like, what advice should I take?

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Like what's the biggest thing I should know about an apprenticeship?

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What would you say?

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I think you need to put yourself in an environment where you can thrive.

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if someone, some you need to find the right person

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that'll have the time for you.

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, But I think that's a two way street as well.

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I mean, it's, it's really, you really have to show the attitude

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that, um, that you will work really hard for this other person.

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I think they will give back.

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what would be the advice that I'd, that I'd give to an apprentice now.

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hoping you'd say this because you've actually said this to me before, an

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apprenticeship, a four year apprenticeship teaches you nothing other than the

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skills to think through a situation to maybe get to where you need to get to,

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but you are not gonna do a four year apprenticeship and walk out and be like.

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can frame a house, I can start to finish, build it, but you'll

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have the basic skills to allow you to think through some problems.

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And it's only from there that your, your first, second, third, fourth

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year out of the apprenticeship is when you really start to learn stuff.

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I finished my apprenticeship and we had predominantly frame, so

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I was like, I'm a gun framer.

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Away we go.

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And like I cooked the first frame I did, I messed up the measurements of

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upstairs, put beams in the wrong place.

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It was a debacle.

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And I was like, how, how did I cock this up so bad when I've been

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such a gun framer for so long?

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But I just was a gun worker.

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I wasn't a con, you know, leader.

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You can't have speed and skill, like speed only comes after a

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certain of time of repetition or knowing something very, very well.

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You've picked up efficiencies in the way that you do something and and

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I say this to all my apprentices, like, just take your time, slow down,

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get it right once it's gonna stop.

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Think through the situation, think about what you're about to do,

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and then do what you're about to do or talk to someone about it.

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I think speed really comes from how fast do you think?

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And then the fact that you don't have to think, so you've.

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I've done it so many times that you no longer have to think about it.

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And that's where you get incredibly fast, you know?

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Whereas yeah, like when you are learning, you've gotta stop,

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take the time to think, you know?

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Yeah, no,

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it um.

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amount of concentration to make sure that you're not making mistakes.

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You're thinking about every step methodically, but when you've got that

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experience, you can just flow through.

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Everything is smooth, slow is smooth, smooth is fast,

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if you could change one thing about the whole apprentice system,

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the way it's currently operated, what would you both change?

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Funding.

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the pay divide for apprentices I think is still too much and it's

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not scaled to the current economy.

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So, can

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Um,

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I kick back here now a bit.

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yep.

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Go for it.

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How, like just, let's say an apprentice is on the average apprentice on probably

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about 20 an hour, is that about right?

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Maybe

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21%. Yeah.

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Yep.

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So how much funding would you now say that they should get extra?

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it needs to be a reflection of economics.

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you can't kill that with a, with a silver bullet.

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Um.

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I'm, what I'm getting at here is all of a sudden we go, Hey, are we gonna give

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every apprentice another $10 an hour?

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Now all that's gonna do is the carpenters are gonna go, well, I'm

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gonna charge more to bridge that gap more because they've got that.

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I'm just gonna become more expensive.

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Yeah.

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But at the same time, it also will improve quality of life for apprentices

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and also potentially incentivize people to move over from other

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professional industries into out, um.

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Yeah.

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No, that, that's a, that's a

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And then that, and then thus creating a little bit more

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competitive, um, competitive pool, which I think is, IM important.

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If we're gonna run in a, in a, in a capitalist economy, I think com

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competition's really important.

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So, um,

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just, it's a simple one.

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It's like if you're doing an apprenticeship, you don't get taxed.

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There's no tax on an apprenticeship.

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yeah, potentially.

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Yeah.

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it's something like that that

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Yeah.

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aren't taxed.

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It's tax

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But that's funding, like, if you're gonna, if you're gonna sacrifice attacks,

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that's, that's funding, you know?

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I think though, if you don't finish your apprenticeship,

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that needs to be a consequence.

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So you go into it.

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Like, because there's gotta be something on the other side.

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Like, because otherwise there's no return on investment from, say,

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yeah,

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they're, they're putting all this money behind it, but, hey, I just

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want two or three years to, to cash up before I go on a Europe trip, and

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then I'm gonna go do what I want to

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yeah.

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job.

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have, but people have personal, you know, stories and, but

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sometimes they just can't do that.

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No,

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Yeah.

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thing is like, we, like there has to be a return, return on investment

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because also so many apprentices aren't finishing their time.

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what do you pin that down to?

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Yeah, they're prob probably a lot of them are leaving 'cause it's money

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related, you know, they just can't afford to stay being an apprentice.

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you know, when you come outta school and you are young, you know, you

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don't really know what you want to do.

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You get a little bit of the ways through.

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Your friends have taken on other paths, you know, and especially when you're

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young, people sell you everything.

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Like it's the best thing ever.

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Yeah.

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I work at, wherever else is amazing, you know, you should do

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it and it, you know, maybe you think then, oh, maybe I will go do.

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Something else.

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I think it's a lot to ask of, and I didn't do it.

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I had a few different jobs before I became a a carpenter.

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It's a fair bit to ask of someone who's that young to be, committed

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to, to sticking it out for ages.

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And then when you're a little bit older, you're probably, especially now, it's

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harder to go, oh, well I'm going to cop a pay cut and go, go be a tradie.

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ago.

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rate for apprentices who commenced their apprenticeship that actually

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finished it, have a guess.

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I have a

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30%.

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the way.

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What do you guys

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What do you mean?

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What do you mean?

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A hundred percent hit rate?

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have finished and completed their apprenticeship that have worked for me.

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I've had, I've had 30 apprentices and had one finish.

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Well with me, finish with me.

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Yeah.

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I

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And then I've had a co I've had a couple that have finished.

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Yeah, I've had a couple finish.

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Um, not with me.

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So

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Yeah.

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a problem as of 2023.

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The completion rate for apprentice and trainees in Australia who

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commenced was 54.8%, which means approximately 45.2 of individuals who

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started their apprenticeship did not complete in the expected timeframe.

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Wow.

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a huge issue.

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It's huge.

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Yeah.

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And like what, and

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Yeah.

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I mean, I think there's a common theme with, that we hear on the, um,

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grapevine that it's, it's cost related.

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People coming into it, it's cost related, they won.

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Don't wanna take that dive into it.

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So they'd rather, I don't know, dog food drive trucks for 45, $50 an hour?

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so the di, the number one reason for employment related

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issues was Dissatisfaction with pay or working conditions.

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Them being offered a better job elsewhere, not getting along with the boss or

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colleagues losing their job or being made redundant and disliking the work.

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So I, yeah, I, I, I agree that obviously there is a huge issue with the pay and

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working conditions, and maybe something is a tax free for apprentices and, and

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it shouldn't be in all apprenticeships.

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By the way.

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I'm gonna be, I think we need to look at the apprenticeships that we're, we're

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short on, , and incentivize them firstly.

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And then, and being biased here, but it's the, the reality is like, it is

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a carpentry apprenticeship, like on the skill shortage list at the moment.

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Is it yoga?

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Yoga instructors like, fuck me.

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You kidding.

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and, and dog walkers.

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they're, these have been identified by the government as just shortage in work.

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Um, and

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Nice.

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wasn't on there,

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Hmm.

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Interesting.

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think that we should be looking at trades, one that have a long-term future.

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So for example, around like renewables and solar and things like

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Sustainable.

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Yeah, sustainable jobs.

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I also think that these rebates should only be for residential.

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They should not have anything to do to do with commercial.

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All right?

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So you only get the rebate if you're in residential to bridge that gap

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again from residential to commercial.

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So now it makes it more attractive to be in the residential market because

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you're potentially not being taxed.

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And you get paid otherwise higher in the commercial industry.

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'cause that's why everything's so expensive and in

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Victoria have a huge debt.

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But if we start to now look backwards on that, um, I think, I think that

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there's, the evidence is there that it's obviously paid an issue.

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but yeah, I find that, I think that yeah, the trades that, yeah, carpentry, like

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even like brickwork tile in concrete, like they're kind of dying trades.

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Like if you're a young kid, and di no disrespect to say a

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brick layer or concrete like.

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Damn physical work, like why would you do it?

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Tough

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Yeah, but it's like at some point we transitioned from building stone.

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Buildings to, you know, brick veneer buildings, it's probably

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'cause stones are heavy.

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And eventually people will like, screw that for a job.

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That's a stupid job, you know?

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And

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is always gonna be there, and that's just like a hard trade, and brick

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claims get paid really well by the way, but like it's a very hard

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trade to tell someone to go into.

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they, they do now bricklayers get paid really well now 'cause

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there's not many good bricklayers.

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It's like tuck pointers or, you know.

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Some of those other like dying specialist trades that get paid really well,

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but I'm sure it's incredibly hard for those people to find apprentices and,

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and pass their skills down the line.

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Like a stone mason that I was working with a bit, he packed it in

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because he just couldn't find anyone.

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Obviously you can't do it yourself, you know, or by yourself.

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'cause it's incredibly, you know, labor intensive and, and hard, heavy work.

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He just couldn't find anyone.

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He is like, oh.

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I can't keep doing it, But it's same like, okay, Jack, how much easier

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was it to do the two act house as a framer than conventionally framing?

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When I did the, uh, we, we went to the factory, , out at Carbon Light.

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And, um, you know, they have incredible hoists.

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They have tables that square all the walls for you.

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Um, lots of mechanical, , you know, lifting devices.

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Um, so much easier.

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Um, if we were to do that on site, like that's the idea of prefabrication.

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It's got, it's a lot more controlled environment.

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, And then we had a crane to drop everything in.

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Like people were not really lifting much.

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, Pretty

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much

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Yeah,

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with a rattle gun.

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So, um, yeah, for sure.

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Completely agree with you.

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so in Switzerland they've had a huge shift towards penalized, , mass timber

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construction, all that sort of stuff.

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And they've found that it's increasing the longevity of a carpenter's career because

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they're not doing as physical a work.

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They're still doing it, but now they're using technology.

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To make their lives easier.

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And perhaps if young people were coming into the trades and your body's not being

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punished, like you gotta remember these kids have come outta school where they've

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sat down for most of the day, maybe run around, kick the footy at lunchtime,

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to having to be on their feet, working physically for eight hours a day if you

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would, using things that made your life a little bit easier, it might be a bit more

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attractive and people might stick it out.

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Yeah.

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fun.

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Funny enough on that, like my little cousin did work experience

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with this, uh, late last year or early year, I can't remember.

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well you be maybe 15, 16 at school and was, I played

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footy on fi blah, blah, blah.

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So he actually stayed at mom and dad's house because it was

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the, the work was closer to him.

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Okay?

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So he didn't have to drive all the way from Preston to a job in the ville.

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So mom's gone up, he got home at like four o'clock and mom's

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like, he's like, how's your day?

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And he's like, yeah, good.

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Mom's like, come get you when dinner's ready.

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So went up about six o'clock, he's out in bed, cold done, and mom

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just left him and he slept all the way through for the next day.

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Like zonked.

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Like that's the reality of an apprenticeship.

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Like you start, like, I remember when I started like I was real fit.

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jeez, I spent, but the problem is that like, and apart from being an absolute

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shit carpenter, the reason why I had to get off the toilet is my back's cooked.

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I couldn't, I can't do it physically.

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My back just goes instantly.

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, So I think that there's an issue there and I was only probably 30, 28

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around that when I had to actually from doctor's advice go no more.

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So, and I look at these old carpenters, they are like 60, 70 still on the tools

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who have lifted hardwood frames and had to do it all by hand with hand saws and.

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If they're still going, but someone who's young, who is super fit,

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they kept their body in good shape.

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Not so much anymore, but, it, it is, it's a young person's game.

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And I think that's also the issue that we have is we are losing so many people

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out of the industry the speed and the, the what is required is just too much.

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We could change that with what Switzerland's doing, what

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Germany's definitely doing, um, we could recognize in for sure.

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think about it, you can move prefabrication, you're gonna have a

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huge decrease on WorkSafe uh, claims

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like that would have to, at a minimum be dropped 30% from the, just if you

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had cranes in every site or if you are like, what are we, I think it's 5.4%

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work cover as a, a builder from memory.

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It might have gone up since last time I checked.

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Hey, if you, you can buy a little portable crane that's gonna cost

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you like 50 to a hundred grand.

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Like, we'll, we'll quarter that, and the government will subsidize you.

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Say, Hey, now we're doing this.

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Frank Mout up.

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It's, you've been taught, you lift it up and off you go.

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I, something that I've looked into a lots like, Hey, how do I actually

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get a crane to like, potentially make this easier on everyone?

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And I also think like the other, the other thing is, and, and I dunno how I say this,

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but like there's a misconception that.

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To, to try and get women into the industry.

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Like there's a huge misconception that like women can't lift things.

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So how do we now bridge that gap and go, well, what if you got cranes and we've got

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these lifting things on site, to which it isn't the case because I was never strong.

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And it's just something that is like an excuse for people

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not to hire in the industry.

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, But maybe that also goes, oh, maybe it just opens more doors for people as well.

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like my old boss, his body's cooked and he wore it as a badge of honor

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that I've worked so hard, you know, my body's cactus or you know, whatever.

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And to some extent I was like that, you know, early on.

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And then, you know, a couple of years ago, busted both my wrists.

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I can't do anywhere near what I used to be able to do.

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I can still do everything.

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I just don't do it the same dumb ass way that I used to do.

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I, I work a hell of a lot smarter now and, you know, I'll have a lot

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more longevity in my career now, hopefully, 'cause I'm, I'm working

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smarter and it's something that probably a lot of places need to adopt.

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Yeah, like do, this is a weird question for you.

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Is that like a positive out of you breaking your arm, your arm?

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Like do you think you'd still be full gung-ho where it is a badge of on it?

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If you didn't break your arm,

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Probably

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do you, are you

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Of course.

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in hindsight, do you think like breaking your arm is actually a really good thing?

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Oh.

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it's, it's certainly changed my perspective on a lot of things.

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Um, there's some stuff that I used to love that I will never, ever do

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again, which is pretty heartbreaking.

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it's hard having a kid who, you know, puts a lot of punishment on my, on my wrist.

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that, that, that sort of stuff, shit.

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But, um, you know, yeah, it was definitely an eyeopener and,

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and made me look at things.

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Yeah.

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Very, very differently.

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Differently.

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And now I, you know, even just getting a little bit older and a

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little bit wiser, you know, like I think Matt, not long ago you sent

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something in one of our group chats of, you know, some people working, do.

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I look at some of those things and I think that ain't nothing

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on what, what I used to do.

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Like not even near it.

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But now I think I'm so lucky I'm not dead.

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I'm so lucky I don't have a spinal or neck or a back or head injury

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from doing dumb shit on a job site.

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Hundred percent.

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Like that is something that I would say is the best thing that has

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changed that this, and maybe 'cause we're, we're thinking about is.

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I remember like as a, as an apprentice, like you are walking on a second

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story on the top plates carrying trusses with nothing to protect you.

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Like you just walk the top plates now, like if I said to one of my

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apprentices, go walk the top plates.

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I'd be like, what?

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What's that?

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Hmm.

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Yeah, I used to walk up the Trus webs, like straight up the top corner of Trus.

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yeah, yeah, yeah.

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You just use 'em as a letter.

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Yeah.

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It's.

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Yeah, yeah.

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Anyway, we're gonna run, we're gonna wrap this up.

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It is something we're gonna do a lot more often, start

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working through all the trades.

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, But also pretty much we are gonna also start a bit of a, maybe a second

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episode once a month where we're just gonna talk absolute, we'll call junk

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about just stuff in the industry.

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And I wanna try to bring some of those conversations into just format

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like this to help those people who might not have the community.

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And if you don't have that community, my biggest advice is create one.

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Go out.

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Just reach out to a number of builders that you think might be young, starting

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or around the same point of view as you.

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And just be like, guys, like, or girls, let's create something.

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Let's just start a little group and let's start feeding and sharing information.

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Because it does help.

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And it like, for me, it's probably saving.

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Thousands and thousands and thousands of dollars, just

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having that little group chat.

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So Jack and Brad, thank you for this afternoon, um, and super pumped

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to do another lease in the future.

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Thank you Matt,

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