Leave it to a woman
You may have heard that Great Britain has been wrestling with an energy shortage and has many of the “welfare” type problems we have been exposed to in the US. This leads to large numbers of old and barely livable housing units that are outmoded. Even with the many government building programs and the wide availability of government support programs for non-workers, their housing units are gobbling the heat and cooling energy. So one woman stepped up with a solution. In Greater Manchester, social entrepreneur Aileen McDonnell has an answer: take local people, many of them long-term unemployed or struggling to find a decent job, train them in skills such as carpentry, plastering, brickwork, tiling and roofing, and put them to work refurbishing some of the area’s rundown public housing. Result? Greener, healthier, more comfortable homes; reduced energy bills; lower carbon emissions; and hundreds of workers with highly in-demand, useful skills.
Aileen’s pioneering retrofit academy is doing what our politicians can’t seem to – insulating homes across Britain, with the help of ex-prisoners and single mothers. Green Skills and Retrofitting are phrases which trip off the tongue of pretty much every aspiring politician these days. Sounds like a no-brainer – until you ask, “who exactly is going to do the work?” Since McDonnell launched her non-profit educational company, ‘B4Box’, it has created training and permanent job opportunities for some 1,400 workers, many of whom started with no qualifications, and upgraded over 5,000 properties. B4Box trains single mums, ex-prisoners and young people who’ve been excluded from school. To the surprise of many in the local authorities she worked with, this not only delivered for the occupant, it was also highly cost-efficient. Spurred on by that experience, she set up B4Box as a for-profit company with a strong social mission Born and brought up in public housing, McDonnell won a scholarship to a grammar school, and was able to go to university in the halcyon days of full grants.
And it all sprung from McDonnell’s personal experience of helping co-ordinate the refurbishment of local accommodation for disabled people. B4Box won the prestigious international Ashden Award for Low Carbon Skills last year. Aileen McDonnell’s, “I was literally the only woman. I was the only one who said, ‘I’m interested in construction.” Instead, McDonnell was fired up by the prospect of making existing homes fit to live in. She set up a charity, Manchester Care and Repair, and scored early successes in retrofitting disabled people’s homes to a decent standard by bringing everyone involved – housing managers, contractors and, crucially, the householders themselves – together to work out how best it could be done. McDonnell and her team’s success is a living rebuke to the ‘business as usual’ approach of much of mainstream construction. And at a time when both political parties are parroting the ‘green skills’ mantra, they could use some womanly “outside the government creativity” for the future.
Learning a trade
My husband is so good at home repairs that they have a special VIP area for him in the emergency room.
A boss tells his new employee, “I’ll give you 15 bucks an hour starting today and in three months…I’ll raise it to 18 bucks an hour. So when would you like to start?”
“In 3 months,” the employee replies.
Why is it when you pass by road construction crews on the highway they are all men except the woman was holding up a sign that says: “Slow Men Working.”
My company just conducted a one-day motivation training for all the junior employees. It was a roaring success. All the employees are now really motivated to find new jobs.
July 10th Birthdays
1988 – Katie Pavlich, 1981 – Jessica Simpson, 1972 – Sofía Vergara, 1946 – Sue Lyon
1990 – Hector David, 1980 – Gong Yoo, 1965 – Urban Meyer, 1989 – Antonio Brown