
In clean energy mad dash, union-scale jobs look for their place
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Jobseekers might be surprised to learn clean energy is among the fastest growing careers right now. Labor leaders say developers are getting better at hiring union workers to build wind and solar farms but they see room for improvement in North Dakota.
Industry analysts said the clean energy workforce has a union coverage rate just above 10 percent, compared with 7 percent in the private sector.
Kevin Pranis, Minnesota and North Dakota marketing manager for the Laborers' International Union of North America, said momentum has developed over the past decade.

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"We've seen a really positive shift with good union jobs that pay the same rates that members would make on a conventional energy project," Pranis explained.
In neighboring Minnesota, he noted they have seen a substantial increase in developers hiring local union members for projects, as opposed to out-of-state teams. And while there's progress in North Dakota, he pointed out on some projects, the percentage is still low.
He acknowledged changing the mindset is hard in a fossil fuel-heavy state but adds developers can help by conveying the wage growth in renewables.
Under the Trump administration, federal incentives for such projects are being scaled back. Pranis predicted a rush of construction jobs for renewable sites over the next two years before key credits expire. Even if demand eventually softens, he argued the sector will still be a force because of plans laid out by utilities and the training members receive pays off in other ways.
"We really train people to be construction professionals, over a set of skills that laborers focus on," Pranis emphasized. "Those skills are applicable, whether it's a solar project, a wind project, a highway, a school."
Pat Hook, business manager of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 683 in Ohio, said another complicating factor is local opposition to wind and solar projects. His union often shows up at public hearings to state the facts and dispel misinformation, so members get a chance to be hired. He sees positive movement in this area.
"The sentiment in the local area is starting to change, hopefully away from opposition because the projects were actually completed and all the kind of fears of potential things that could happen didn't," Hook observed.