Looking for a job that can't be outsourced and that could provide a good income for years to come? Think infrastructure. In the 21st century, infrastructure isn't just roads, bridges, railroads, and water or sewer plants -- it's high-tech electrical grids, high-speed Internet cable and wireless networks. Several factors have come together to make now a great time to get into infrastructure jobs. One is demographic -- a generation of baby boomers who've spent their careers maintaining water, sewer, and power plants are hitting retirement age. Another issue is America's longtime habit of deferring maintenance on its roads, bridges, and other infrastructure systems, says executive recruiter Stephen Hinton of Hinton Human Capital in Atlanta. This has recently come home to roost with prominent infrastructure failures such as the 2007 Mississippi River bridge collapse in Minneapolis. With infrastructure crumbling, many cities are launching massive infrastructure-repair programs, Hinton says, sometimes under federal-government order. "The U.S. has 50 to 60 years' worth of work that needs to be done just to bring things up to date," he says. Two more reasons why infrastructure is a hot job niche: The growth of high-tech communication and the federal stimulus bill signed in early 2009. Stimulus funds should help spur everything from new light-rail development to more efficient electrical transmission to the spread of high-speed Internet. A raft of infrastructure jobs that pay in the low- to mid-$40,000 salary range are well-known -- plumber, electrician, concrete mason, welder, HVAC technician. These so-called "skilled manual trades" topped Manpower's list of tough jobs to fill in both 2008 and 2009, and will continue to be in demand for years to come, says Joel Leonard, a self-proclaimed "maintenance evangelist" in North Carolina who helps infrastructure companies find skilled workers. Here are a range of other infrastructure-related jobs that have a promising future. Water treatment operator Computer-aided designer Land surveyor "Lots of folks get into it straight out of high school, or while they're in college," he says. $55,000 per year. Construction project manager Field engineer, telecommunications Security consultant Lipman says, "Information security is going to be hot, and pays well." $85,200 per year. Reliability engineer by Carol Tice, www.payscale.com |
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