Join us FREE, we're FREE to use
Web's largest swingers site since 2006.
Already registered?
Login here
Back to forum list |
Back to The Lounge |
Jump to newest |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"There's hundreds of thousands of new flats and houses being built in and around London. My borough has thousands going up at the moment. " Yeah but they're all built by companies that flood the sites with eastern Europeans that work for £50 a day. Its making pricing jobs for smaller trade companies impossible | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"There's hundreds of thousands of new flats and houses being built in and around London. My borough has thousands going up at the moment. Yeah but they're all built by companies that flood the sites with eastern Europeans that work for £50 a day. Its making pricing jobs for smaller trade companies impossible" Very true | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"Busy at the moment but what I’ve noticed as a joinery foreman for the company I work for is we are struggling for joiners with the correct qualifications only seem to have a level 2 and as for bricklayers we can’t get seem to be a shortage of them up our way " Yeah well that's the result of the previous recession many tradesmen leaving the industry in favour of other employment. Also the devaluation of trade qualifications as a direct result of employer's being obsessed with "multi trades" rather than single trade. My 4 years city and guilds advanced craft certificate is virtually worthless these days and can't even get a CSCS trade card because the CSCS people don't recognise city and guilds and because I can't provide a letter from my employer at the time due to him being dead! It's a money making venture. Some guy can rock up on site with minimal trade experience as long as he can pass some Dopey course that entitles him to a operatives certificate apparently that makes him fit to work on site even though he wouldn't know how to fit a fire door even if it fell on his head. I am a fully skilled carpenter and joiner with 34 years of experience. Yet all i am classed as these days is a multitrade. I might as well have done a bloody yts scheme back in the day and should have become a flipping heating engineer. | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"Busy at the moment but what I’ve noticed as a joinery foreman for the company I work for is we are struggling for joiners with the correct qualifications only seem to have a level 2 and as for bricklayers we can’t get seem to be a shortage of them up our way Yeah well that's the result of the previous recession many tradesmen leaving the industry in favour of other employment. Also the devaluation of trade qualifications as a direct result of employer's being obsessed with "multi trades" rather than single trade. My 4 years city and guilds advanced craft certificate is virtually worthless these days and can't even get a CSCS trade card because the CSCS people don't recognise city and guilds and because I can't provide a letter from my employer at the time due to him being dead! It's a money making venture. Some guy can rock up on site with minimal trade experience as long as he can pass some Dopey course that entitles him to a operatives certificate apparently that makes him fit to work on site even though he wouldn't know how to fit a fire door even if it fell on his head. I am a fully skilled carpenter and joiner with 34 years of experience. Yet all i am classed as these days is a multitrade. I might as well have done a bloody yts scheme back in the day and should have become a flipping heating engineer." few years ago we where on a Laings job and the site agent said our city and guilds is no longer recognised and so was the advanced craft so we could not get a gold Cscs card my mate piped up and showed him his hands and said see them they do the talking not some daft card the bloke didn’t know what to say | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"Busy at the moment but what I’ve noticed as a joinery foreman for the company I work for is we are struggling for joiners with the correct qualifications only seem to have a level 2 and as for bricklayers we can’t get seem to be a shortage of them up our way " I'm qualified in all levels of carpentry including level 3 site carpentry. I also have my level 5 HND in construction management. Plenty of us but unfortunately sexism within the construction industry is still rife. That attitude isn't going to help the industry. Shame I've experienced it and by senior managers no less. | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"Busy at the moment but what I’ve noticed as a joinery foreman for the company I work for is we are struggling for joiners with the correct qualifications only seem to have a level 2 and as for bricklayers we can’t get seem to be a shortage of them up our way I'm qualified in all levels of carpentry including level 3 site carpentry. I also have my level 5 HND in construction management. Plenty of us but unfortunately sexism within the construction industry is still rife. That attitude isn't going to help the industry. Shame I've experienced it and by senior managers no less. " a lot of the blue chip construction companies I’ve worked for the Laings Kiers bowmer Kirkland has plenty of female site managers maybe the smaller companies still have a thing against women on sites but same can be said about a lot of industries | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"Busy at the moment but what I’ve noticed as a joinery foreman for the company I work for is we are struggling for joiners with the correct qualifications only seem to have a level 2 and as for bricklayers we can’t get seem to be a shortage of them up our way I'm qualified in all levels of carpentry including level 3 site carpentry. I also have my level 5 HND in construction management. Plenty of us but unfortunately sexism within the construction industry is still rife. That attitude isn't going to help the industry. Shame I've experienced it and by senior managers no less. a lot of the blue chip construction companies I’ve worked for the Laings Kiers bowmer Kirkland has plenty of female site managers maybe the smaller companies still have a thing against women on sites but same can be said about a lot of industries " Nope. This was from my time with Morgan Sindall and Wilmott Dixon. I've never worked for any small construction company. How many women do you see actually running entire projects as the main CM? Down here I've seen zero. I don't mean a female QS or BS. | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"Busy at the moment but what I’ve noticed as a joinery foreman for the company I work for is we are struggling for joiners with the correct qualifications only seem to have a level 2 and as for bricklayers we can’t get seem to be a shortage of them up our way I'm qualified in all levels of carpentry including level 3 site carpentry. I also have my level 5 HND in construction management. Plenty of us but unfortunately sexism within the construction industry is still rife. That attitude isn't going to help the industry. Shame I've experienced it and by senior managers no less. a lot of the blue chip construction companies I’ve worked for the Laings Kiers bowmer Kirkland has plenty of female site managers maybe the smaller companies still have a thing against women on sites but same can be said about a lot of industries Nope. This was from my time with Morgan Sindall and Wilmott Dixon. I've never worked for any small construction company. How many women do you see actually running entire projects as the main CM? Down here I've seen zero. I don't mean a female QS or BS." it could be that the company’s you have been at perhaps the men above had more experience it’s not all about what qualifications you have experience counts for a lot my experience with a lot of university graduates who end up running sites are they have the knowledge but sometimes lack the practical as they have no trade background now I know you are a time served joiner which should help you but perhaps you correct in you opinion on sexism but we know it should not happen in present times | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"Busy at the moment but what I’ve noticed as a joinery foreman for the company I work for is we are struggling for joiners with the correct qualifications only seem to have a level 2 and as for bricklayers we can’t get seem to be a shortage of them up our way I'm qualified in all levels of carpentry including level 3 site carpentry. I also have my level 5 HND in construction management. Plenty of us but unfortunately sexism within the construction industry is still rife. That attitude isn't going to help the industry. Shame I've experienced it and by senior managers no less. a lot of the blue chip construction companies I’ve worked for the Laings Kiers bowmer Kirkland has plenty of female site managers maybe the smaller companies still have a thing against women on sites but same can be said about a lot of industries Nope. This was from my time with Morgan Sindall and Wilmott Dixon. I've never worked for any small construction company. How many women do you see actually running entire projects as the main CM? Down here I've seen zero. I don't mean a female QS or BS. it could be that the company’s you have been at perhaps the men above had more experience it’s not all about what qualifications you have experience counts for a lot my experience with a lot of university graduates who end up running sites are they have the knowledge but sometimes lack the practical as they have no trade background now I know you are a time served joiner which should help you but perhaps you correct in you opinion on sexism but we know it should not happen in present times " Sorry but how patronizing of you! I have enough experience thanks! I had enough experience to pass the first stage interview process with a large company. I was clearly told by that site manager he wanted me working for them and i would be on his team if i passed the next two interview stages. The next stage that guy said no to the job I went for. Tried offering me a lesser job. More office based job. Lol no thanks. Funny how I had enough experience and qualifications for the actual person I'd be working alongside, but not this other more senior chap! Well I've got my foot in the door and worked hard for it and not just sat at a desk! Shame some of males in the industry don't like seeing women climb the ladder..pun intended Going by what you're saying there's still a difference between North and South in this industry. City and Guilds are still very much accepted within the construction industry down here. Also There's plenty of British natives working on sites around here. So much so there's a Scottish guy on here who messaged me saying he's working local for 6 months. He's not the first northerner, Scot or Irishman to travel south to work on our sites. | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"Busy at the moment but what I’ve noticed as a joinery foreman for the company I work for is we are struggling for joiners with the correct qualifications only seem to have a level 2 and as for bricklayers we can’t get seem to be a shortage of them up our way I'm qualified in all levels of carpentry including level 3 site carpentry. I also have my level 5 HND in construction management. Plenty of us but unfortunately sexism within the construction industry is still rife. That attitude isn't going to help the industry. Shame I've experienced it and by senior managers no less. a lot of the blue chip construction companies I’ve worked for the Laings Kiers bowmer Kirkland has plenty of female site managers maybe the smaller companies still have a thing against women on sites but same can be said about a lot of industries Nope. This was from my time with Morgan Sindall and Wilmott Dixon. I've never worked for any small construction company. How many women do you see actually running entire projects as the main CM? Down here I've seen zero. I don't mean a female QS or BS. it could be that the company’s you have been at perhaps the men above had more experience it’s not all about what qualifications you have experience counts for a lot my experience with a lot of university graduates who end up running sites are they have the knowledge but sometimes lack the practical as they have no trade background now I know you are a time served joiner which should help you but perhaps you correct in you opinion on sexism but we know it should not happen in present times Sorry but how patronizing of you! I have enough experience thanks! I had enough experience to pass the first stage interview process with a large company. I was clearly told by that site manager he wanted me working for them and i would be on his team if i passed the next two interview stages. The next stage that guy said no to the job I went for. Tried offering me a lesser job. More office based job. Lol no thanks. Funny how I had enough experience and qualifications for the actual person I'd be working alongside, but not this other more senior chap! Well I've got my foot in the door and worked hard for it and not just sat at a desk! Shame some of males in the industry don't like seeing women climb the ladder..pun intended Going by what you're saying there's still a difference between North and South in this industry. City and Guilds are still very much accepted within the construction industry down here. Also There's plenty of British natives working on sites around here. So much so there's a Scottish guy on here who messaged me saying he's working local for 6 months. He's not the first northerner, Scot or Irishman to travel south to work on our sites. " i wasn’t patronising you it’s just my opinion of what I’ve seen with my own eyes and I stand by my comments on university graduates with no trade background if I was interviewing for a senior role and it came down to let’s say a female who hadn’t had any practical experience but was equally as qualified as the male who had 20 years as a joiner then I’m afraid it would be him but if it was the other way round the female had the practical experience and he didn’t then she would get my vote simple as that in my opinion having the practical experience is better than not having it if that’s patronising then I’m sorry | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"Busy at the moment but what I’ve noticed as a joinery foreman for the company I work for is we are struggling for joiners with the correct qualifications only seem to have a level 2 and as for bricklayers we can’t get seem to be a shortage of them up our way I'm qualified in all levels of carpentry including level 3 site carpentry. I also have my level 5 HND in construction management. Plenty of us but unfortunately sexism within the construction industry is still rife. That attitude isn't going to help the industry. Shame I've experienced it and by senior managers no less. a lot of the blue chip construction companies I’ve worked for the Laings Kiers bowmer Kirkland has plenty of female site managers maybe the smaller companies still have a thing against women on sites but same can be said about a lot of industries Nope. This was from my time with Morgan Sindall and Wilmott Dixon. I've never worked for any small construction company. How many women do you see actually running entire projects as the main CM? Down here I've seen zero. I don't mean a female QS or BS. it could be that the company’s you have been at perhaps the men above had more experience it’s not all about what qualifications you have experience counts for a lot my experience with a lot of university graduates who end up running sites are they have the knowledge but sometimes lack the practical as they have no trade background now I know you are a time served joiner which should help you but perhaps you correct in you opinion on sexism but we know it should not happen in present times Sorry but how patronizing of you! I have enough experience thanks! I had enough experience to pass the first stage interview process with a large company. I was clearly told by that site manager he wanted me working for them and i would be on his team if i passed the next two interview stages. The next stage that guy said no to the job I went for. Tried offering me a lesser job. More office based job. Lol no thanks. Funny how I had enough experience and qualifications for the actual person I'd be working alongside, but not this other more senior chap! Well I've got my foot in the door and worked hard for it and not just sat at a desk! Shame some of males in the industry don't like seeing women climb the ladder..pun intended Going by what you're saying there's still a difference between North and South in this industry. City and Guilds are still very much accepted within the construction industry down here. Also There's plenty of British natives working on sites around here. So much so there's a Scottish guy on here who messaged me saying he's working local for 6 months. He's not the first northerner, Scot or Irishman to travel south to work on our sites. i wasn’t patronising you it’s just my opinion of what I’ve seen with my own eyes and I stand by my comments on university graduates with no trade background if I was interviewing for a senior role and it came down to let’s say a female who hadn’t had any practical experience but was equally as qualified as the male who had 20 years as a joiner then I’m afraid it would be him but if it was the other way round the female had the practical experience and he didn’t then she would get my vote simple as that in my opinion having the practical experience is better than not having it if that’s patronising then I’m sorry " You did patronize me. Experienced it enough to know when it done blatantly and slyly. Sorry, I'm not going to argue more about it. So let's leave it at that. You also assumed I didn't have enough practical experience. You could of just asked. Sounds like you could do with working more around women. Or maybe not as some of said they receive enough grief from their woman at home! You know I even had a chippie say to me he couldn't take me on because his wife wouldn't like it! Lol. You may be really open-minded towards women on site (and all the site chippie lads I've worked with were lovely towards me), I'm afraid the senior managers around age 50+ aren't so open-minded. One such manager totally blanked me during a site meeting. I prefer working in a suit then my cargo trousers and polo shirt . Attitudes within our industry has to change. | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"Busy at the moment but what I’ve noticed as a joinery foreman for the company I work for is we are struggling for joiners with the correct qualifications only seem to have a level 2 and as for bricklayers we can’t get seem to be a shortage of them up our way I'm qualified in all levels of carpentry including level 3 site carpentry. I also have my level 5 HND in construction management. Plenty of us but unfortunately sexism within the construction industry is still rife. That attitude isn't going to help the industry. Shame I've experienced it and by senior managers no less. a lot of the blue chip construction companies I’ve worked for the Laings Kiers bowmer Kirkland has plenty of female site managers maybe the smaller companies still have a thing against women on sites but same can be said about a lot of industries Nope. This was from my time with Morgan Sindall and Wilmott Dixon. I've never worked for any small construction company. How many women do you see actually running entire projects as the main CM? Down here I've seen zero. I don't mean a female QS or BS. it could be that the company’s you have been at perhaps the men above had more experience it’s not all about what qualifications you have experience counts for a lot my experience with a lot of university graduates who end up running sites are they have the knowledge but sometimes lack the practical as they have no trade background now I know you are a time served joiner which should help you but perhaps you correct in you opinion on sexism but we know it should not happen in present times Sorry but how patronizing of you! I have enough experience thanks! I had enough experience to pass the first stage interview process with a large company. I was clearly told by that site manager he wanted me working for them and i would be on his team if i passed the next two interview stages. The next stage that guy said no to the job I went for. Tried offering me a lesser job. More office based job. Lol no thanks. Funny how I had enough experience and qualifications for the actual person I'd be working alongside, but not this other more senior chap! Well I've got my foot in the door and worked hard for it and not just sat at a desk! Shame some of males in the industry don't like seeing women climb the ladder..pun intended Going by what you're saying there's still a difference between North and South in this industry. City and Guilds are still very much accepted within the construction industry down here. Also There's plenty of British natives working on sites around here. So much so there's a Scottish guy on here who messaged me saying he's working local for 6 months. He's not the first northerner, Scot or Irishman to travel south to work on our sites. i wasn’t patronising you it’s just my opinion of what I’ve seen with my own eyes and I stand by my comments on university graduates with no trade background if I was interviewing for a senior role and it came down to let’s say a female who hadn’t had any practical experience but was equally as qualified as the male who had 20 years as a joiner then I’m afraid it would be him but if it was the other way round the female had the practical experience and he didn’t then she would get my vote simple as that in my opinion having the practical experience is better than not having it if that’s patronising then I’m sorry You did patronize me. Experienced it enough to know when it done blatantly and slyly. Sorry, I'm not going to argue more about it. So let's leave it at that. You also assumed I didn't have enough practical experience. You could of just asked. Sounds like you could do with working more around women. Or maybe not as some of said they receive enough grief from their woman at home! You know I even had a chippie say to me he couldn't take me on because his wife wouldn't like it! Lol. You may be really open-minded towards women on site (and all the site chippie lads I've worked with were lovely towards me), I'm afraid the senior managers around age 50+ aren't so open-minded. One such manager totally blanked me during a site meeting. I prefer working in a suit then my cargo trousers and polo shirt . Attitudes within our industry has to change." no I clearly stated that your joinery experience should of been an advantage but sometimes if your face don’t fit male or female or your not mate of a mate then your not going to get the job we all know company’s have to advertise the job and sometimes it’s already been appointed but I wasn’t patronising you | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
"It's busy again now can't believe how much it changes in the space of a week " It's always quiet in the building trade just after the Christmas break (has been for the 20 odd years I've been in it anyway). Having said that though I've only had 3 weekdays off with no work since Christmas. New housing estate being built in Cannock and a new multi store shopping centre being built in Cannock too. I don't work building sites though, more domestic housing and council housing work with some private jobs in the mix, ticking over pretty well at the moment. | |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
| |||
Reply privately | Reply in forum | Reply +quote |
Post new Message to Thread |
back to top |