BLUE COLLAR: A Homeowner Before 25

By Aleksandr @ Adobe Stock

You know that Your Survival Guy is a big fan of Mike Rowe. Almost singlehandedly, Rowe has shined a light on how important and fulfilling blue collar work is in America. Now, with many of America’s Baby Boomer technicians and tradesmen retiring out of the workforce, and college tuition bills not producing a good return on investment, many in America’s newest generation of high school graduates are opting for vocational education, rather than colleges. Cole Kelley explains his decision to eschew four year college to instead study HVAC systems. Now, rather than shouldering crushing student loan debt, Kelley is looking to own a home before the age of 25. He writes in The Wall Street Journal:

When I was in elementary and middle school, my teachers encouraged students to become doctors, lawyers, professors, architects—all the academic-intensive professions. They sold me on studying engineering. I’ve always liked building things with my hands, not sitting in an office developing plans or considering theories. So I decided to become an HVAC technician. I do what I love—and I’ve found that I can make a more than livable wage.

I’m not alone in this turn away from university schooling. There’s increasing skepticism about the financial return of a college education, and enrollment in vocational-focused community colleges rose 16% last year.

This month, after I picked up my high-school diploma, I walked directly into a union apprenticeship that promises five years of tailored instruction. I’m earning nearly four times the federal minimum wage, and the union is even paying for me to earn professional licenses that demonstrate advanced skills.

Today’s work differs from old blue-collar jobs. On job sites these days the laptop is the most important tool, as technology has transformed the trade disciplines. Artificial intelligence might be changing everything from electrical circuitry to electric-car repair, but a highly trained person still needs to crawl under the house or the hood to do the work.

On an HVAC job, I balance hands-on labor and intellectual challenges in everything from mapping out installations to problem-solving when something goes wrong. A healthy economy needs people to do these jobs. Massachusetts, my home state, faced a shortage of around 160,000 skilled workers in 2022.

I decided on HVAC in part because I was looking to use my skills in healthcare. Growing up, I spent too much time in hospitals suffering from headaches. I didn’t want to be a doctor—with eight years of education after high school and hundreds of thousands of tuition dollars—but I could see myself on the complex engineering side of hospital work, where heating, ventilation and air conditioning are crucial.

Knowing what I wanted to do, I attended a technical high school, supported by the national SkillsUSA curriculum and competition. From my first minutes on campus, I knew I’d found my place. I finished the freshman curriculum in two weeks and checked off the sophomore assignments before that first January.

In my junior year, I designed my own curriculum, which involved building a chiller and hydronic heating system to manage temperatures in a small facility. During senior year, I spent alternating weeks at a pharmaceutical manufacturer that produced a drug for rare genetic diseases, where I was responsible for maintaining purified water systems, ventilation and compressed gas systems for clean rooms.

As I start my career, I’m considering how I can become a homeowner before I’m 25. My college-bound friends will follow years behind, as they spend large chunks of their paychecks on school debt. When I start house-hunting, I’ll probably look for a fixer-upper. I know people with the skills to make it a showplace.

Action Line: I work with wealthy Americans from all over the country. Sure, there are many doctors and lawyers who excelled at school and do amazing things. But there are also many wealthy Americans who approached their careers differently. From vocational school to the military to the school of hard knocks, these Americans chose a different path and worked just as hard at achieving success. I want to hear about how you achieved success. When you’re ready, I’m here. In the meantime, please click here to subscribe to my free monthly Survive & Thrive letter.