The industry is full of management. Big jobs are run by management firms. The big sites are top heavy with managers. H & S is a thriving business. Take away the countless chiefs who sometimes outnumber the indians, and the wages would not have been static for the last ten years
Only now has the...
:) Can not argue with that. On the top floor, no windows, damp, hard hat, glasses, hi viz, gloves (handy when your trying to do intricate work) on top of 3 layers, two pairs of socks etc....site policemen telling you to put your glasses and gloves back on, report to supervisor to get re inducted...
Unless things have changed, of course you can become a bricklayer, you will need to go to college and get qualifications, work on site for poor wages to start, probably mix up and hod it up to the brickies, make tea, get cold in the winter, go home without pay if it rains hard..........