California teenagers are bypassing traditional college paths to enter skilled trades, with many earning over $100,000 annually before age 21. This shift reflects growing concerns about AI’s impact on white-collar jobs and the rising costs of higher education, making blue-collar careers increasingly attractive to Gen Z workers seeking stable, well-paying employment.
The big picture: Recent data reveals a stark employment contrast between college majors, with computer engineering and computer science graduates facing unemployment rates of 7.5% and 6.1% respectively, while construction services majors experience just 0.7% unemployment.
Why this matters: Experts predict AI could eliminate half of all entry-level white-collar jobs within one to five years, driving unemployment to 10-20%, making skilled trades appear as a safer career alternative.
What you should know: Trade apprenticeships and union jobs offer compelling financial incentives without the burden of student debt.
- United Association Local 342, a pipe trades union, offers apprentices five-year paid programs that lead to journeyman wages of $80.50 per hour.
- Electrical Training Alliance graduates in Santa Clara start at $91 per hour with full union benefits.
- These programs have acceptance rates as low as 5-10% due to high demand.
Who’s making the switch: The movement includes both high school graduates and college-educated workers seeking career changes.
- A Resume Builder survey found 37% of Gen Z blue-collar workers hold four-year degrees.
- Over 25% of blue-collar Gen Z workers cited AI job security concerns as a career motivator.
- Ellen Lahey, 24, left her UC Santa Barbara earth science degree path for welding, saying “Everyone needs a welder. The job’s not going to leave anytime soon.”
The AI factor: Microsoft research identified blue-collar jobs like plastering, roofing, and pile driving as least threatened by AI automation, though the landscape is evolving.
- An OpenAI study found that AI could best perform jobs typically held by four-year degree graduates.
- Only 4% of jobs were deemed completely safe from AI replacement, including carpentry and roofing.
- 63% of Gen Z respondents don’t believe college degrees will protect them from AI-related job loss.
What instructors are seeing: Vocational schools report increased enrollment and younger students entering programs directly from high school.
- “I think since ChatGPT really started taking off, that kind of opened people’s eyes,” said Jonathan Cronan, HVAC instructor at San Jose Community College.
- Al Garcia from Local 342 noted: “I do think there’s an uptick in folks coming right out of high school applying to the program.”
The automation reality: Even skilled trades are beginning to incorporate AI and robotics, though human expertise remains crucial.
- Collaborative robots (cobots) can now mimic human welds and use AI to monitor quality in real-time.
- AI tools for electricians can analyze and plan more efficient electric grids.
- Instructors estimate it will be “very hard for robots to do what humans do, at least for another 10 to 15 years.”
Current market dynamics: The AI boom paradoxically benefits trades workers in the short term while potentially threatening long-term job security.
- Robert Chon from Electrical Training Alliance noted: “We’re building tons of AI data centers both in San Jose and in Santa Clara right now.”
- He added the conflicted nature of the work: “We know that in building data centers, we’re developing technology that will eventually replace workers and possibly including ourselves someday.”
California teens are ditching office jobs – and making $100K before they turn 21