Workers in the maritime industry were greatly affected by COVID-19, from restricted port visits to delayed crew changes and cruise-ship levels of virus transmission. As wages and pensions were generous compared to other industries, retirement and career realignment were viable options for a large part of the American seafaring workforce. What does the employment field look like today?
Deck Officers
Compared to the number of jobs available at the time, there
was an oversupply of deck officers in Western countries this past decade. The
issue was more acute at the third mate level, who are typically recent
graduates. While maritime academies graduate fewer mates than engineers, deck
officers have higher retention in the afloat maritime industry than engineers.
The wave of COVID-era retirements unstuck the promotion pipeline in the deck
department, and allows newer officers to take positions at their highest
qualification.
Engineering Officers
In 2014, international regulatory changes came into effect, requiring
newly-minted ship’s officers to hold at least a community college level of
education. The maritime industry had an unusually linear path for promotion,
from entry level to department head. Now, the employment pool of ship’s
officers has been detached from the skilled labor pool, which used to send its
members into the officer ranks with regularity.
On the demand side, more maritime-trained engineers are
working ashore are than staying aboard ship. Industrial and facilities engineering
disciplines had become neglected areas of concentration at most flagship universities.
These hands-on programs were generally forgotten as engineering programs became
more scientifically-oriented towards high-tech research and development. Someone
needs to fill these jobs, and the career-oriented nature of maritime academies
became the first stop for power plant, sophisticated equipment technician, and
prototype employers.
Skilled Level
The most perplexing labor shortage at sea is the mid-level positions,
the able seamen and enginemen. Perhaps the average age for this cohort had
increased to 55; younger people were doing short stints at the entry level, or
going for a college degree and an officer’s berth. The top unions for these
workers did not suffer a pension collapse, as the American Maritime Officers’
union did in 2009, so these mid-levels were able to retire on schedule.
The Navy and Coast Guard had been steady suppliers of skilled mariners, but shipping companies must compete with other veteran-friendly employers such as defense contractors and large-capital corporations.
It seems that these positions would be great targets for
re-skilling workers displaced by deindustrialization. Someone has to pay for the
training, though, whether it is state employment agencies, the GI Bill,
employers, or largely out-of-pocket. Entry-level personnel will not commit to
the expense until they are sure that the maritime field is right for them.
Employers expected recent maritime academy graduates to
backfill these positions. During lean times, as recently as 2020, graduates of
limited economic means went “before the mast” to begin earning family-sized
paychecks, instead of waiting for an officer’s assignment. But when officer
positions are readily available, it takes a lot of gaslighting (“you’re not
ready…”, etc.) to get new graduates to take unlicensed positions- not an
efficient or ethical strategy.
Entry Level
Traditionally, the gatekeepers of entry-level, deep-sea maritime
positions, such as union training schools and federal government agencies with
ships, could offer entry-level positions to those with previous work
experience. These prospective mariners would be expected to bring something to
the table, professionally. Preferably, they had work experience on inland and
fishing boats. If not, they could be a great cook, or have nighttime watch standing
experience from the Army. But at this moment, the gatekeepers are recruiting at
high school job fairs. Salaried employment, or fixed contracts, in the maritime
industry, certainly beats the variable pay and unpredictable schedules of other
employers, such as foodservice. The potential for upward mobility at sea is
unparallel as well.
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