Here's a story you've heard a thousand times: the trades are wide open. Blue-collar jobs are supposedly begging for help, practically throwing toolbelts and pensions at anyone willing to show up. It's the standard advice anytime someone complains about their career prospects. Can't find work? Learn a trade! They're desperate!
Except one jobseeker tried exactly that, and what he found was something quite different.
The Reality Behind the Rhetoric
In a Reddit post titled "No, the trades are not hiring," a frustrated electrician spelled out his experience in blunt terms: "I am so sick and tired of this worn out idea that blue collar jobs are looking for apprentices to come work for them." After applying to multiple companies and hitting wall after wall, he described an industry that looked less like opportunity and more like an exclusive club filled with nepotism and insider gossip.
This wasn't someone fresh off the street with zero experience. He had four years working for an electrical company, detailed project work on his applications, and solid references. You'd think that would count for something. It didn't.
He even returned to his old employer, the place where he'd spent four years building experience and relationships. Their response? "Apply online and go talk to HR." No hiring manager available, no conversation based on past work, no recognition at all. A week and a half later, he received the standard rejection: "Thank you for applying. After careful consideration…"
Red Flags and Dead Ends
The few offers he did receive weren't exactly encouraging. One company he described as a parade of red flags, where someone apparently told him: "Only meth heads and divorced alcoholics work here" and "F*** OSHA." Everywhere else just said no.
And he wasn't selective about where he applied. He went to every electrician company in town. Many required a two-year technical or trade school degree just to offer $15 an hour starting pay. Think about that for a second: two years of school and tuition costs for what amounts to barely above minimum wage in many states.
What about unions, though? Someone inevitably chimes in with "Bro, just go Union!" But as he pointed out, unions are backed up for ages. The apprenticeship pipeline that's supposed to be this golden ticket? It's clogged.
Not Just the Trades
In the comments, people from completely different fields shared eerily similar stories. One user noted the pattern: "Every market and everyone and their mom will have a 'just learn to code' variant." Every industry gets hyped as the magic solution that never quite delivers.
Someone else remembered when "just go to law school" was the universal advice. Healthcare workers shared their own instability stories, with one saying they nearly faced furlough because Medicare reimbursements dried up. IT professionals described hitting barriers despite supposedly in-demand tech skills. A pharmacist mentioned multiple layoffs in a short period. Even healthcare and administration roles proved difficult to secure, with employers sometimes rejecting candidates simply for living too far from the workplace.
What the Data Actually Shows
The Bureau of Labor Statistics counted roughly 7.7 million job openings in October. That's a high number on paper, but those openings aren't evenly distributed across industries, and they're not all meaningfully accessible without specialized credentials or connections. Unemployment has hovered near historic lows but ticked up slightly, showing signs of softness beneath the surface. Broad averages mask pockets of intense competition and stagnant hiring processes for many roles.
For trades specifically, the story gets complicated. Sectors like HVAC, electrical, and plumbing are projected to grow over the next decade as infrastructure needs expand and experienced workers retire. But projected growth doesn't automatically translate into accessible entry points right now. Employers list openings that sit unfilled for months, citing everything from credential requirements to slow hiring pipelines. Across the economy, job openings still outnumber actual hires, which suggests getting your foot in the door remains harder than the headlines imply.
The Gatekeeping Problem
Here's what stands out about this electrician's experience: knowing how to wire a panel and having four years of hands-on experience didn't guarantee even a conversation. The traditional narrative about the trades being a stable path with apprenticeships and union routes ran headfirst into a reality of paperwork, screening systems, and gatekeeping.
Companies that supposedly need workers still prefer filtering applications through HR departments and credential checklists over actually talking to candidates and mentoring new talent. The irony is thick. An industry that built its reputation on learning by doing now demands degrees for entry-level positions.
In a job market that feels increasingly unpredictable and uneven, what looks like opportunity on the surface can turn out to be another maze of forms, filters, and dead ends. Even in fields that everyone swears are desperate for workers, getting hired often requires navigating barriers that have nothing to do with your ability to actually do the job.
Maybe the trades really do need more workers. But if the pipeline to get into those jobs is broken, backlogged, and wrapped in bureaucracy, all the demand in the world won't help the people trying to break in.




