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News / Clark County News

Young Clark County woman is plumb inspiring

Third-generation plumber wants women to consider the trades

By Susan Parrish, Columbian Education Reporter
Published: July 7, 2015, 12:00am
5 Photos
Smokey Fritz, apprentice plumber, grips a plastic pipe fitting in her mouth as she climbs a ladder to install plumbing in a new home under construction in Camas. Fritz likely is the only woman plumber in Clark County.
Smokey Fritz, apprentice plumber, grips a plastic pipe fitting in her mouth as she climbs a ladder to install plumbing in a new home under construction in Camas. Fritz likely is the only woman plumber in Clark County. "I wish more women would try the trades," she said. Photo Gallery

Number of plumbers, pipefitters: 400.

2014 median wage: $24.68 per hour, or $51,341 annually.

Female plumbers: No statistics.

Source: Washington Employment Security Department

Washington Women in Trades

• Headquarters: Seattle

• Contact: 206-903-9508 or cpollyc@comcast.net

• On the Web: www.wawomenintrades.com

Oregon Tradeswomen Inc.

• Headquarters: Portland

• Contact: 503-335-8200

• On the Web: www.tradeswomen.net

Oregon Tradeswomen Inc. Trades and Apprenticeship Career Class

What: Seven-week pre-apprenticeship training class that helps women prepare for a high-skill, high-wage career in construction. To enroll or learn more, register for information session.

When: 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from July 21 through Sept. 3 or from Oct. 20 through Dec. 10.

Cost: Free.

Information: 503-335-8200, www.tradeswomen.net

Oregon Tradeswomen’s Building Girls Summer Construction Camp

What: Hands-on day camp. Girls build a playhouse, make stepping stones, weld table bases, tile tabletops, solder pipe and more.

When: High school girls: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Aug. 3 to 7. Middle school girls: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Aug. 10 to 14.

Number of plumbers, pipefitters: 400.

2014 median wage: $24.68 per hour, or $51,341 annually.

Female plumbers: No statistics.

Source: Washington Employment Security Department

Where: University of Portland, 5000 N. Willamette Blvd., Portland.

Cost: $300; scholarships available.

Information: 503-335-8200, www.tradeswomen.net/building-girls

High school

Clark County Skills Center

• Two-year construction technology program.

• On the Web: www.ccskillscenter.com/construction.html

Evergreen and Mountain View high schools

• Geometry in construction class builds home for Habitat for Humanity.

Fort Vancouver High School

• Welding-fabrication technology program.

• On the Web: http://vansd.org/choices/welding

Post-high school

Clark College

• Construction technology, welding technology, more.

• On the Web: www.clark.edu

Construction Industry Training Council of Washington

• Vancouver programs: Carpentry, electrical, heavy equipment operator, HVAC, painting, plumbing, sheet metal.

• Information: 360-258-1684, www.citcwa.com

• The first woman master plumber in the U.S. was Lillian Baumbach Jacobs.

• In 1951, she received a master’s license in plumbing at age 21.

• She learned the plumbing trade by working alongside her plumber father.

• On the Web: www.baumbach.com/history/LillianObituaries.htm and http://wapo.st/1gkk6S7

CAMAS — Teeth gripping a plastic pipe fitting, Smokey Fritz climbed a ladder inside a house under construction. Fritz joined two lengths of flexible plastic pipe with the fitting, pulled a tool from her back pocket and crimped the pipe.

“If you don’t crimp a fitting right, it can leak,” said the 23-year-old apprentice plumber. “Water, out of everything else in the house, is the most damaging.”

Then she yelled to a co-worker: “Washer box is done!”

Fritz is likely the only female working as a plumber in Clark County. Nationwide, about 9,000 women plumbers, pipelayers, pipefitters and steamfitters comprise only 1.6 percent of the 564,000 workers in the field, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.

Although an American woman became a certified master plumber in 1951 — 64 years ago— the fields of plumbing and the other trades are still dominated by men.

The percentage of women in nontraditional construction work is about 2 to 3 percent, said Cynthia Polly Payne, spokeswoman for Washington Women in Trades, based in Seattle. In some government operations, such as Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, the percentage of women in trades is much higher, about 16 percent.

Most high school girls who attend the trade association’s job fairs “have no idea these opportunities are available to them,” Payne said. “And we’ve been here for 36 years. I don’t think young people realize the struggle that it’s been. Three steps ahead and two steps back is a real thing.”

Local contractor Jack Harroun compared the male dominance of the trades to the female dominance in nursing. That scenario gradually has changed. Although men still make up only 9.6 percent of all nurses, the number of male nurses has more than tripled since the 1970s, according to the United States Census Bureau. Their numbers are projected to continue to rise. Harroun said he’d like to see comparable changes in the trades.

“I’m hopeful that women will start looking at the trades as a great opportunity,” said Harroun, the president of the Building Industry Association of Clark County. “It doesn’t take brute strength. From running an excavator to doing plumbing, so much of what you do is technical. I’m hoping we’re past the point of the mental barriers that certain things are male jobs and certain things are female jobs.”

Washington Women in Trades

&#8226; Headquarters: Seattle

&#8226; Contact: 206-903-9508 or <a href="mailto:cpollyc@comcast.net">cpollyc@comcast.net</a>

&#8226; On the Web: <a href="http://www.wawomenintrades.com">www.wawomenintrades.com</a>

Oregon Tradeswomen Inc.

&#8226; Headquarters: Portland

&#8226; Contact: 503-335-8200

&#8226; On the Web: <a href="http://www.tradeswomen.net">www.tradeswomen.net</a>

Trades offer family-wage jobs and “are a great avenue for success,” Harroun said. “You always need a plumber. You always need an electrician. If there’s any way we can highlight those opportunities for women, we should. We desperately need those technical skill sets.”

Harroun has a 3-year-old daughter.

“In my mind, she’ll be helping me run my company some day.”

Smokey’s story

The story of Smokey Fritz mirrors that of Lillian Baumbach, the first American master plumber who learned the business from her father more than 60 years ago.

Fritz is learning the business under the guidance of her father, Ted Fritz, and grandfather, Cliff Fritz, at Three Brothers Plumbing. Cliff Fritz began working as a plumber in 1968. Ted started plumbing in 1983 and Smokey in 2013.

“I told him not to do it,” Cliff Fritz said about his son.

“I told her not to do it,” Ted Fritz said about his daughter.

He has seen women working in construction in Clark County: electricians, roofers, concrete workers. Although there are about 400 plumbers and pipefitters in Clark County, to his knowledge, his daughter is the only woman plumber working in construction. There are no local statistics about women plumbers.

Oregon Tradeswomen Inc. Trades and Apprenticeship Career Class

What: Seven-week pre-apprenticeship training class that helps women prepare for a high-skill, high-wage career in construction. To enroll or learn more, register for information session.

When: 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from July 21 through Sept. 3 or from Oct. 20 through Dec. 10.

Cost: Free.

Information: 503-335-8200, <a href="http://www.tradeswomen.net">www.tradeswomen.net</a>

Oregon Tradeswomen's Building Girls Summer Construction Camp

What: Hands-on day camp. Girls build a playhouse, make stepping stones, weld table bases, tile tabletops, solder pipe and more.

When: High school girls: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Aug. 3 to 7. Middle school girls: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Aug. 10 to 14.

Where: University of Portland, 5000 N. Willamette Blvd., Portland.

Cost: $300; scholarships available.

Information: 503-335-8200, <a href="http://www.tradeswomen.net/building-girls">www.tradeswomen.net/building-girls</a>

Smokey Fritz was named after her great-grandfather, Dorman E. “Smoky” Housden, who was a cowboy, musician, truck driver, logger, orchardist and jack-of-all-trades. But he was not a plumber.

“I’ve always been a tomboy. Playing in the dirt. Riding quads,” Smokey Fritz said as she stood on a ladder to install plumbing in a new house.

After graduating from Battle Ground High School, she enrolled at Clark College to become an American Sign Language interpreter. But the program is so popular that after a year of taking general college classes, she still couldn’t get into a sign language class. Frustrated, she stepped back from school.

“College is for some people,” she said. “But not for me.”

After working for a year in retail, she realized she didn’t enjoy customer service.

“I jokingly asked my dad if he would train me to be a plumber. At first, he was highly against it. He told me it’s a man’s world.”

Her dad worried she would be harassed by male co-workers, she recalled.

But her grandmother stood up for her.

“She looked Dad dead in the face and said, ‘What if you had a son? Would you let him plumb with you?’ ” Smokey Fritz recalled with a grin.

She said Ted Fritz worried that the hard, physical work would worsen his daughter’s back problems. Determined to forge ahead, she got an OK from her chiropractor.

June 3 was her two-year anniversary in the family business.

“When she started, it spread like wildfire that there was a girl plumber,” Ted Fritz said about his daughter.

“So everybody had to come stare at her and they didn’t get the job done,” her grandfather Cliff Fritz said, laughing. “When I first started out, there were no women plumbers. Back then, it was much more strenuous. Today, it’s all plastic (pipes). They’re lighter, easier to work with.”

During her first week on the job, Smokey Fritz experienced her worst plumbing disaster yet. She was helping her dad check fill valves on a finished house, but she was unsure of which valve to open. She chose poorly.

“I unscrewed a valve and all the water from the house poured onto me. I was soaked,” Fritz recalled. “Dad looked at me and said, ‘I didn’t mean that one.’ “

Smokey Fritz has learned a thing or two about plumbing since then.

“She’s one I can send out alone on a job and I don’t worry about,” said her dad.

High school

Clark County Skills Center

&#8226; Two-year construction technology program.

&#8226; On the Web: <a href="http://www.ccskillscenter.com/construction.html">www.ccskillscenter.com/construction.html</a>

Evergreen and Mountain View high schools

&#8226; Geometry in construction class builds home for Habitat for Humanity.

Fort Vancouver High School

&#8226; Welding-fabrication technology program.

&#8226; On the Web: <a href="http://vansd.org/choices/welding">http://vansd.org/choices/welding</a>

Post-high school

Clark College

&#8226; Construction technology, welding technology, more.

&#8226; On the Web: <a href="http://www.clark.edu">www.clark.edu</a>

Construction Industry Training Council of Washington

&#8226; Vancouver programs: Carpentry, electrical, heavy equipment operator, HVAC, painting, plumbing, sheet metal.

&#8226; Information: 360-258-1684, <a href="http://www.citcwa.com">www.citcwa.com</a>

“She’s more meticulous than the guys,” said her grandpa.

$51,341 per year

In Washington, apprentice plumbers are trained on the job by a journeyman plumber. Next, Smokey Fritz will apply for her residential plumber’s card. Then, after at least 8,000 work hours and four years on the job, she can apply for a journeyman plumber’s card.

Currently, she is making $13.50 an hour at the non-union shop. About every six months, she gets a pay increase. In another year, she’ll get her residential plumber’s card and then her pay could increase to $18.50 an hour. From there, her hourly rate will continue to increase.

The local median wage for a plumber was $24.68 per hour or $51,341 annually in 2014, according to Scott Bailey, regional labor economist for the state Employment Security Department.

The Great Recession brought new home construction to a screeching halt in 2008.

“It all fell apart. People moved away, changed careers. My brother’s one of them,” said Ted Fritz, the sole remaining brother at Three Brothers Plumbing.

One brother returned to school and now is a radiologist. The other brother now installs heating and cooling systems.

But as the economy rebounded, there was more work than Ted Fritz could handle. Cliff Fritz came out of retirement to work with his son, and now with his granddaughter.

Smokey Fritz is in the family business for the long haul.

“I plan this to be my career until I physically cannot do this anymore,” she said. “But it is hard. It’s super physical. It puts a strain on your hands. Your arms. You deal with heat or cold. It doesn’t matter if it’s 100 degrees or 30 degrees outside. You have to work. If you put your mind to something, you can do anything.”

Today new housing construction in Clark County is so brisk that Three Brothers Plumbing is working on two houses per day in Camas, Vancouver, Ridgefield and Battle Ground. It’s challenging finding people who want to work with their hands, Ted Fritz said.

&#8226; The first woman master plumber in the U.S. was Lillian Baumbach Jacobs.

&#8226; In 1951, she received a master's license in plumbing at age 21.

&#8226; She learned the plumbing trade by working alongside her plumber father.

&#8226; On the Web: <a href="http://www.baumbach.com/history/LillianObituaries.htm">www.baumbach.com/history/LillianObituaries.htm</a> and <a href="http://wapo.st/1gkk6S7">http://wapo.st/1gkk6S7</a>

“We have to rebuild the industry somehow,” he said. “With the lure of jobs working with computers and technology, it’s a struggle to find enough young people who want to learn a trade. No one wants to work with their hands anymore.”

Spreading the word

One of the biggest obstacles in recruiting more women into plumbing and other trades is simply spreading the word.

“The trade careers are hidden for women,” said Mary Ann Naylor, spokeswoman for Oregon Tradeswomen. “Young women don’t see adult women doing these careers, whether in pop culture or on job sites.”

To that end, the Portland-based trade association organizes a Women in Trades Career Fair every spring and invites young women to learn about trade careers. This year, a record 687 middle school girls, 575 high school girls and 629 adult women attended.

“Young women are blown away by the (paid) apprenticeship opportunities,” Naylor said. “It’s a much more important conversation than 10 to 12 years ago because college has become so expensive.”

In both Washington and Oregon, Naylor has noticed renewed interest in career and technical education. Her organization offers girls-only construction camps and classes to inspire young women to consider a trade career.

Naylor noted the high rate of job satisfaction in the trades.

“You can’t take your work home with you. There’s pride in being part of a team that made a building or a bridge,” she said.

Standing on a ladder and installing plumbing, Smokey Fritz said she would like to see more women willing to work with their hands.

“I wish more women would try the trades,” Smokey Fritz said. “I hope women will be inspired to try.”

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