Capitalizing on the home market rebound, Zach Weinkauf is busy building decks, remodeling kitchens and framing garages. He's just not on anybody's payroll.
In July, the 29-year-old left a job with a remodeling firm in Minneapolis to work as an independent contractor, and he does most of his work with other independent contractors.
"If a construction company now came to me and said, 'Hey, I can offer you $30 an hour,' I would just turn it down, because there's more to be made," Weinkauf said.
The home market is rebounding as construction in the Twin Cities through July is up 24 percent in 2013 compared with a year earlier. But the number of jobs at construction companies has remained sluggish, at best. Minnesota builders have added an anemic average of 200 workers per month this year, and the total number of construction jobs remains 35,800 short of the peak in 2006.
Fresh off the recession, firms are cautious about hiring, and former construction workers have migrated to oil fields in North Dakota or agricultural jobs. Companies say they can't find the skilled workers they need, and qualified employees are retiring. Meanwhile, other workers say they prefer working for themselves.
"We have a lot more independent contractors and a lot fewer people who are actually employees of a larger firm," said Tom Stinson, an economist at the University of Minnesota. "The trend was already starting before the recession, but I think in the construction industry, that transition was accelerated by the big, big cutback in housing."
Alex Shikhlinski, who owns Delta Construction in St. Paul, said using independent contractors has become a necessity for some firms.
"We have only two employees in the whole company, and we are a multimillion-dollar company, and we have a lot of independent contractors who work with us," Shikhlinski said. "Half of our subcontractors are the same thing."