Partner in Craft Spotlight: Columbia Contracting Corp.

September 21, 2023

Categories

Carpentry, Donors

Our Partners in Craft program recognizes corporations and small businesses across industries that support the School.

We spoke with Kate Durrane, Principal of , about why they support NBSS, trends they notice in their field, their experience working with NBSS grads, and more.

How did you discover the School?

Kate and her dad Arthur standing outside one of their project exteriors
Kate and her dad Arthur

I鈥檝e never not known about the School. My father has been an Advisor to the Carpentry program since the 1990s, for as long as I can remember. And I grew up in Charlestown, which is right across the bridge. When I started becoming more involved in recruitment for the company, I got more involved with the School myself.

Why do you support NBSS?

The type of instruction in the craft that you provide is unparalleled and much needed in today’s world. There鈥檚 not enough trade schools. And 兔女郎直播 Bennet is not just a vocational high school鈥攚e don鈥檛 have enough of those either鈥攂ut NBSS is a post-grad vocational school, so the students have made a choice and聽are taking it seriously. It鈥檚 critical for people who want to learn the trade that they are being taught to do it the right way and to appreciate the craftsmanship that is involved.

It is so important that we support 兔女郎直播 Bennet Street School and other programs like yours. We need to encourage people to enter the trades. We can鈥檛 build these beautiful houses without people who know how to build them, and people aren鈥檛 going to know how to build them if we don鈥檛 encourage people to go into the trades.

What has been your experience working with NBSS grads?

Interior of a home, one of Columbia Contracting's projects

We have employed dozens of NBSS graduates over the years and continue to do so. Currently the majority of my employees are NBSS grads and have been for as long as I鈥檝e been doing this.

Your graduates come to us with a level of skill and knowledge already; they鈥檙e not completely green. Again, the School is a filter for people who do take it seriously, and who care about craftsmanship. It鈥檚 the attention to detail that comes with caring about what you do. And people who go to 兔女郎直播 Bennet Street already care. They鈥檝e made the commitment to invest in their own education in the craft and in the trades.

What is an interesting trend in your field you鈥檝e noticed recently?

The skills gap. Many carpenters are retiring and there aren鈥檛 enough carpenters to replace them. For many years, high school students were not encouraged to join the trades and we are feeling the effects of that now. There are fewer skilled craftsmen in the field than ever, especially with experience.聽

As people retire, there isn鈥檛 a next generation. 20-30 years ago it聽was instilled in us that we should go to college. Parents wanted their children to do better than them, and to them, that was not working with their hands. The dream was not to not have to get dirty, to not have to sweat. And unfortunately that was instilled so deeply鈥攅specially in these parts where education is so important in the greater Boston area鈥攖hat nobody went into the trades. So there鈥檚 a huge gap of people in their 30s and 40s who are not working in the trades.聽

“It is so important that we support 兔女郎直播 Bennet Street School and other programs like yours. We can鈥檛 build these beautiful houses without people who know how to build them, and people aren鈥檛 going to know how to build them if we don鈥檛 encourage people to go into the trades.”

Exterior of a home, one of Columbia Contracting's projects

Complete the sentence: If I wasn鈥檛 in the building industry, I鈥檇 be a _.

I would still be a social worker most likely. I鈥檓 a licensed social worker in Massachusetts, I have my Masters in social work, I鈥檓 independently licensed, and I maintain that license. That鈥檚 what I did before I did this full-time, so I鈥檇 probably still be doing that, managing a social work department in a health care system. Though the skills that made me good as a social worker are still the same skills that I have now.聽

What鈥檚 the best thing that you鈥檝e read recently?

Could be a whole book, an article, or any other bit of whimsy, information, or inspiration.

I just received a copy of my friend and colleague鈥檚 book, “,” by Alison Iantosca, owner of F.H. Perry. I strongly recommend it! She鈥檚 so inspirational to me.聽She鈥檚 something of a mentor to me and a good friend.

What motivates you? And/or what do you love about your work/field?

I love that we create something. That we start with a space and create something entirely new. I also love the sense of completion, that we walk away when it’s finished and beautiful or functional.

Interior of a home, one of Columbia Contracting's projects

It鈥檚 very concrete for me. I love the process, but I really love the end result: I love houses. I understood from a very young age the process of building and that a space of nothing can become something really incredible, and how much work goes into that.聽

At the end of the day, we鈥檙e producing a beautiful product that we鈥檙e handing over to someone, that they get to use and they get to love. Someone else is walking into their house and saying, 鈥淥h my god, I love your house!鈥 And I get to say, 鈥淲e did that!鈥 I also think it鈥檚 kind of universal: everyone loves beautiful houses.

What life or career advice can you share with our students and graduates?

Be responsible, do you what you say you will do and be where you say you will be.聽

Over communicate, ask questions, confirm everything. “Measure twice, cut once” isn’t just for wood, it鈥檚 for everything. Always verify. There is no better employee than a reliable question asker.

When you鈥檙e first starting out, nobody expects you to know everything and nobody鈥檚 going to be mad that you don鈥檛 know everything. They鈥檒l be mad if you pretend you know something and it turns out you don鈥檛, nobody knows everything. Ask questions.