The NAWIC Journal 25th Anniversary Edition

Page 29

CH-CH-CHANGES

— a 30 year look back at the industry by Becky Paroz Director, Queen B Project System Pty Ltd & 2019 Lendlease Crystal Vision Award Winner (QLD)

In 1989 I was in my senior year of schooling. I wasn’t born into a great family life, so I worked during the school holidays to pay for my attendance. I worked on farms pruning vegetation and I worked construction jobs on the weekends when I could be snuck onto the site and no questions would be asked. It wasn’t the done thing back then, females onsite. There were no toilet facilities, no interest and hardly a thought given to it as a possibility. I’d get onsite and help clean up and install concrete joints and reo chairs to get ready for the next day’s early pour. I’d hold heavy things up in place while someone else used the tools and I’d put down drainage socks. I also annoyed the hell out of my local architecture firm enough that they gave me some drafting work once or twice a week. When I was accepted into the University of Southern Queensland’s School of Engineering, I realised I already had exposure to the industry. I was a cadet draftsperson (paid the glorious sum of $3.33 an hour, no penalties, no minimum payment, calculated by the boss to the minute on my timesheet) working in the local council for 75% of the actual wage because I was under 21. I was constantly told I don’t belong, I shouldn’t be there and if I planned to stay, I’d better learn to fit in with the boys. The calendars and the magazines were there, and they weren’t going anywhere. Honestly, it hadn’t even occurred to me to complain about them. I was there to learn, to become an engineer and a leader beyond that, not to worry about the décor. I fell in love with the construction side of the industry. I moved away from design and discovered a talent for QA/QC, processes, technical writing and systemisation, as well as training and mentoring. I learned about electrical, mechanical, hydraulic, rail, buildings, infrastructure and fire services and how to communicate with a wide range of trades as a result

of my unorthodox career. I have been put in charge of graduate programs and I have been in front of so many audiences talking about systems and training in WHSQA&E that I cannot recall them all. I have also been part of the management teams of some of Queensland’s most significant landmark projects. The changes over the past 30 years have been remarkable. Every year I see more women embracing trades, engineering, estimating, mining, machine operation and becoming sisters in steel caps. I see groups like NAWIC start-up and flourish by supporting women in the industry with their goals. I see wages become fairer through the determination of the women who champion this industry. I see men embrace the benefits that come with women being a part of the workforce and I see women thriving under the dynamic and challenging conditions that come with being a part of the industry. I was told by my professor of engineering when I started, along with the eight other women out of the nearly 650 students undertaking engineering, that I was a forerunner, a beacon, a signal to the industry that we women were coming and we were going to stay. He didn’t quite say it that way and I didn’t quite understand what he meant then. As I reflect 30 years later over the course the industry has taken, and how far we as women have come to be represented as part of the workforce, I see what he meant. It has kept me going, kept me acting on behalf of, speaking out for, and training and mentoring the many young women I have had the pleasure to work with over the years. I never gave up, I kept applying for the jobs I wanted, kept being in the face of the industry, doing whatever it took, whatever role came up, that allowed me to stay. Now, with the advocacy of NAWIC and many individuals, there are many more voices added to the chorus. I encourage you all to design the career you want, carve your name in the concrete and become the forerunners for the next 30 years of change.

25TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION

27


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

AM, Queensland Government Customer & Digital Group

5min
pages 102-104

THE GROUND UP by Dr Christina Scott-Young, RMIT University

5min
pages 100-101

INDUSTRY by Meg Redwin, Multiplex

7min
pages 96-98

by Charlotte Nichols & Kate Hannaford, John Holland Group

2min
page 99

by Maree Riley, Australian Antarctic Division

7min
pages 88-92

WILL BE THERE FOR YOU by Lina McIvor, Multiplex

3min
page 93

A CAREER THAT MAKES A DIFFERENCE

3min
pages 86-87

by Carolyn Whyte, Carolyn Whyte Research & Writing

5min
pages 83-85

by Kara Chisholm, Transport for NSW

2min
page 82

by Anna Broughton, NS Group

6min
pages 80-81

IF I CAN DO IT, ANYONE CAN by Jo Matai, Lendlease

3min
page 77

by Carly Zanini, Carly Zanini Consulting

6min
pages 66-69

An interview with Sarah Brunton, ERGT Australia

5min
pages 78-79

CPBJH JV

5min
pages 70-72

by Elissa Stirling, Inhabit

6min
pages 73-76

An interview with Ashleigh Hiemstra, Merge Building

4min
pages 64-65

by Sher Mitchell, Advance Archaeology

4min
pages 62-63

by Eliza Lane, Australian Industry Trade College

4min
pages 58-59

MY KOKODA EXPERIENCE by Emma Foster, SHAPE Australia

6min
pages 60-61

FROM PARENTAL LEAVE by Rachael de Zylva, Laing O’Rourke

5min
pages 48-49

by Melonie Bayl-Smith, Bijl Architecture

6min
pages 56-57

by Helen Shield, Construction Training Fund

3min
pages 50-51

EVOLVING CAREER by Clare Bailey, Taylor

6min
pages 52-55

AND GOAL ACHIEVEMENT by Taylor Perrin, Capital Veneering

5min
pages 46-47

TRADIES

7min
pages 43-45

by Alison Mirams, Roberts Co

4min
pages 32-35

AUSTRALIA

3min
pages 41-42

with Allison Smith and Fiona Tellefson, APP Corporation

7min
pages 36-38

IN SAFE HANDS - LUISA YOUNG SHARES HER EXPERIENCES OF TWO DECADES IN CONSTRUCTION by Narae Ko, Unispace

7min
pages 26-28

by Becky Paroz, Queen B Project System

3min
page 29

An interview with Yvonne Pengilly, QBCC

7min
pages 30-31

PART OF MY LIFE by Sandra Steele, K&L Gates

5min
pages 24-25

THE NAWIC BRIGHT IDEAS GRANT

3min
pages 19-21

Scholarship Research Report

6min
pages 14-16

Research Report

5min
pages 17-18

THE NAWIC BOARD OF DIRECTORS

5min
pages 6-7

Senator the Hon Marise Payne

2min
pages 10-11

An interview with Professor Paula Gerber, Monash University

7min
pages 22-23

SCHOLARSHIP

2min
pages 12-13

ABOUT NAWIC

1min
pages 4-5
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.