Earlier this year, President Barack Obama announced a goal
to double the amount of apprenticeships in the United States over the next five
years, connecting ready-to-work Americans with ready-to-be-filled jobs.
Lehigh Valley Workforce Investment Board, a nonprofit that
serves as the hub for Pennsylvania CareerLink Lehigh Valley and the connection
between the workforce and training entities, was chosen as one of 50
organizations across the nation to attend an information session on the
initiative.
Nancy Dischinat, CareerLink’s executive director, was
surprised when she got the call from the U.S. Department of Labor with an
invitation to attend the first American Apprenticeship Summit on Monday in
Washington, D.C. to serve as part of the think tank in helping to implement
Obama’s mission.
“It was intense,” Dischinat said after returning from the
summit. “It was interesting to learn how passionate that everyone is about all
of this.”
The summit came on the heels of Obama’s announcement of $100
million in American Apprenticeships grants for growing industries to scale-up
apprenticeship programs that work. The grants will be launched in the fall and
will focus on partnerships between private and public organizations. Dischinat
said she is hoping that CareerLink Lehigh Valley, which is based in Allentown,
will receive a grant to start an apprenticeship program.
To implement the president’s commitment, in June six
roundtables across the nation were held, with leaders in key high-growth
industry sectors to gauge interest in the apprenticeship model and to ensure
new investments meet business needs for skilled workers.
The sessions focused in the growing industries of
transportation and logistics, health care, construction, energy, manufacturing
and information technology.
Dischinat attended the construction session, offering
feedback and suggestions on the needs of more apprenticeship programs in the
nation, and especially in the Lehigh Valley.
“We provide recruitment, skills and job training, and there
are many avenues that we have been developing resources for,” she said. “And we
need a model to put all of the pieces together."
“I think we are right for apprenticeship,” she said. “I
think we have some strong programs and companies that are trying to refuel
their workforce, and apprenticeships are another way to upgrade the skills of
their hires.”
Source: LVB.com
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