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Return to Virginia Business - November 2004

Special Report: Manufacturing

Shenandoah Valley starts program to provide skilled manufacturing workers

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Virginia Business

November 2004

Advances in manufacturing automation have driven the need for a highly skilled work force in the central Shenandoah Valley region, where manufacturing is the largest employment sector. Nearly one out of four jobs in the region — 23.5 percent — is in manufacturing, according to the Virginia Employment Commission. That figure represents more than 43,000 full-time employees. In today’s highly automated environment, manufacturers need technically skilled workers who understand integrated systems. So the region launched a program to meet the needs of local businesses.

“The idea of a manufacturing work force development program was brought to me by several members of local industry,” says Jane Fuller, assistant director of work force services and continuing education at Blue Ridge Community College. “The real question was — could we pull this together? We had been running a summer program for children called Learning Can Be Fun that introduced kids to robotics, computers and engineering. This new program is a natural extension of that, keeping kids interested in engineering through high school and beyond.”

Recent economic announcements support the need for work force development:

• Coors Brewing Co, based in Golden, Colo., plans to build its third U.S. brewery at Elkton in Rockingham County, investing $160 million to $190 million during the next three years.

• Hershey Chocolate of Virginia will invest $48 million and create 110 jobs at Hershey’s Stuarts Draft manufacturing facility in Augusta County.

• Morningstar Foods, a subsidiary of Dean Foods, will invest $57 million in the Mt. Crawford dairy processing facility in Rockingham. The expansion will include increased distribution capacity and a state-of-the-art soy processing, storage and distribution facility.

To meet the demand for skilled workers, a consortium of five regional work force training organizations (see box) joined together to create a comprehensive approach to high performance manufacturing career development. The consortium, assisted by a $2.4 million grant from the Department of Labor, focused on three key employment areas — health care, information technology and advanced manufacturing. The grant played a key role in getting the local business community involved in designing a program to meet the manufacturers’ needs. The initiative has also been used as an economic development incentive for prospective employers looking to locate in the Valley.

“Right now we’re working with a manufacturer in Waynesboro who is looking to expand,” says Sharon Johnson, project director for the Workforce Investment Board. “We are competing with North Carolina [as a possible alternative expansion site] and overseas. Our board is putting together a customized training package as an additional incentive for them to choose Virginia.”

The program embraces the concept of lifelong learning, beginning in elementary school and ending with a baccalaureate degree, an associate’s degree or a certificate in manufacturing career development. The program is all-inclusive and piques the interest of young school children while also meeting the retraining needs of workers. The program also can be customized to allow adult learners to direct their own career path with built-in flexibility, letting participants exit and re-enter the career lattice as needed.

Participants can start in elementary school with Learning Can Be Fun — a program for second through eighth graders covering robotics, computer design, introduction to machining and CNC programming. This is followed by the Career College in middle school, covering design, experimentation and Lego robotics. Finally, the Learning Can Be Fun Grad Program offers studies for high school juniors and seniors emphasizing robotics, advanced manufacturing and systems courses.

Upon graduation from high school or as an adult in a manufacturing occupation, participants may enroll in a 42-week, seven-module High Performance Manufacturing (HPM) Certification Program. By December, 47 employees from 20 area companies will have completed the program. These participants will graduate with an industry certification of Certified Manufacturing Technologist and will have six credits toward an associate’s degree in High Performance Manufacturing. The emphasis of the new HPM degree is on electronic and mechanical skills, team-based decision making and communications skills. The degree program was developed with input from the regional Manufacturing Advisory Council and modeled after a successful customized program developed for Merck & Co. Graduates of the HPM program can continue on to complete a baccalaureate degree in manufacturing or engineering through a distance-learning program with Old Dominion University that is given through Blue Ridge Community College. A similar agreement is currently being explored with James Madison University.

The first certification class graduated in March 2004, with a second group earning certification last August, for a total of 36 graduates. Blue Ridge Community College planned to start a group of about 15 students this fall. Response was greater than anticipated, and the college has expanded the original class to two classes of about 23 students each. There are also about 560 manufacturing firms in the Shenandoah Valley eagerly awaiting their graduation.

Return to Virginia Business - November 2004


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