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Program to
promote manufacturing careers Source: Omaha World
Herald Publish Date: 7/9/2006 To forestall an anticipated worker
shortage in Nebraska manufacturing, business leaders from Omaha, Lincoln
and Columbus are scheduled this week to announce a program promoting
manufacturing careers to high school students and young adults. The program, known as "Dream It
Do It," advocates manufacturing jobs as a way for people ages 16
to 26 to match their interests - from music to motorcycles to molecular
biology - with their careers. It will be announced today in Columbus
and Monday in Omaha and Lincoln. A new group known as the Nebraska Advanced
Manufacturing Coalition will launch the campaign, which is slated to
begin in September. Dwayne Probyn, formerly director of work force development
at Metropolitan Community College, will become the coalition's executive
director. The campaign will reach out to high
school and community college students in the three cities. The Nebraska
Advanced Manufacturing Coalition is expected to raise at least $500,000
for the campaign, whose partners are Nebraska manufacturers, and will
expand to the rest of the state if the initial launch is successful.
It will follow the model of a $2.5
million pilot program launched last year in Kansas City, Mo., that has
been credited with boosting community college enrollment in fields related
to manufacturing by 35 percent. To extend the campaign, the Kansas City
program recently received a $15 million Workforce Innovation in Regional
Economic Development grant from the U.S. Department of Labor. "The goal is really to put in
programs that will encourage the high schools and community colleges
to develop a student base around the needs of the manufacturing trades,"
Probyn said. "This is all about raising the awareness and the profile
of the manufacturing trades as a profession." Probyn hopes to add equipment and facilities
at the community colleges participating in the program - Metro in Omaha,
Central Community College in Columbus and Southeast Community College
in Lincoln. The goals of the "Dream It Do
It" program dovetail with efforts at the state government level
to foster business expansion and lure new investments to the state through
incentive programs, Probyn said. "Creating this talent pool in
the manufacturing arena also helps in efforts of economic development,
to attract businesses to locate here, to relocate here and to expand
here," he said. Tony Raimondo, chairman of Behlen Manufacturing
in Columbus, helped bring the campaign to Nebraska through his affiliations
with the National Association of Manufacturers and the Manufacturing
Institute, which worked together on the effort. He said that if the
campaign succeeds, it likely would be expanded to cities such as Fremont,
Norfolk and Beatrice. Raimondo said one of the campaign's
first goals will be to complete a "skills gap analysis" to
determine in which areas the state is most likely to face worker shortages
in the coming years. The Nebraska campaign hopes to qualify for a WIRED
grant like that won by the Kansas City campaign, he said. To do so,
the skills gap analysis will extend beyond manufacturing to address
needs in the biotech and health care sectors, Raimondo said. "We're trying to address the skills
gap and help the kids find careers to keep Nebraska competitive,"
he said. "This total effort is geared toward U.S. competitiveness."
The program seeks to answer manufacturers'
concerns that not enough young people graduate with skills and training
needed for manufacturing jobs. A National Association of Manufacturers
report compiled in conjunction with the Deloitte & Touche accounting
firm estimates that manufacturers will need as many as 10 million new
skilled workers by 2020. Tom Whalen of Omaha's Silverstone Group
said he is working with the campaign to address what he says is a disconnect
between educators and employers in Nebraska. He said he saw that disconnect
during his 13-year tenure as chairman of the education council of the
Nebraska Chamber of Commerce. "What I heard consistently . .
. was the need for more cooperation and collaboration between business
and education," he said. "There continues to be a very real
need for business to play an active role working with teachers and administrators
to understand the needs of the workplace. That includes helping the
educational community understand what job opportunities are in the pipeline."
Contact the Omaha World-Herald newsroom
Copyright ©2006 Omaha World-Herald®.
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast,
rewritten, displayed or distributed for any purpose without permission
from the Omaha World-Herald.
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