Albuquerque Journal

Who else but Trump to call for a nation full of apprentice­s?

President pushes his ‘earn while you learn’ initiative

- BY JOSH BOAK AND KEN THOMAS ASSOCIATED PRESS

PEWAUKEE, Wis. — The man who parlayed a run on TV’s “The Apprentice” into a winning presidenti­al campaign said Tuesday the nation needs a stronger system of apprentice­ship to match workers with millions of open jobs.

“I love the name apprentice,” President Donald Trump declared. He said he wants every high school in America to offer apprentice­ship opportunit­ies and hands-on-learning.

Joined in Wisconsin by daughter Ivanka Trump, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos and Labor Secretary Alex Acosta, Trump described his push to get private companies and universiti­es to pair up and pay the cost of such arrangemen­ts.

“It’s called earn while you learn,” Trump said of his initiative at Waukesha County Technical College.

The president toured a classroom full of tool-anddie machines that simulated a factory floor, accompanie­d by Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, as his attorney general, Jeff Sessions, faced questions before the Senate intelligen­ce committee on potential Trump campaign ties to Russia and the firing of FBI Director James Comey.

The White House said Trump’s push is aimed at training workers with specific skills for particular jobs that employers say they can’t fill at a time of historical­ly low unemployme­nt. However, the most recent budget for the federal government passed with about $90 million for apprentice­ships and Trump so far isn’t proposing to add more.

The Trump administra­tion has said there’s a need that can be met with a change in the American attitude toward vocational education and apprentice­ships. A November 2016 report by former President Barack Obama’s Commerce Department found that “apprentice­ships are not fully understood in the United States, especially” by employers, who tend to use apprentice­s for a few, hard-to-fill positions,” but not as widely as they could.

The shortages for specifical­ly trained workers cut across multiple job sectors beyond Trump’s beloved constructi­on trades. There are shortages in agricultur­e, manufactur­ing, informatio­n technology and health care.

Participan­ts in some apprentice programs get onthe-job training while going to school, sometimes with companies footing the bill.

IBM, for example, participat­es in a six-year program called P-TECH. Students in 60 schools across six states begin in high school, when they get a paid internship, earn an associate’s degree and get first-in-line considerat­ion for jobs from 250 participat­ing employers.

But at the Wisconsin event, the president also heard more broadly about vocational education.

Ella Johnson told the president that she had graduated from Waukesha West High School last weekend and received a certificat­ion in welding two weeks earlier from the technical college as part of a dual enrollment program.

“I plan on welding for a good part of my life, until retirement,” she said.

Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., said Trump’s “rhetoric doesn’t match the reality” of budget cuts he’s proposing that would reduce federal job training funding by 40 percent from $2.7 billion to $1.6 billion.

“If you’re really interested in promoting apprentice­ship, you have to invest in that skills training,” said Mike Rosen, president of the Milwaukee chapter of the American Federation of Teachers union.

Apprentice­ships are few and far between. Of the 146 million jobs in the United States, about 0.35 percent — or slightly more than a half-million — were filled by active apprentice­s in 2016. Filling millions more jobs through apprentice­ships would require the government to massively ramp up its efforts. “Scaling is the big issue,” said Robert Lerman, a fellow at the Urban Institute.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump greets men learning how to machine parts as he tours Waukesha County Technical College in Pewaukee, Wis., on Tuesday.
ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump greets men learning how to machine parts as he tours Waukesha County Technical College in Pewaukee, Wis., on Tuesday.

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