Dayton Daily News

Apprentice­ship track boosts AK Steel, union

Maintenanc­e program draws from within steelmaker’s ranks.

- By Eric Schwartzbe­rg Staff Writer

AK Steel Corporatio­n, MIDDLETOWN — Middletown Works and Machinists’ Local Lodge 1943 celebrated on Friday the launch of the company’s first Maintenanc­e Mechanic Apprentice­ship Program, one aimed at meeting both employee developmen­t and business needs.

Launched on National Manufactur­ing Day, the program gives union production employees the opportunit­y to train to become fully accredited journeymen in maintenanc­e mechanics as maintenanc­e technician­s through classroom work as well as on the job training.

The 18-month program is the “lifeblood” of AK Steel, according to Kirk Reich, the company’s president and chief operating officer.

“It’s the future of our company, and I would say as a result of the things we’re doing here today, we put our future in really good hands,” Reich said. “Manufactur­ing today is a very tough and challengin­g environmen­t. The competitio­n for quality, talented men and women to work in our facilities is like we’ve not seen before.”

That, he said, is a result of the nation’s low unemployme­nt rate, a tight local job market and the choice by many individual­s to go into other profession­s.

“There’s a number of factors that really led us to realize that we’ve got to raise more of our technical talent,” Reich said. “That’s what spurred all of this discussion on and has led to where we are today.”

The program is part of a growing trend for industrial unions and their employers to meet the challenges for workforce training, company officials said. That enables AK Steel to meet present and future employee developmen­t and business needs.

The program, whose standards were approved in April by the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, has enrolled 30 apprentice­s who are AK Steel employees ranging in experience from nine months to 22 years on the job at the company.

At the end of the program, the apprentice­s will receive state certificat­ion as journeymen and will be eligible to work as maintenanc­e mechanics at AK Steel Middletown Works, Reich said.

Providing the apprentice­s with training opportunit­ies in the areas of pipefittin­g, hydraulics, welding and electrical work are four of the company’s “most experience­d, seasoned, talented” craftsman, Reich said.

“Much the same as me, they’re all multigener­ational AK Steel employees and really folks that we want to emulate in every way, shape or form,” he said.

The program is an opportunit­y for AK Steel employees to “up the skill set,” according to Neil Douglas, president and directing business representa­tive for the IAM Local Lodge 1943.

“The union’s goal ... is to keep these apprentice programs going,” Douglas said. “We want this to continue (for) decades and decades and decades down the road. I think it’s going to give our local, our membership and the company an advantage over those companies that do not have that.”

Apprentice­s attend class three days per week and get hands-on training the other two days as portions of the facility are idle and equipment is down, according to piping apprentice instructor Chad Johnson.

John Campbell, of Carlisle, an AK Steel employee for 21/2 years, said the apprentice­ship program allows him to see everything around the mill.

“Working with mobile (maintenanc­e), you get to go to all the different department­s and see how everything works, and just learning all the different aspects of maintenanc­e, in general,” Campbell said.

Tony Adams, of Springboro, an AK Steel employee for nine years, said the program allows an employee to learn a skill that they can take with him or her.

“It’s something you can pass along, teach your children,” Adams said. “It’s a positive for me and my family, as well. Gives you stability is the main thing.”

Douglas said it is important that employees let their families and the community know of the opportunit­y.

“Getting that out into the community might be an incentive to bring more people in and fill our ranks more,” he said. “The more people that we have working here, the more opportunit­y people have to bid and move around in the plant to different jobs.”

John Giltrow, of Middletown, a third-generation AK Steel employee who has worked for the company for 38 years, said the apprentice program is “huge” for the average employee, especially those who are multigener­ational.

“We’ve got an investment in this and the community itself, too,” said Giltrow, a piping apprentice instructor for the program. “We want to see it succeed. We want to be able to keep this thing going, to keep the company running.

“It benefits the community, it benefits us, it benefits the company, which is a win-win-win,” he said. Contact this reporter at 513-7555126 or email Eric.Schwartzbe­rg@ coxinc.com.

Twitter: @eschwartzb­erg

 ?? GREG LYNCH / STAFF ?? Jon Giltrow, piping apprentice instructor, works with apprentice­s Chase Johnson and Justin Mullins on Friday as part of AK Steel’s new apprentice­ship program.
GREG LYNCH / STAFF Jon Giltrow, piping apprentice instructor, works with apprentice­s Chase Johnson and Justin Mullins on Friday as part of AK Steel’s new apprentice­ship program.

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