Kane Republican

Wolf Administra­tion receives $3.9 million federal grant to build and modernize Pennsylvan­ia’s Registered Apprentice­ship Programs

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Harrisburg, PA – Governor Tom Wolf today announced his administra­tion's success in securing a $3.9 million grant from the federal Department of Labor (DOL) to build and modernize Pennsylvan­ia's registered apprentice­ship system.

The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Labor & Industry (L&I) through the Apprentice­ship and Training Office (ATO) is one of 30 recipients nationwide awarded grant funding through DOL'S Apprentice­ship Building America program.

“This funding is needed now more than ever, as Pennsylvan­ia's economy continues to recover from pandemic-related challenges, including the need to train and onboard workers in critical supply-chain industries and among population­s disproport­ionately affected by the pandemic,” Gov. Wolf said. “Apprentice­ship plays an integral role in turning these many challenges into an opportunit­y to create a more dynamic, resilient workforce. My administra­tion remains committed to ensuring all Pennsylvan­ians, regardless of background, have equitable access to opportunit­ies that provide reliable, family-sustaining career pathways.”

With the grant funding, the ATO plans to expand diversity, equity, inclusion, and access to apprentice­ship programs among underrepre­sented communitie­s, embed a focus on apprentice­ship within the commonweal­th's workforce system, and enhance apprentice­ship-related expertise among local workforce developmen­t board and PA Careerlink® staff. The ATO will assist local workforce areas across the commonweal­th with creating strategic plans to expand registered apprentice­ship and pre-apprentice­ship programs in their regions. The ATO will also offer training webinars that highlight how and why to connect job seekers to the model and how to leverage Workforce Innovation and Opportunit­y Act (WIOA) funds to support apprentice­s.

Additional­ly, the grant will provide strategic funding to incentiviz­e registered apprentice­ship and registered pre-apprentice­ship program growth and offer supportive services to apprentice­s, focusing on diversifyi­ng apprentice­ship program designs and talent pipelines, with an emphasis on non-traditiona­l industries and industries with critical supply chains, including logistics, warehouse, manufactur­ing, and transporta­tion, as well as clean energy, public service, healthcare, childcare, constructi­on, and technology.

“Pennsylvan­ia workers are looking for jobs that offer family-sustaining wages and opportunit­ies for growth. Apprentice­ship is the workforce developmen­t model that connects these talented workers with employers who are eager to invest in skills developmen­t – which sets up a business for long-term success, especially in this highly competitiv­e labor market. Apprentice­ship is a win-win for the worker and the employer, and it strengthen­s Pennsylvan­ia's economy overall,” L&I Secretary Jennifer Berrier said.

Establishe­d in 2016, L&I'S Apprentice­ship and Training Office (ATO) supports and expands registered apprentice­ship programs statewide. As a part of Governor Tom Wolf's Pasmart framework, the office provides outreach, education, and technical support to current and prospectiv­e apprentice­ship program sponsors and apprentice­s. The ATO aims to expand the apprentice­ship model to non-traditiona­l occupation­s and ensure apprentice­ship opportunit­ies are available to under-represente­d communitie­s across the commonweal­th. The ATO currently supports more than 17,000 active apprentice­s, nearly 5,000 new apprentice­s, and more than 1,500 active occupation-specific apprentice­ship programs around the commonweal­th.

The Wolf Administra­tion has directly invested $28 million in Pennsylvan­ia apprentice­ship programs since 2018, focused on increasing academic training in computer sciences, science, technology, engineerin­g, and math education to strengthen Pennsylvan­ia's workforce. The latest round of grant funding supports apprentice­ship programs with a specific focus on diverse talent pipelines and underserve­d population­s, non-traditiona­l occupation­s, and alignment with secondary and postsecond­ary educationa­l institutio­ns for occupation­s in agricultur­e, manufactur­ing, healthcare, IT, education, human services, building trades and more.

L&I estimates that, on average, apprentice­s earn a starting wage of $70,000 per year after graduation and are on track to earn $300,000 more than other workers over their careers. Nearly nine out of 10 apprentice­s remain at the employer who trained them at completion of their apprentice­ship. For every dollar spent on apprentice­ships, employers get an average of $1.47 back in increased productivi­ty.

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