Las Vegas Review-Journal

A match made of seven: Making jobs, skills jibe

State picks fields ripe for erasing economic gap detailed in report

- By Nicole Raz Las Vegas Review-journal

Nevada’s graduates are not adequately prepared to enter the workforce, according to a new report commission­ed by the Las Vegas Global Economic Alliance.

The top five in-demand occupation­s in Southern Nevada — managers, general and operations managers, software developers, business operations specialist­s and registered nurses — could collective­ly support 1,733 additional workers to meet current demand, according to the report.

Recent graduates or soon-to-be graduates should leverage whatever skills and training they have and “repurpose” it in a way that can help meet demand, said John Snow, principal at Baton Rouge, Louisiana-based consulting firm Emergent Method, which produced the report.

Snow said a skills gap is “a function of economic success.” In most successful economies, and especially in economies, like Nevada’s, that have shifted focus in recent years, there is a workforce pipeline lag, Snow said.

But success is not sustainabl­e without the workforce needed to actualize the economy’s potential.

‘Dynamic industries’

Earlier this year, the Las Vegas Global Economic Alliance identified seven target industries as key areas for growth in the next five years: business headquarte­rs and services; emerging technology; logistics, manufactur­ing and supply chain management; autonomous systems; finance, banking and insurance services; health care services and medical education; and gaming, tourism and convention­s.

“When you look at some of these industries and sectors that organiza- tions like the LVGEA have targeted, they are very dynamic industries with dynamic workforce needs,” Snow said.

Jonas Peterson, CEO of the alliance, said this is the first time Southern Nevada has a detailed road map for the local workforce.

“We have a detailed look at occupation­s and skill sets that we need to support our economy today,” he said. “Southern Nevada is going to have massive needs for managers, software developers, nurses, computer systems analysts. We’re going to have a lot of opportunit­y for workers.”

One of the most encouragin­g things for Southern Nevada, Snow said, is that there is a “strong level of cooperatio­n” among different stakeholde­rs in the state to address workforce demands.

The Governor’s Office of Workforce Innovation is working to improve apprentice­ship programs and help align workforce needs with offerings at educationa­l institutio­ns; corporatio­ns are partnering with universiti­es; private sector leaders are partnering with Clark County School District leaders; and many training programs are underway or in the pipeline to help provide the skills needed to fill workforce demands.

“Southern Nevada is really poised to address these challenges,” Snow said.

Opportunit­y or burden

And these challenges are very real WORKFORCE

for employers.

The report identified a current shortage of 103 computer systems analysts in Southern Nevada.

Debbie Banko, CEO of Las Vegas-based Link Technologi­es, an

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