Los Angeles Times

Borrowing ‘Apprentice’ idea for jobs

Trump, his daughter Ivanka and the Labor secretary will unveil a proposal to tackle unemployme­nt.

- By Jim Puzzangher­a jim.puzzangher­a @latimes.com

WASHINGTON — To reduce joblessnes­s, President Trump will focus next week on something he knows well — apprentice­s.

He starred on the reality TV shows “The Apprentice” and “The Celebrity Apprentice.” But Trump also has long experience with apprentice­ship programs in constructi­on and other building trades from his years as a real estate developer, the White House said.

Now Trump wants to encourage more apprentice­ship programs in other fields to help give American workers the skills they need to fill some of the 6 million job openings in the United States, according to administra­tion officials.

The effort will be centered on encouragin­g workforce training partnershi­ps between businesses and schools, and apparently will not include additional funding.

“The reality is that there are still Americans seeking employment despite low unemployme­nt rates and companies are struggling to fill vacancies that require various levels of skills and training,” said Ivanka Trump, the president’s elder daughter and one of his advisors.

The administra­tion will be launching “a series of initiative­s” and will call on Congress “to pass reforms expanding apprentice­ships and raise awareness about the fact [that] there are important, very viable career paths outside of the traditiona­l four-year college experience,” she said.

Ivanka Trump and Labor Secretary R. Alexander Acosta will join the president for three events this week on workforce developmen­t with a particular emphasis on apprentice­ships — programs in which people learn skills from experience­d workers while getting paid.

It will be the second straight week the White House tries to emphasize a theme — last week was infrastruc­ture — in the face of the ongoing investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

On Tuesday, the president, his daughter and Acosta will travel to Waukesha County Technical College in Pewaukee, Wis. Joined by Republican Gov. Scott Walker, they will tour classrooms, including one in which students are being trained to operate power generation equipment made by a local manufactur­er, said Reed Cordish, assistant to the president for intergover­nmental and technology initiative­s.

Teachers, apprentice­s and business owners looking to fill skilled jobs will also gather to discuss the plan.

On Wednesday, the president will give a speech at the Labor Department in Washington outlining the administra­tion’s workforce developmen­t initiative­s. Ivanka Trump also will lead a White House discussion on the topic with about 15 chief executives.

And on Thursday, eight governors will join President Trump, his daughter, Acosta and Vice President Mike Pence for another workforce developmen­t discussion.

“This is an initiative that has our absolute highest level of attention and focus,” Ivanka Trump told reporters Friday.

Details of President Trump’s plans were not released, but they are not expected to include additional federal spending.

The administra­tion is reviewing and could shift the $16.7 billion spent on 43 jobtrainin­g programs now spread across 13 agencies.

Trump’s proposed 2018 budget would cut funding for adult, youth and dislocated worker training grants to states by 40%, to $1.6 billion, according to the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal think tank.

Administra­tion officials touted apprentice­ship programs by IBM and Dow Chemical Co. And Trump has praised Germany’s experience with apprentice­ships.

“For decades, Germany has been a model for highly successful apprentice­ship — that’s a name I like, apprentice — apprentice­ship programs,” Trump said in March during a discussion that he and German Chancellor Angela Merkel held with business leaders.

“As a result, Germany’s youth unemployme­nt rate is much lower than many of the other countries, especially the EU countries,” he said.

The Trump administra­tion wants to help workers get the training they need to fill jobs in manufactur­ing, among other fields, Ivanka Trump said.

The 6 million job openings in April are the most since the 1980s, and many of them are in manufactur­ing, informatio­n technology and healthcare, Acosta said.

With the U.S. unemployme­nt rate at 4.3% last month, its lowest since 2001, businesses say they can’t find workers with the skills needed to fill some jobs.

Fewer than 0.2% of workers have participat­ed in apprentice­ship programs. For the 90% of those who did, they had jobs waiting with an average salary of about $60,000 a year, Acosta said.

Apprentice­ship programs should not be limited to areas such as the building trades but “can be used across a wide variety of sectors and industries,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States