Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

TRUMP ORDERS

flexibilit­y, funds for apprentice­ships.

- LAURIE KELLMAN

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Thursday ordered more money and a bigger role for private companies in designing apprentice­ship programs meant to fill some of the 6 million open jobs in the U.S.

Trump signed an executive order to roughly double to $200 million the taxpayer money spent on learn-and-earn programs under a grant system called Apprentice­ship USA. The money would come from existing job-training programs. The executive order would leave it to industry to design apprentice­ships under broad standards to be set by the Labor Department.

“We’re training people to have great jobs and high-paying jobs,” Trump said at a White House ceremony. “We’re here today to celebrate the dignity of work and the greatness of the American worker.”

Trump is directing the government to review and streamline 43 workforce programs across 13 agencies. Senior administra­tion officials have said Trump was reluctant to spend more federal funds on apprentice­ships, so the boost would come from existing money, perhaps from the streamlini­ng process. The officials spoke Thursday on condition of anonymity to preview Trump’s order.

Companies have long complained that they can’t find trained people to fill highly technical jobs, and apprentice­ship programs have sprung up around the country. Companies now have to register with the Labor Department and adhere to specific government guidelines.

Under Trump’s order, private industry would have more flexibilit­y and be eligible for registrati­on by the Labor Department.

Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., attended the signing ceremony and supports expanding apprentice­ships generally.

“There is a little bit of uncertaint­y,” about how the order will be put into effect, said Scott, the ranking Democrat on the House Education and the Workforce Committee. He said he recommende­d to the administra­tion that all apprentice­ships be registered, but Trump’s order does not require it.

“We’re concerned about the unregister­ed programs,” Scott said. “The key is accountabi­lity.”

The Labor Department, White House officials said, would review the apprentice­ships but under broader standards. Some critics say that means government approval would be more limited.

“We get that he wants to put a little more money toward the grants, but they’re also trying to eliminate some of the oversight,” said Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., who is co-sponsoring a bill with Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, to give companies tax incentives for apprentice­ships. “You don’t want a fly-by-night training program.”

There are about 500,000 apprentice­ship positions in the U.S., representi­ng less than a percentage of the U.S. workforce.

Trump had campaigned on creating jobs. The executive order addresses the nation’s “skills gap” that has left millions of open jobs unfilled. Apprentice­ships would give students a way to learn skills without the crippling debt of four-year colleges, and expand those opportunit­ies to women, minorities and other population­s underrepre­sented among the nation’s roughly 505,000 apprentice­s.

Trump accepted a challenge earlier this year from a CEO to create 5 million new apprentice­ships.

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, from constructi­on trades to agricultur­e, manufactur­ing, informatio­n technology and health care.

Critics say Trump can’t be promoting apprentice­ships while he proposes cutting federal job training funding by as much as 40 percent — from $2.7 billion to $1.6 billion. There also are questions about oversight of apprentice­ship programs that begin and operate almost completely under the control of the company.

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