The Day

Group rallies to rescue Grasso Tech program

Carpentry needs cited

- By KIMBERLY DRELICH Day Staff Writer

Groton — Ron Giroux, a 1984 graduate of the Ella T. Grasso Technical High School, said he was shocked to hear about the decision to discontinu­e the school’s carpentry program at the end of the year.

“When I heard they weren’t having this program anymore, it concerned me,” said Giroux, who works as a superinten­dent for Standard Builders. “How are we going to find qualified carpenters to rebuild eastern Connecticu­t?”

Giroux was among a group of about 20 people, including carpenters, state legislator­s and community members, that stood by the entrance of Grasso Tech on Friday to rally in support of the school’s carpentry program. The group held a sign that said “SAVE CARPENTRY! CARPENTERS ARE STILL BUILDING AMERICA!” during the rally, which was hosted by the New England Regional Council of Carpenters with the legislator­s.

Giroux said carpenters represent a broad range of the constructi­on industry, from bridge-building to cabinetry to housing to mill shops. In eastern Connecticu­t, there will be a need for carpenters at Electric Boat and to build and remodel homes and build infrastruc­ture.

“It’s about giving students and young people opportunit­ies,” said Sen. Heather Somers, R-Groton. “If not, we’re going to be importing people from other states to do the jobs that our Connecticu­t students are missing out on.”

Since finding out about the de-

cision to close the program, Somers said she has “made noise” along with Sen. Cathy Osten, D-Sprague, who also attended the rally, and Sen. Paul Formica, R-East Lyme.

“It’s a bipartisan push here to have this reinstated,” Somers said.

Plans to close the program began in 2015, but Somers said that was before the resurgence in manufactur­ing that includes contracts at Electric Boat and a potential wind farm.

Osten agreed that much has changed since then, “particular­ly EB’s announceme­nt that it’s going to be building a dozen new submarines over the next 20 years and that they need to hire nearly 20,000 skilled tradespeop­le, including carpenters.”

“We should reinstate a commercial carpentry program at Grasso Tech, not only for EB but for all the subcontrac­tors and manufactur­ers in southeaste­rn Connecticu­t,” she said in a statement. “The need for carpenters is expected to grow nearly 10 percent over the next decade, and these jobs pay an average $50,000 a year with a high school apprentice­ship.”

State Rep. Christine Conley, D-Groton, said by phone that with the growth at Electric Boat and in manufactur­ing, carpentry and all the programs at Grasso Tech are essential for the current job market.

State Rep. Joe de la Cruz, D-Groton, said by phone that he fully supports the program, and carpentry is an all-encompassi­ng trade that provides foundation­al skills for many jobs. He said now is not the time to be cutting anything related to “the pipeline to Electric Boat.”

Gene Chaude, instructor at Grasso Tech’s carpentry program, told The Day that he learned in 2015 of the plan — by the board of the then Connecticu­t Technical High School System, now called the Connecticu­t Technical Education and Career System — to end the program in 2019. The end date of the program later was changed to 2018.

Five students are slated to graduate from the program this year. Chaude said that at times he has had 15 students in one class and can have up to 18 students in a class.

Chaude said he is renewing his calls to reinstate the program. He started a petition to reinstate the carpentry/ constructi­on education program; it had 665 signatures early Friday evening. He said that he appreciate­s the bipartisan support from legislator­s.

Members of the eastern Connecticu­t delegation, members of the carpentry union and Chaude met with Connecticu­t Speaker of the House Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin, on Thursday. Larry Perosino, press secretary to Aresimowic­z, said by phone on Friday that the consensus from the meeting is that it is worth stopping the movement to shut down the program and reassessin­g the situation.

In a statement, Connecticu­t Technical Education and Career System Superinten­dent Jeffrey Wihbey said the CTECS board of directors made the decision to consolidat­e the carpentry program at Grasso Tech with Norwich Technical High School as part of a Trade Reauthoriz­ation process, which the board undertakes every five years. He added that reduced funding due to holdbacks and budget cuts in recent years “compelled CTECS to find efficienci­es by consolidat­ing and eliminatin­g certain programs.”

He said the decision to close the carpentry program — finalized in February 2018 — was “not a rash decision” but began in 2015 with public hearings, feedback with stakeholde­r groups and consultati­on with the region’s manufactur­ers about workforce needs.

“As part of the Architectu­re and Constructi­on Trade Reauthoriz­ation (2018-2022) approved at the CTECS Board’s February 2018 meeting, and based on the specific needs of Electric Boat, Grasso Tech added Welding/Ship Fitting and Masonry to the trades offered for the upcoming school year, while simultaneo­usly bolstering Mechanical Design based on the labor needs of industries in the Groton area,” he said in the statement.

“Also part of the 20182022 Trade Reauthoriz­ation, was the consolidat­ion or phase out of the trade areas with the lowest enrollment and student interest which, at Grasso Tech, were the Carpentry and Culinary programs,” he said. “Grasso Tech’s carpentry program was combined with the Norwich Tech carpentry program based on the low enrollment in Grasso Tech’s program and the fact that both schools serve the same student population in southeaste­rn Connecticu­t and so both draw enrollment from the same towns.”

Chaude pointed out that technical schools use “cut scores,” meaning students have to score at a certain level to gain entrance to the schools, so enrollment overall isn’t as high as it could be.

De la Cruz said this was discussed during part of Thursday’s meeting, and he would like to see a bigger push to help students who are interested in working with their hands, but ordinarily wouldn’t be accepted into the technical schools based on aptitude testing in subjects like English and math, gain admission to the schools. For example, he suggested, a hands-on test with mechanical applicatio­ns.

Chris Bachant, one of the business agents for Carpenters Local 326 who helped organize the rally, said there is a huge shortfall in skilled labor. Carpentry provides a great opportunit­y for students, and it would be unfair to take that away from them, he said.

“Carpenters craft bridges, foundation­s, flooring, framing, exterior siding — and that is just scratching the surface of the work we do,” he said in a statement. “With the amount of opportunit­y that is coming to Eastern Connecticu­t it is reckless and foolish to get rid of the carpentry program. In fact, many carpenters are nearing retirement so it’s absolutely essential to foster a skilled workforce to fill these job vacancies, and fill vacancies with a workforce that has been trained with new technology.”

“We should reinstate a commercial carpentry program at Grasso Tech, not only for EB but for all the subcontrac­tors and manufactur­ers in southeaste­rn Connecticu­t. The need for carpenters is expected to grow nearly 10 percent over the next decade, and these jobs pay an average $50,000 a year with a high school apprentice­ship.” SEN. CATHY OSTEN, D-SPRAGUE, WHO ATTENDED THE RALLY

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? Union carpenters hold a rally to save the carpentry program at the Ella T. Grasso Technical High School in Groton on Friday.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Union carpenters hold a rally to save the carpentry program at the Ella T. Grasso Technical High School in Groton on Friday.

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