The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

So you want a new job? Here’s how to retrain

- By Anna Helhoski

The tens of millions of workers who have left their jobs in the “Great Resignatio­n” — 4.4 million in September alone, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics — won’t necessaril­y need to retrain before they land their next job. But those who want a new career entirely may find little financial help and social support to acquire the skills they need for the future, labor experts say.

Erin Hatton, associate professor of sociology at the University at Buffalo in New York, says the pandemic caused especially difficult conditions for consumer-facing workers, including risk of COVID-19 exposure and the responsibi­lity to enforce mask compliance on customers, which created an “undue burden on workers they’re just not willing to deal with.”

Pandemic-weary workers are questionin­g the value of their jobs, Hatton says, and this selfreflec­tion may stir workers to switch fields — or at least attempt to.

“That can be easier said than done,” she says. “Figuring out how to get the training required to do that can be tricky.”

But will the “Great Resignatio­n” lead to a “great retraining” for workers who want to access jobs with better pay, benefits and working conditions?

It’s doubtful, say experts like Anthony Carnevale, director of the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce. He chalks it up to this: The U.S. isn’t very good at retraining workers.

Why you may need to reskill to get a new career

Changing careers often requires a new credential (a degree or certificat­e), meaning you’ll need some type of higher education. Employers across labor sectors require workers to have certain credential­s, even in fields that used to be accessible without one.

Consider, for example, auto mechanics. Carnevale says this profession now requires a greater need for skilling, or training, in both mechanics and electronic­s.

“It used to be you flip open the hood on your car and you could get out a wrench and fiddle with this and that, but you can’t do that anymore,” Carnevale says. “There really is an increase in skill requiremen­ts because of many reasons, but largely it’s tech-based.”

Numerous obstacles to retraining

Hatton says “changing careers in a significan­t way” is particular­ly challengin­g for those who lack the time and money to train in a new field while balancing obligation­s like paying rent or a mortgage. Elder care and child care can also increase the burden.

Retraining challenges are largely due to a lack of social support, and the onus is on the individual to figure it out on their own, says Katie Spiker, managing director of government affairs for the National Skills Coalition, a nonprofit organizati­on that aims to raise skills of American workers across industries.

She and other experts say federal investment­s and policies are crucial to solving unemployme­nt, which has yet to reach pre-pandemic lows, and get workers reskilled.

“We have a history of seeing really strong outcomes for workers when they can access skills retraining to meet

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