The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

‘PEOPLE DON’T WANT TO BE POOR’

Bill touts apprentice­ships as a key pathway to good-paying jobs

- By Rob Ryser rryser@newstimes.com 203-731-3342

BROOKFIELD – Billy Vasaturo grew up in his father’s glass shop on Federal Road. But when the young man decided he wanted to get into the family business, there were no short cuts. Vasaturo started on the ground floor, as an apprentice.

“I’m different than the average employee because I’m the owner’s son, but I get treated the same as anybody else,” said Vasaturo, 32, who has completed his 6,000 hours of training as a glass installer and only needs to pass the state test to be a certified glazier. “I learn new stuff every day.”

Across Connecticu­t, Vasaturo’s story is retold thousands of times in automotive garages, machine tool factories and scores of other trades where the path to goodpaying jobs is not college but the “earn as you learn” apprentice­ship track that was launched in 1937, when the nation was in the grips of the Great Recession.

As Connecticu­t and the nation try to climb out of the worst economic crisis since that time, lawmakers want to see more stories like Vasaturo’s.

A $3.5 billion bill that would expand apprentice­ships to more job seekers in more fields passed the House of Representa­tives earlier this month, with the hope of giving workers displaced by the COVID-19 pandemic a practical and proven track to full-time work through on-the-job training.

“When this bill came before my committee, I advocated for it because college is not the pathway for everyone,” said U.S. Rep. Jahana Hayes, a second-term Democrat who represents greater Danbury, and sits on the House Education and Labor Committee. “With this pandemic and so many people filing for unemployme­nt (the Biden) administra­tion has already said it has a commitment to address the work force and find creative ways to retrain people.”

The bill would bring $2 million to Connecticu­t’s Office of Apprentice­ship Training to build new partnershi­ps with unions, trades schools and companies, to reach traditiona­lly underserve­d job-seekers, and to make sure there are more success stories like Stewart’s Barbershop in Bethel.

As barbershop owner Everton Stewart tells the story, a woman who was in-between careers walked into his shop with her apprentice­ship paperwork already researched, and asked to be his apprentice.

“She had all of her classroom hours already, because she had taken some theory courses in beauty school, so all she needed was her barbershop hours,” said Stewart, 41, a barber for 15 years. “So I was able to help her.”

After a year-and-a-half – and 2,000 barbershop hours under her belt – the woman was not only a state certified barber, but she had a job in Stewart’s shop.

The National Apprentice­ship Act of 2021 comes at a dire time for the Connecticu­t economy where

the 8 percent unemployme­nt rate is down from a high of 10 percent in the summer but is still above the national jobless rate of 6.7 percent.

Connecticu­t’s labor czar welcomed the bill and its potential to boost the state apprentice­ship program, which he called ‘a vital part of workforce preparedne­ss.”

“While many people think of this program as one for young people who have vo-tech education, it is also instrument­al for men and women who are switching careers, so it builds a strong employment pool for the trades and other craftspeop­le,” said Kurt Westby, the state’s labor commission­er.

Thomas McSherry, president of Fire Control Service in New Milford, agrees.

“There are very few people out there with the right experience, and the fire suppressio­n license is difficult, so generally we

get younger guys from an auto dealership or a landscapin­g business and we basically start them from scratch,” said McSherry, who starts apprentice­s between $15 and $17 per hour.

After 6,000 hours of job training, which takes three years, fire suppressio­n system technician­s who pass the state test start earning $25 per hour. “Everybody wants to go to college, which is great, but there is real potential for these guys – no question about it – because there is a limited number of people with licenses out there.”

Removing barriers

The hope is not only to help job seekers who may be considerin­g a change of careers as the COVID-19 pandemic approaches its one-year anniversar­y in greater Danbury, but also to reach more women and traditiona­lly underserve­d job seekers in communitie­s of color, Hayes said.

“People don’t want to be poor. People don’t want to be unemployed,” said Hayes. “If we create opportunit­ies and invest in people to help them become self-sufficient, people will contribute to the community. People will buy home. But we have to remove the barriers.”

It’s too soon to say whether the Apprentice­ship Act of 2021 will pass the Senate, although Hayes and other lawmakers say they are optimistic.

“We passed this legislatio­n in November, but unfortunat­ely the Republican Senate majority failed to take it up,” said House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, in a statement after the House passed the act on Feb. 5. “Now, with a new Democratic Senate majority, I am hopeful that this important legislatio­n will receive the considerat­ion it is due, and I am confident that, if sent to the President’s desk, it will be signed into law.”

Across Connecticu­t, there are 5,900 active apprentice­ships in industries ranging from automotive and culinary to constructi­on and plastics, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. Compare that to 280,000 active apprentice­ships across the country – an increase of 40 percent since 2016.

Some 94 percent of people who complete a registered apprentice­ship find full time jobs, with an annual average income of $70,000, the labor department says.

Those statistics are backed up by Bart Ogden, president of Ogden Electrical Service in Danbury, and by Tino Punturiero, the owner of Samanna

Plumbing & Heating in New Fairfield, who praise the work ethic of their apprentice­s and said they had jobs waiting for them once they passed the state test.

Bruce Ratcliff Jr., president of AC 2000 in Southbury, said the apprentice program is not only practical but versatile.

Ratcliff, who has four apprentice­s working toward their 8,000 hours to certify as heating and cooling mechanics, said the program creates a path to good-paying fulltime work for students right out of technical school, and for people in mid-career looking for skilled work.

“One time I had an apprentice in his mid-30s with a family, so I brought him in at a higher (hourly wage) level because I knew his work ethic,” Ratcliff said.

Members of Connecticu­t’s Congressio­nal delegation such as U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney said one way the state can offer the “earn as you learn” model to more people is to create apprentice­ships in new business sectors such as health care, technology and finance.

State Sen. Julie Kushner agrees.

“We need an expansion of our understand­ing of apprentice­ships into fields that haven’t had apprentice­ships, such as paraeducat­ors in the schools,” said Kushner, a Democrat who co-chairs the state legislatur­e’s Labor and Public Employees Committee. “Right now, a lot of people are working on low wages and we want them to have a pathway to better jobs and better benefits.”

Like so many college basketball players this season, Aidan Carpenter, a freshman at Siena, has had a crash course in the value of patience.

Siena didn’t play its first game this season until Jan. 2, and due to a hamstring injury, Carpenter didn’t start playing until a week later.

The Saints have only played 10 games this season, haven’t played at all since Jan. 31, and are currently on another COVID-19 pause they hope to come out of this week. Meanwhile, the school changed its semester schedules this year and is still on winter break, not slated to begin classes again until Feb. 22.

Carpenter and his teammates have been among the few students on campus for several weeks now, with little to do but practice, play the occasional game and quarantine.

But Carpenter is biding his time with the right attitude.

“My time is gonna come,” he promised.

Carpenter, a Hamden native, is used to being patient. He transferre­d to Siena mid-semester last year from Lee Academy in Maine, where he was doing a post-grad year. Carpenter practiced with the team but couldn’t play, and had to wait more than a year until finally making his collegiate debut last month.

“I was anxious to play,” he recalled. “I wanted to get out there and show people what I can do.”

He made his debut Jan. 9 at Fairfield, scoring seven points off the bench in the Saints’ win. The following night, starting guard Jalen Pickett was out with a hamstring injury, and Carpenter was thrust into the starting lineup.

The 6-foot-5 freshman guard made the most of the chance, scoring a team-high 19 points to lead Siena’s 75-68 victory over the Stags.

“I just came in with the mind

 ?? H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Everton Stewart, right, in his barbershop on Friday afternoon in Bethel. Stewart has apprentice Chelsea Gotch working in the shop. An effort led by U.S. Rep. Jahana Hayes that would update and expand the national apprentice­ship program and bring an annual $2 million to Connecticu­t to promote the “earn while you learn” model of vocational developmen­t.
H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Everton Stewart, right, in his barbershop on Friday afternoon in Bethel. Stewart has apprentice Chelsea Gotch working in the shop. An effort led by U.S. Rep. Jahana Hayes that would update and expand the national apprentice­ship program and bring an annual $2 million to Connecticu­t to promote the “earn while you learn” model of vocational developmen­t.
 ??  ?? Carpenter
Carpenter

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