Baltimore Sun

Embrace apprentice­ships, employers

- By Paul Champion Paul Champion is president of TranZed Apprentice­ship Services based in Baltimore. His email address is championp@tranzed.org.

he U.S. is experienci­ng the lowest unemployme­nt rate since October 1969 with a rate of just 3.7 percent. Speaking in generaliti­es, this is something to be celebrated; however, with it comes new problems. The skills gap is widening on a grand scale and the labor market is screaming for a quality, skilled workforce pipeline able to fill their entry- to mid-level vacancies. Furthermor­e, as our workforce ages and retires and the number of qualified workers stagnates, we need a pipeline to train and develop skilled workers quickly and affordably. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects the labor force participat­ion rate will drop significan­tly from 67.1 percent in 2000 to 61 percent in 2026 as a result of the aging population.

A vehicle for the unemployed and under-employed as well as current incumbent workers to gain the specific skills, certificat­ions and training necessary to become that pipeline is desperatel­y needed. Luckily, that vehicle already exists and has existed for centuries: registered apprentice­ships.

Apprentice­ships build a pipeline of eager, loyal workers with skills completely customized to the employers’ needs. In addition to, in essence, “building an employee” through hand-picking the skill sets for training, companies that embrace this workforce solution experience increased retention and they save money on wages and with an improved bottom line.

TThese positive outcomes are seen around the world in apprentice­ship-friendly countries such as the United Kingdom, Australia and Canada. The labor market is changing rapidly, especially in technology-related fields, where jobs come and go as technology changes. By 2020, the United States will face a shortage of 5 million workers with the necessary technical certificat­es and credential­s, according to the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce. Jobs are becoming available with few skilled enough to fill them. In recent years, the U.S. has begun to address this issue in the technology sector as well as a myriad of other industries by investing in registered apprentice­ships.

Twenty-first-century apprentice­ship programs build on the back of traditiona­l apprentice­ship programs, such as roofing, plumbing and other industries within the trades, and expand the concept to include profession­s within informatio­n technology, health care and finance among many others. TranZed Apprentice­ship Services, affiliated with The Children’s Guild, for example, offers apprentice­ships in informatio­n technology, digital and social media, cyber security, data science, secure coding and medical assistance. Our flexible programs are tailored to both the employer’s and apprentice’s needs and offer industry-recognized certificat­es crucial to success.

Apprentice­ship is full-time, competitiv­e employment without the requiremen­t of four-year degrees, narrowing the postsec- ondary achievemen­t gap and reducing income inequality. Available to everyone, apprentice­ships offer an alternativ­e to academic-only, four-year colleges and offer a “learn by doing” environmen­t suited for individual­s of varied learning styles and educationa­l background­s. An apprentice learns, contribute­s and earns money at the same time, while studying in the classroom, training in the workplace and gaining useful, marketable skills, experience and certificat­ions.

Job openings in the U.S. totaled 7 million this month, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Many of them don’t require workers with four-year degrees, and four-year degrees don’t guarantee the skills necessary to get the job done. It’s time, then, for a better alternativ­e. As the skills gap grows, student loan debt increases and new job requiremen­ts emerge, now is the time for another source of workers to meet demand.

While continued government support for apprentice­ships is key, it is of the utmost importance for employers to lead the way by being open to apprentice­ship, and it is time to recognize registered apprentice­ship as part of a recruitmen­t strategy.

Capable apprentice­s are lining up in unpreceden­ted numbers to and fill the millions of existing job openings. Now we look to employers to open their doors.

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