Chattanooga Times Free Press

Walker Public Schools to expand workforce training

- BY ANDREW WILKINS STAFF WRITER

Four new profession­al pathways will be added to Walker Launch, Walker County School’s workforce preparedne­ss program, under a $3 million grant from the board of Georgia’s technical college system.

A learning lab for mechatroni­cs, a field relating to production lines, will be added for students this fall in the 500 Building at the Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College in Rock Spring, according to Damon Raines, Walker County Schools superinten­dent.

After that, a culinary lab will be built in the building’s kitchen, while learning labs for the health care and teacher preparatio­n pathways will be added to the nine available for students training for the workforce through Walker Launch.

“A large percentage of our students need to go directly into the workforce,” Raines said. “So this really provides them some on-the-job training before they’re on the job physically, to better prepare them for that workforce.”

Multiple local companies could hire students who complete the hospitalit­y and culinary pathway, but Raines said Rock City and the McLemore resort, both on Lookout Mountain, have expressed a need for more workers. Large Walker County employers like Roper Corp. and Audia plastics have helped develop the mechatroni­cs program, which will allow students to go directly to work after graduating high school.

Students who attend Walker Launch earn technical certificat­es of credit along with their high school diploma through dual enrollment classes at the technical college. In the first five years of the program, according to

“Our goal is to prep kids to be college- and or career-ready.”

— JOSH INGLE, SUPERINTEN­DENT FOR DADE COUNTY SCHOOLS

Walker County Schools, students collective­ly earned 108 certificat­es.

“We’ve been working on this for 18 months,” Raines said. “This is a huge collaborat­ive effort with the chamber, economic developmen­t, Top of Georgia and the school system. All of that aligns perfectly with our mission and to be able to create a workforce for those groups.”

Career pathways currently available for Walker Launch include: heating and air conditioni­ng, welding, cosmetolog­y, logistics, computer networking, criminal justice, medical assisting, health care pathways and early childhood education.

In a written statement, the school system said Walker County was the only school system to receive the grant.

Josh Ingle, superinten­dent for Dade County Schools, said he signed an agreement with Walker County Schools so their students could participat­e in any programs not available at Dade County’s job training program.

Details of the agreement still need to be worked out, he said in a phone call, adding that he expects those discussion­s will happen after the first of the year.

“Our goal is to prep kids to be college- and or career-ready,” Ingle said. “For the kids choosing to go straight to work or a technical school, we certainly want to prepare them for the workforce. Whether it’s in Dade County, Walker County or Catoosa County, all the kids in Northwest Georgia — they’re all our kids — they are the future of our workforce.”

There are 58 College & Career Academies in Georgia, including the addition of Walker Launch, and more than 3,000 business partners collaborat­e with Georgia’s College & Career Academies.

For more informatio­n on Georgia’s College & Career Academies, visit tcsg.edu/gcca.

Contact Andrew Wilkins at awilkins@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6659.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? The 500 Building on Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College’s Walker County Campus in Rock Spring, Ga., will be renovated to house Walker Launch, the Walker County Public Schools college and career academy.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO The 500 Building on Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College’s Walker County Campus in Rock Spring, Ga., will be renovated to house Walker Launch, the Walker County Public Schools college and career academy.

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