Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

High school graduate pipeline growing for Tesla

Classes in developmen­t also offered to students

- By Max Michor Contact Max Michor at mmichor@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0365. Follow @MaxMichor on Twitter.

As Tesla expands its Gigafactor­y 1 in Sparks, it’s putting Nevada high school graduates to work on its assembly lines.

“The thought was: As we grow from a small team out in Northern Nevada to thousands of employees, how do we build sustainabl­e pipelines,” Chris Reilly, head of workforce developmen­t and education programs at Tesla, said Wednesday.

The answer was a pilot program started in 2017, when Tesla sent 13 recent high school grads to work on manufactur­ing lines at the Gigafactor­y. The pilot was a success, Reilly said.

“The managers reached out and said ‘How fast can we grow this?’”

As the program enters its third year, Reilly and his team are searching for 50 to 60 students to join Tesla’s manufactur­ing and developmen­t program. In 2018, Tesla selected 54 Nevada students.

Tesla hired an additional 30 Nevada students last year through the Jobs for America’s Graduates program, which works with low-income high school students who are struggling or failing in school.

Jocelyn Guevara, a 17-year-old senior at Las Vegas High School, said she gave up her theater elective to join the JAG program as a sophomore.

“I think it’s really interestin­g how the experience is being made available to us,” Guevara said at an informatio­nal session hosted at her school. “These are the cars of the future.”

Guevara said she’s already got a job, thanks to the resume-building and personal developmen­t tools she learned from JAG, but is interested in joining the apprentice­ship program and going to school at University of Nevada, Reno.

“I’m really grateful,” she said. “I see success in my future with this company and this program.”

Students who apply for the apprentice­ship tour the Gigafactor­y as a group of juniors and seniors. After the tour, the group splits up, and juniors take resume-writing workshops while seniors are interviewe­d, Reilly said.

When graduates are selected, they move into housing in Reno that Tesla has reserved at a pre-negotiated rate. They work full-time making about $17 per hour at the factory while taking a 20-credit apprentice­ship course at Truckee Meadows Community College, Reilly said.

Reilly said the graduates are fulltime employees who get full benefits as well as equity in the company.

Students who don’t have vehicles can catch a shuttle from their apartment complex to the factory, where they work three 12-hour shifts alternatin­g with four 10-hour shifts each week. Graduates work on assembly lines to build batteries and electric motors for Tesla’s electric cars and energy storage products.

Graduates in the program also take personal developmen­t classes, which include financial and career developmen­t workshops.

Reilly said the apprentice­ship was inspired by vocational programs at the Southeast Career Technical Academy in Las Vegas. During a tour of the school, Reilly saw kids learning about and building basic robotics systems.

“I’ll never forget leaving that school and saying, ‘We need a program,’ ” he said.

After the two-year apprentice­ship, there’s no guarantee that kids will keep their jobs at the factory, but Reilly said several students from previous years already have been promoted.

“We’ve built a framework that can be applied to other industries,” he said, “and we’re excited about sharing that out.”

Tesla also offers a program that partners with University of Nevada, Las Vegas engineerin­g students and lets them work at the factory part-time while they train to be technician­s — the workers who maintain and troublesho­ot production robots.

“Overall we’ve seen a continuous increase in interest,” Reilly said.

Tesla has invested $37.5 million into Nevada schools to develop technology programs including robotics, cybersecur­ity and computer science, he said.

“The grant from Tesla is a game changer,” said Kerry Larnerd, director of career and technology education for the Clark County School District. “It’s getting us into the world our kids live in.”

She said that in a district where many families can’t afford to put their kids through college, technology programs can give them handson experience and skill sets they can use to further their own educations.

“They may not want to get a four-year degree, but they can keep growing in an industry that won’t require that four-year degree or will give them the opportunit­y to pursue one later,” she said.

Technology programs in Clark County schools are growing as fast as the schools’ infrastruc­ture can support them, Larnerd said.

“What we’re putting in kids’ hands these days is different from anything you’ve ever seen,” she said.

Tesla’s Gigafactor­y 1 is about 30 percent complete with 5.4 million square feet of production space, and will eventually grow into a 100-acre complex with 15.5 million square feet of production space, Reilly said.

 ?? Cathleen Allison Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? Expansion at the Tesla Gigafactor­y in Sparks is leading to growth for a program to put Nevada high school graduates to work on its assembly lines.
Cathleen Allison Las Vegas Review-Journal Expansion at the Tesla Gigafactor­y in Sparks is leading to growth for a program to put Nevada high school graduates to work on its assembly lines.

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