logo
Las Vegas residents desired in growing manufacturing industry

Las Vegas residents desired in growing manufacturing industry

Yahoo17-04-2025

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) – Unleashing the gliding, ruby-tipped prong, Las Vegas-area students manufactured everyday metal objects. The gleam from their creations holds the eye of around 200 employers.
Well ahead of President Donald Trump's call for the renewal of domestic manufacturing, City of Henderson leadership is already welcoming industrial investment with a unique strategy: produce the workforce ahead of production.
Jared Smith, the City of Henderson's economic development and tourism director, pointed to the Debra March Center of Excellence as the result of smart, public-private planning.
'The College of Southern Nevada has the expertise, has the programs in place that our people need to be trained in these programs,' he said. 'We had the land; we built the building. They control all of the training. And companies come to us as partners to help solve those workforce challenges real quick.'
The idea is this. When a company signals its interest in building a facility in Southern Nevada, for example Haas Automation, hundreds employees must be trained on advanced manufacturing. The employer is then able to work in partnership with city staff and College of Southern Nevada educators to plan a college program and by the end of the semester workers can walk into the new plant.
'We're really diving into the future of training and partnership between the private sector and the public sector,' Smith said.
Some potential employers can also compensate students for their coursework since it will directly translate into a career. The hands-on training comes from industry professionals interested in keeping pace with the evolving industry.
'The more that we can train our people and create a resilient workforce and are in a resilient city, the better we will be known nationally and worldwide,' Smith said.
The whir of the machine shop couldn't hide the enthusiastic vocal timbre of the manufacturing director, Dan Flick.
'If it's industrial maintenance technicians, automation technicians, machinists, anything to do with making something, I mean, you can't go wrong,' he said, tilting over a tabletop robotic arm.
Flick stood in his classroom, which was walled with the latest in automated machinery units. He said the outdated view of manufacturing, for some detractors, has missed the years of industry evolution.
'People think, I'm going to be in a factory doing one thing, pushing a button, changing a part, or watching a machine make ice cream,' Flick said. 'Yeah, that's not where you're going to end up.'
Some work may be basic, but the equipment he teaches with is straight from the factory floor. Flick said many of his students have gone on to own and manage their personal companies with the education they have received.
'The world's your oyster,' he said. 'But you just got to stick to it. You got to understand the basics. And once you get that, it's, it's looking pretty good.'
Flick said interested students can email him on how to enter the program at daniel.flick@csn.edu or call 702-651-3727.
From Amazon to Pepsi, potential employers are knocking on the classroom door for the educated workforce to wrap up their homework, including Jose Covarrubias, tool and dye manager at Sunshine Minting.
'Here in Nevada, it was hard to find skilled labor,' he said. 'And once we partnered up with Dan Flick and his program, we were able to hire apprentices.'
The coursework also helping some employees who needed a retooling on computer numerical control (CNC) basics, according to Covarrubias.
'We hired five people that were very unskilled when it came to CNC machining,' he said. 'Within halfway through the class, they had already completed maybe 300 programs at work. So, 100% of everything that was taught in class was something that they could use hands-on at work.'
The work comes with some benefits, as Covarrubias pointed to the starting apprenticeship pay at $22.50 an hour.
'On top of us paying for you to take these classes,' he said.
Covarrubias said the industry is seeing a large shortage of advanced manufacturing workers and noted the long line of employers waiting nearby.
'There's like a list of 200 companies around Nevada that are all ready to hire and willing to hire and high-paying jobs,' he said.
The job is a far cry from working on a Model T assembly line, Covarrubias said, some may be surprised by the amount of computer work versus manual labor.
'I would say 60% of the work is done on the computer, and that's really where these classes really come in place,' he said. 'You are expected to get your hands dirty, but it's not dingy, it's a clean room with air conditioning.'
CSN courses are available mornings, afternoons, and evenings and can be made to fit student's schedules, according to CSN. Potential employers include Blue Bunny, Haas Automation, Entek, Sunshine Minting, Pepsi, and Amazon.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rigetti Computing Stock Down 37% As Nvidia CEO Sees ‘Inflection Point'
Rigetti Computing Stock Down 37% As Nvidia CEO Sees ‘Inflection Point'

Forbes

time22 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Rigetti Computing Stock Down 37% As Nvidia CEO Sees ‘Inflection Point'

Nvidia CEO says quantum computing is reaching 'an inflection point' and Rigetti Computing stock is up slightly — but down 37% in 2025. Should you buy? Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is now a quantum computing booster after a March conversion. Actively traded Rigetti Computing enjoyed a slight boost to its stock price which is down 37% in 2025 — after a 970% increase since June 2024. The company's recent earnings report does not support a bull case for Rigetti stock. Yet the longer-term opportunity for quantum computing could be significant, according to my June 10 interview with MIT expert Jonathan Ruane. Quantum computing — which uses super-cooled metal to power more calculations per circuit than classical computing can perform — is capturing the attention of investors. How so? Publicly-traded quantum computing stocks soared Wednesday before reversing direction later in the day. For example, according to Yahoo! Finance The reason? 'Quantum computing is reaching an inflection point,' Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told a crowd at Nvidia GTC Paris Wednesday, reported Yahoo! Finance. 'We are within reach' of using quantum computers for 'areas that can solve some interesting problems in the coming years,' Huang added. This brings up an important observation about the industry: when Jensen Huang talks about quantum computing, people listen. That's my modern-day twist on the old catchphrase — 'When E.F. Hutton talks, people listen' — from a TV commercial for the late brokerage firm. Rigetti is among the most heavily traded public companies on the stock exchange — but should it be? The arguments opposing investor interest seem compelling: the company's stock has fallen 37% so far in 2025 and its first quarter 2025 financial results. Yet if prognosticators such as MIT Lecturer John Ruane are correct, the future of quantum computing could be very bright if certain problems are solved in the next five to ten years, he told me in a June 10 interview. Meanwhile Rigetti sees a bright future. 'We are four to five years from real commercial value of quantum computing,' Rigetti CEO Subodh Kulkarni told Asking For A Trend. 'That's where the market is really supposed to grow and be large enough where things like sales and EPS start becoming much more critical at that point. At this point, it's all about technology development and how we are getting the milestones done so that we enable this large $100 plus billion market in the future,' he added. Huang's views on QC have evolved significantly this year. He went from saying in January QC could be 15 to 30 years away from offering practical solutions to business problems, noted Investopedia, to seeing QC at an inflection point on June 11. During the interim, in March Huang announced a bet on a Boston-area research center to help Nvidia overcome the impediments to realizing the technology's potential, I wrote in my March Forbes post. At the moment, QC is based on fragile hardware and error rates that are unacceptably high for most practical applications. Classical computers rely on linear algebra, noted Yahoo! Finance. QCs, however, have far more processing capability because they apply quantum mechanics and advanced mathematics — making them amenable to solving problems in 'cybersecurity, cryptography, and chemistry,' reported Yahoo! Finance. Perhaps Huang was motivated to make his Wednesday remarks by IBM — which on June 10 announced plans to launch in 2029 a large-scale QC capable of 'operating without errors,' according to IEEE Spectrum. Google released a quantum computing chip called Willow in December, saying the technology "paves the way to a useful, large-scale quantum computer," noted Yahoo! Finance. While Amazon and Microsoft announced two quantum chips in February. Compared to these recent announcements, Huang's remarks were relatively content free. Meanwhile, Rigetti seems to have relatively little capital compared to these tech giants. What's more, the company says it is years away from being little more than a technology researcher hoping for a breakthrough from which the company can generate revenues. Rigetti's first quarter 2025 results were disappointing. The company's $1.5 million in revenue for the quarter fell more than 42% short of expectations while earnings per share of 13 cents missed by 84%, according to Google Finance. Rigetti net profit was less then met the eye. The company reported a $42.6 million profit in the first quarter of 2025, 'driven mainly by non-cash gains tied to financial instruments,' noted Quantum Insider. As Rigetti ramped up utility-scale quantum systems, the company revealed a $21.6 million operating loss. One thing Rigetti has going for it is the 970% increase in the company's stock price in the last year. The company has wisely capitalized on that increase to sell $350 million in common stock to raise its cash balance to about $570 million, according to Perhaps this cash will shore up the company's finances over the next four or five years as a hoped-for increase in revenue ultimately emerges. 'Quantum computing breakthroughs in science and engineering will make the tool more valuable for business. Better error correction algorithms will make QC less expensive and more consistent. Better performance will increase QC's commercial viability. Google's Willow chip showed big improvements in error correction,' Ruane told me in a June 10 interview. 'Engineering larger systems — including the chip and the surrounding infrastructure — that work together can improve QC's value to business. Google and IBM will operate across a rage of innovations to build powerful hardware platforms. Software startups will develop technology which venture capitalists will find amenable.' Ecosystems will be essential if the U.S. wants to lead the world in QC. 'Universities like MIT and Harvard will collaborate with large companies and startups to build ecosystems. Nvidia's Boston-based Accelerated Quantum Research Center is a good example. In May 2025, a new act was proposed — the quantum sandbox — aims to help create QC ecosystems,' he said. Problems with hardware and algorithms will need to be solved before achieving quantum advantage — where quantum surpasses classical computing. 'QC has the potential to make pharmaceutical development more efficient. This is not certain. There is a need to focus on hardware and algorithms. MIT and Harvard have algorithm developers like Aram Harrow,' he explained. It remains to be seen which problems will be more amenable to QC than classical computing. 'It is unclear whether QC will help make large language models easier to train and operate. Who could know what AI would end up doing?' 'There will never be a day when every person can have their own quantum computer — due to the physics. The use cases of QC are also unclear. QC may be operating more like supercomputers in hybrid clouds with classical computers. Everybody could end up using QC through apps powered by the hybrid cloud.' Business leaders will need new skills to take advantage of QC. Executives must 'learn how to reimagine solutions to previously unsolvable business problems using QC. This could be in areas such as logistics where a company is trying to optimize its supply chain.' If quantum advantage is near, will Rigetti be able to capitalize on it — or will IBM, Nvidia, Amazon, Google, and Microsoft get the lion's share?

Manchester City director James Smith to return to Everton in recruitment role
Manchester City director James Smith to return to Everton in recruitment role

New York Times

time28 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Manchester City director James Smith to return to Everton in recruitment role

Manchester City's director of scouting and recruitment James Smith is leaving the club and is expected to re-join Everton. Smith's anticipated return to Goodison Park – where he was head of technical scouting from 2003 during David Moyes' first spell in charge, before following the Scot to Manchester United in 2013 – would continue a behind-the-scenes revamp under new chief executive Angus Kinnear. Advertisement There is a healthy relationship between the Premier League sides and talks over Smith's return to Merseyside have been amicable. Smith has been placed on gardening leave by City, who are also restructuring their set-up under new director of football Hugo Viana. Viana is picking up where his predecessor, Txiki Begiristain, left off in aiming to strengthen the link between senior and youth levels at the Etihad Stadium. A reunion of Moyes and Smith will be seen by many as a coup for Everton, with the former highly-regarded in the game after his work at the two Manchester clubs. Smith would effectively replace Dan Purdy, Everton's former head of recruitment who The Athletic revealed in April had decided to leave. Purdy has since joined former Everton director of football Kevin Thelwell at Rangers. Everton's new set-up also includes Nick Hammond as head of trading/negotiating, having joined from Leeds United, and Chris Howarth, the head of strategy. They are also hoping to install a new head of football operations following a process being handled by executive search firm Nolan Partners. Former Leeds director Kinnear, to whom Smith will report, started his role last month following the decision by new owners, The Friedkin Group (TFG), not to renew Thelwell's contract in a major executive overhaul. It promises to be a pivotal summer transfer window for the Merseyside club before they head into their new stadium with 15 players, at one stage, set to see their deals expire at the end of June. It has already been announced that three of that group, Ashley Young and backup goalkeepers Joao Virginia and Asmir Begovic, are to leave the club. Midfielder Abdoulaye Doucoure will also depart after turning down a new deal, but Everton have exercised the €15million purchase option to make Carlos Alcaraz's loan from Flamengo permanent. Everton remain in talks over a new deal for veteran midfielder Idrissa Gueye. (Tony McArdle/Everton FC via Getty Images)

Investment CEO Tells Convention Audience That 60 Percent of Them Will Be Unemployed Next Year Due to AI
Investment CEO Tells Convention Audience That 60 Percent of Them Will Be Unemployed Next Year Due to AI

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Investment CEO Tells Convention Audience That 60 Percent of Them Will Be Unemployed Next Year Due to AI

Although hundreds of billions of dollars have been poured into AI development, nearly 75 percent of businesses have failed to deliver the return on investment promised to them. The hyped up tech is notoriously buggy and in some ways now actually getting worse, with project failure rates on the rise. Despite staring into the maw of a colossal money pit, tech CEOs are doubling down, announcing plans to increase spending on AI development, going as far as laying off armies of workers to cut down on expenditures. And while some investors footing the bill for big tech's AI bacchanalia are starting to wonder when they'll see cash start trickling back into their pockets, private equity billionaire Robert Smith isn't one of them. Speaking at the SuperReturn conference in Berlin last week, Smith told a crowd of 5,500 of his fellow ultrarich investors that at least 60 percent of them would be out on the street within a year thanks to the power of AI. "We think that next year, 40 percent of the people at this conference will have an AI agent and the remaining 60 percent will be looking for work," Smith lectured. "There are 1 billion knowledge workers on the planet today and all of those jobs will change. I'm not saying they'll all go away, but they will all change." "You will have hyperproductive people in organizations, and you will have people who will need to find other things to do," the investor ominously intoned. Smith was speaking primarily about "AI agents," a vague sales term that mostly seems to mean "large language model that can complete tasks on its own." For example, OpenAI rolled out a research "Operator" that was supposed to help compile research from all over the web into detailed analytical reports earlier this year. There's only one issue with the billionaire's prediction — AI agents so far remain absolutely awful at doing all but the simplest tasks, and there's little indication the industry is about to rapidly revolutionize their potential anytime soon. (OpenAI's Operator is no exception, often conflating internet rumor with scholarly fact.) Meanwhile in the real world, a growing number of businesses that rushed to replace workers with AI agents, like the financial startup Klarna, have now come to regret their decision as it largely blows up in their faces. It doesn't take an AI agent to scrape together another explanation for Smith's absurd claim. His private equity fund, Vista Equity Partners, is among the largest in the world. Dealing almost exclusively in software and tech, Smith has a cozy relationship with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, and just raised $20 billion for AI spending — its largest fund to date. Now responsible for billions of dollars in investments that are tied down to a disappointing AI industry, it's really just a matter of time for Smith before his claims either pay out — or the chickens come home to roost. More on AI: Therapy Chatbot Tells Recovering Addict to Have a Little Meth as a Treat Sign in to access your portfolio

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store