logo
Southwest PA students are upskilling for automation with a federally-backed program — and it's seeking instructors

Southwest PA students are upskilling for automation with a federally-backed program — and it's seeking instructors

Technical.ly14-03-2025

A new local training program is offering job seekers a free opportunity to develop in-demand skills in an increasingly automated industry.
Launched earlier this month, Butler County Community College's (BC3) Industrial Equipment Technician program trains students on how to use equipment that goes hand-in-hand with the increased automation of manufacturing processes.
Classes are already full through September, but the program is looking for additional instructors to train those who join the waitlist, the coordinator of professional education and certificate programs at BC3, Kate Buza, told Technical.ly.
'Since we've had such a great response to it,' Buza said, 'now we are looking to find another instructor so we don't have to wait all the way until September to offer it again.'
The program was designed specifically for job seekers and to upskill current workers by offering hands-on training in equipment diagnostics, troubleshooting, safety and maintenance in several key areas:
AC/DE electrical systems
Hydraulics and pneumatics
Industrial electrical wiring
Programmable logic controllers
$850k in funding and other partnerships crucial to programming
This year is the first year a program like this has been offered at BC3, Buza said, and it's thanks to $850,000 from the Build Back Better (BBB) Regional Challenge Grant, a $62.7 million investment in Southwestern Pennsylvania's economic development.
The nonprofit New Economy Collaborative (NEC) is tasked with distributing the BBB funding across five distinct projects, all focused on adoption, upskilling infrastructure and commercialization in the robotics sector.
BC3's new training program falls under Project 3, which aims to expand pathways to new careers and is the upskilling element of NEC's efforts to support economic development in the region.
BC3 also tapped an advisory board of local manufacturers to help design the program, Buza said.
'Our advisory board talked about the need for more automation,' Buza said, 'and finding workers who have skills, at least on a basic level, of electrical work, working with programmable logic controllers and motor control.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

With federal support for robotics and defense, this Pennsylvania town is reinventing itself
With federal support for robotics and defense, this Pennsylvania town is reinventing itself

Technical.ly

time4 days ago

  • Technical.ly

With federal support for robotics and defense, this Pennsylvania town is reinventing itself

The New Economy Collaborative of Southwestern Pennsylvania announced a $62.7 million Build Back Better grant toward workforce development in Southwestern Pennsylvania. Follow coverage of the 11-county project here. If you're a company looking for defense manufacturing, Southwestern PA is the place to be. For the 34th year in a row, major corporations from around the world joined government officials and local organizations in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, to attract defense contracts to the region. Called the Showcase for Commerce, the annual event has long served as a hub for collaboration, where attendees from around the world come to exchange ideas, forge partnerships and ink defense contracts that fuel the regional economy. But Johnstown faces a growing challenge — who will do the work to fulfill these defense contracts? 'We're losing young people,' said David Grimaldi, director of workforce development at JARI, a nonprofit economic development organization in Johnstown. 'We just want to keep the people and provide a workforce for our manufacturers who are in desperate need of it because of the contracts they have.' The Johnstown metro area ranked as the third fastest-shrinking city in the country in 2017, and in the years since, it has struggled to reverse that trend. The most recent figures put the population of Johnstown proper at 17,668, a nearly 4% decline since the 2020 Census, or a drop of nearly 1% per year, according to data from the World Population Review. With local defense manufacturers like Lockheed Martin and Martin-Baker America landing big contracts in recent years, demand for entry level workers trained in basic manufacturing skills is growing, according to Grimaldi, and federal dollars are already flowing into Johnstown to address this problem. The New Economy Collaborative (NEC) of Southwestern Pennsylvania, an organization tasked with administering $62.7 million of the federal Build Back Better (BBB) Regional Challenge, is providing grants to organizations in the region to expand pathways to entrepreneurship and new manufacturing jobs. That $62.7 million is part of a broader $1 billion BBB initiative, launched in 2021 through the American Rescue Plan to spur post-pandemic economic recovery and revitalize communities impacted by decades of industrial decline. Southwestern Pennsylvania was fortunate to receive federal funding to supercharge robotics and automation, according to Jackie Erickson, the senior director of federal government affairs for the Allegheny County Conference on Community Development, which is part of the NEC. 'For many years, most of the funding for robotics went into Carnegie Mellon University, and a lot of that was geared towards the defense sector,' Erickson said. But in recent years, partially thanks to NEC funding, robotics adoption is spreading beyond the city of Pittsburgh, out into more rural areas of Southwestern Pennsylvania. The NEC is deploying funds through five projects across 11 counties in the region, including Cambria County, where Johnstown is located. The projects focus on adopting robotics in manufacturing, upskilling the regional workforce and commercializing new technologies for the advanced manufacturing sector. Helping people find work, helping companies find skilled labor JARI recently received a $144,000 grant from the New Economy Collaborative to support workforce development programs aimed at underemployed and unemployed residents in the region. 'We go directly into the Johnstown Housing Authority units and provide work readiness skills to those people that are underemployed or unemployed, giving them the skills that they need to get into the workforce,' said Grimaldi, the organization's workforce director. The initiative is already showing results. In the first cohort of JARI's Work Readiness Program, a mother and daughter participated together, Grimaldi said. After her father's recent death, the daughter had been working part time at a local Dollar General, while her mother was unemployed. Completing the program helped the daughter get into Drexel University, while her mother enrolled at the Greater Johnstown Career and Technology Center to train as an automotive technician. Without NEC and BBB funding, JARI wouldn't be able to offer as many economic development opportunities in the area, Grimaldi said. Down the street, a local makerspace called Made in Johnstown is using the same federal funding to change residents' lives through workforce training bootcamps, certification classes and entrepreneurial mentorship. Director Michael Rottam received federal funding routed through the NEC to help him launch the makerspace and provide programming. Since opening Made in Johnstown's doors, he's seen the space make a tangible impact on the community. 'One gentleman who went through our bootcamp, he was working at the local Walmart and had three children and wanted to better his life,' Rottman said. After attending the makerspace's workforce training bootcamp, the father enrolled in a local vocational school to become a robotics technician and now works for a local manufacturer. 'Robotics and defense go hand in hand' JARI and Made in Johnstown were featured at last week's event, where government officials from both sides of the aisle, including US Sen. John Fetterman and US Rep. Glenn Thompson, were able to see their work firsthand. The showcase has a rich history, according to Allegheny Conference's Erickson, who helped coordinate the showcase for a number of years while working for Bob Casey, Pennsylvania's former senator. Over 30 years ago, former US Rep. John Murtha established the showcase to promote job creation and advanced manufacturing in the region, Erickson said. Since his death in 2010, the event has continued with strong bipartisan support. The showcase has helped introduce large and small manufacturers from around the world to the region, helping develop a strong defense supply chain in Cambria and surrounding counties. And Southwestern Pennsylvania is well positioned to advance the defense sector moving forward, Erickson said. 'Robotics and defense go hand in hand,' Erickson said. 'As we look towards what the Defense Department is doing with different and new capabilities for future national security reasons, robotics is going to be at the heart of that.'

A Pittsburgh community college leans into ‘mechatronics' to upskill for debt-free careers
A Pittsburgh community college leans into ‘mechatronics' to upskill for debt-free careers

Technical.ly

time14-05-2025

  • Technical.ly

A Pittsburgh community college leans into ‘mechatronics' to upskill for debt-free careers

A federally funded mechatronics lab in Pittsburgh is helping students land tech jobs quickly without taking on student debt. In Pittsburgh's shifting landscape, regional manufacturers say demand for skilled workers in the field is growing fast, but companies are struggling to fill roles, according to Justin Starr, an endowed professor of advanced technology at the Community College of Allegheny County (CCAC). His program aims to change that by preparing students with the skills needed to step into modern manufacturing careers, without putting them thousands of dollars in the hole. 'The story that sometimes gets lost is that manufacturing is different than it used to be,' Starr told CCAC launched a new lab for mechatronics, which is the study of mechanical, electrical and computer systems used to operate and automate modern manufacturing machines, in 2023. Backed by $1.8 million from the federal Build Back Better (BBB) Regional Challenge grant, the space is outfitted with cutting-edge robotics equipment commonly used in today's manufacturing facilities. Mechatronics students at CCAC have a graduation and job placement rate of over 90%, according to Starr, and students are walking away without debt because of the program's low cost, something that's increasingly uncommon in today's education system. 'What we do is teach students to be able to effectively operate advanced manufacturing lines so they can go out there and be the people who are building the equipment of today and tomorrow,' Starr said. Christofer Main, 21, is one of them. As a plastic extrusion technician at VEKA, a window systems manufacturer in Beaver County, Main is completing a two-year apprenticeship that allows him to work and earn a salary while studying at CCAC. Main said the program was a clear choice, especially now, when he has a baby on the way. 'With college, my wife, for example, she's $40,000 in debt,' Main said. 'I don't have $40,000 just laying around. Monthly payments are crazy. This way, I still get paid to come to school and I don't have to worry about that debt.' Fast, reliable access to a skillset that pays The program's associate degree graduation rates have fallen in recent years, but Starr said that's actually a sign of success. Students are getting the skills they need to be productive with employers after just one semester or one year. '[Students] will go get a job, and they might not stick around for a full two years,' Starr said, 'because they're making $35 an hour and they're 18 years old.' Ethan Miller, 18, another VEKA apprentice studying at CCAC, is currently making around $40,000, plus free schooling, straight out of high school. 'You can't go to college and get paid for it unless you're a football player,' Miller said. 'I can get paid to go to school, and school is free, no debt. That beats college.' For some, CCAC's program is also a path to stability in a new country. Nahid Khajazada came to Pittsburgh in 2021 after the Taliban retook control of Afghanistan. She's currently living in the city alone while her family remains overseas. After a year in CCAC's mechatronics program, she landed an internship with local startup RealBotics. Khajazada said she hopes to transfer to a four-year university and eventually start her own company. 'Here, I've learned a lot of things,' she said. 'I'm more confident with how to work with this kind of stuff.' 'Mechatronics' over 'advanced manufacturing' hooks more people Funding for CCAC's mechatronics lab comes from the New Economy Collaborative (NEC) of Southwestern Pennsylvania, which is administering $62.7 million of the BBB Regional Challenge grant. That $62.7 million is part of a broader $1 billion BBB initiative, launched in 2021 through the American Rescue Plan to spur post-pandemic economic recovery and revitalize communities impacted by decades of industrial decline. The NEC is deploying the funds through five projects across 11 counties in the region, including Pittsburgh. CCAC's mechatronics lab is part of Project Three, which focuses on upskilling workers and expanding career pathways into sectors like advanced manufacturing, a major industry in the Pittsburgh region that's driving real economic mobility, Starr said. There are over 90,000 people employed by over 2,800 manufacturing companies in the Pittsburgh region, according to data from the nonprofit organization Pittsburgh Regional Alliance. However, stigma around manufacturing remains, according to Starr. 'We have a lot of students whose parents maybe did manufacturing in the 70s and 80s, and they think it's dirty,' Starr said. 'They think it's a field where their son or daughter could get laid off if they go into it.' To get around this, CCAC uses the term mechatronics to convey that the skills it's teaching are high tech and part of the advanced manufacturing industry. The field blends traditional manufacturing skills, like wiring and mechanical drives, with advanced technologies such as programmable controllers and collaborative robots. 'Technology changes constantly,' Starr said, 'and if we're going to fill a need in the region, we need to train our students to use the equipment that either industry is using today, or that industry is going to be using tomorrow.'

Southwest PA students are upskilling for automation with a federally-backed program — and it's seeking instructors
Southwest PA students are upskilling for automation with a federally-backed program — and it's seeking instructors

Technical.ly

time14-03-2025

  • Technical.ly

Southwest PA students are upskilling for automation with a federally-backed program — and it's seeking instructors

A new local training program is offering job seekers a free opportunity to develop in-demand skills in an increasingly automated industry. Launched earlier this month, Butler County Community College's (BC3) Industrial Equipment Technician program trains students on how to use equipment that goes hand-in-hand with the increased automation of manufacturing processes. Classes are already full through September, but the program is looking for additional instructors to train those who join the waitlist, the coordinator of professional education and certificate programs at BC3, Kate Buza, told 'Since we've had such a great response to it,' Buza said, 'now we are looking to find another instructor so we don't have to wait all the way until September to offer it again.' The program was designed specifically for job seekers and to upskill current workers by offering hands-on training in equipment diagnostics, troubleshooting, safety and maintenance in several key areas: AC/DE electrical systems Hydraulics and pneumatics Industrial electrical wiring Programmable logic controllers $850k in funding and other partnerships crucial to programming This year is the first year a program like this has been offered at BC3, Buza said, and it's thanks to $850,000 from the Build Back Better (BBB) Regional Challenge Grant, a $62.7 million investment in Southwestern Pennsylvania's economic development. The nonprofit New Economy Collaborative (NEC) is tasked with distributing the BBB funding across five distinct projects, all focused on adoption, upskilling infrastructure and commercialization in the robotics sector. BC3's new training program falls under Project 3, which aims to expand pathways to new careers and is the upskilling element of NEC's efforts to support economic development in the region. BC3 also tapped an advisory board of local manufacturers to help design the program, Buza said. 'Our advisory board talked about the need for more automation,' Buza said, 'and finding workers who have skills, at least on a basic level, of electrical work, working with programmable logic controllers and motor control.'

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