Opinion | Filling Jobs, and Bridging the Blue-Collar Gap - The New York Times


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Key Challenges in Manufacturing

The article highlights the significant challenge manufacturers face in finding skilled workers. This shortage is attributed to demographic shifts and cultural factors that impact the pipeline of skilled labor.

Proposed Solutions

The authors advocate for a shift from a 'just-in-time' approach to talent acquisition to a long-term investment strategy. Key elements of this strategy include:

  • Youth apprenticeships
  • Work-based learning programs
  • Integrating workplace learning with classroom education.

They emphasize that employers should actively participate in developing future workers, not passively wait for them.

Role of Employers and Policy

The article commends initiatives from organizations like the Business Roundtable but stresses the need for broader participation from more employers. It highlights concern over potential federal funding cuts for workforce and education programs that further complicate the issue. The authors believe that strong employer engagement, from designing apprenticeships to partnering with schools, is critical.

Conclusion

Ultimately, the article concludes that attracting young people to manufacturing requires employers to actively showcase the opportunities available in the field, starting now.

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To the Editor:

“Revive Manufacturing? Factories Can’t Fill Jobs Now” (Business, June 25) rightly highlights the demographic and cultural forces driving the shrinking pipeline of skilled workers. But too much of the conversation frames employers as passive recipients of talent, rather than active participants in developing it.

Employers must move from a just-in-time approach to talent to a long-term investment strategy — starting with youth apprenticeship and other forms of work-based learning. The workplace must become an extension of the classroom, where students earn while they learn and build the skills that today’s economy demands.

It’s encouraging to see coordinated leadership from the Business Roundtable and efforts like the Workforce Partnership Initiative. But we need more, especially as work force and education programs face potential federal cuts. Thousands of employers nationwide must follow suit — designing youth apprenticeships, partnering with schools and embedding learning into the job itself.

If we want more young people to see a future in manufacturing, we need more employers to show them what it looks like — on the job, starting now.

John Ladd Washington The writer is a senior adviser at the nonprofit Jobs for the Future and a former administrator at the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Apprenticeship.

To the Editor:

Farah Stockman’s article about manufacturing work-force challenges examined manufacturers’ struggles finding skilled workers. One recent Trump administration decision eliminates a promising tool to address this challenge.

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