Increase commitment to workforce training
Published 9:26 pm Thursday, December 17, 2015
By Glenn DuBois
Virginia is on the verge of taking an important step forward in helping individuals earn terrific career opportunities, with family-supporting salaries, and supplying our businesses with the highly-qualified employees they struggle to hire today.
I am talking about the plan Governor McAuliffe unveiled this week to expand community college training programs that lead to industry-recognized certifications.
These certifications are an increasingly important part of Virginia’s postsecondary picture. Some of Virginia’s fastest-growing industries, like cybersecurity healthcare and advanced manufacturing, boast the greatest needs for these credentials. Meanwhile, other Virginia industries are seeking ways to replace an aging workforce in essential positions like HVAC, electricians, plumbers and truck drivers.
Our commonwealth invests in individuals who pursue anything between an associate degree and a doctorate. That’s important. Virginia needs all those credentials. The need is just as great, however, for the postsecondary certifications that denote critical skills essential to keeping Virginia moving forward.
There were more than 175,000 job vacancies last year in Virginia in this category, according to research conducted by the company Burning Glass.
Those jobs paid more than $28 an hour, more than $58,000 a year, and they each sat vacant for nearly a month, longer than the national average.
We all paid a price for that. Virginia businesses lost more than 36 million hours of productivity. Individual Virginians lost more than $1 billion in wages. And our state government, which depends on income tax withholdings more than any other state save one, lost more than $54 million in tax revenue.
That’s not a one-time occurrence. During the next decade as many as two-thirds of the 1.5 million jobs Virginia must fill will require more than a high school diploma but less than a bachelor’s degree, according to leading economic analysis.
Virginia’s community colleges spent the spring and summer studying this issue, at the direction of the General Assembly and the McAuliffe administration. We listened to more than 1,500 business leaders at 22 town hall meetings held across Virginia.
While those sessions confirmed the nuances and distinctions that make our regions unique and fascinating, they all confirmed the need for more credentialed talent, and the desire to have it yesterday.
We’re not alone in identifying this need. Across the nation, 19 states are already funding the training programs that lead to these credentials. That includes many of Virginia’s neighbors, like Maryland, Kentucky and the Carolinas.
North Carolina, alone, is investing more than $92 million a year on its non-credit training programs. For the sake of comparison, Virginia spent $5 million on comparable programs last year. Virginia can do better, and we must.
The training programs that lead to these credentials are short-term, lasting weeks or months, compared to the semesters and years it takes to earn a traditional college degree. The programs cost, on average, $3,100, and there is little to no financial aid available for people pursuing them.
It’s not hard to see what a deterrent that can be given that 75 percent of Americans live paycheck-to-paycheck.
These training programs offer people a second chance to pursue their American Dream. The average age of Virginians pursuing these credentials today at our community colleges is 37, more than a decade older than the average age of those pursuing our traditional academic programs.
Given the pressures facing the Virginia economy, we have no talent to waste.
Interestingly, one out of three people who earn these industry-recognized certifications go on to earn a college degree. That means these credentials truly are stackable, supporting individuals on the way up a career ladder.
Virginia’s community colleges were created nearly 50 years ago to address the commonwealth’s unmet needs in higher education and workforce training. Today, those needs are taking the form of more credentialed talent.
We are honored to work with Gov. McAuliffe and General Assembly leaders to connect more individuals with vital career opportunities and the businesses who are eager to hire talented, trained people who will bolster their competitiveness.
Glenn DuBois is the chancellor of Virginia’s 23 community colleges, a position he has held since 2001. Email him at gdubois@VCCS.edu.