Knox County is one step closer to a Skilled Trades Academy and Regional Training Center (START). The school is “designed to attract, train, and retain a quality workforce in the construction industry.”
“Knox County is committed to creating opportunities for everyone to thrive,” Mayor Glenn Jacobs said in a statement. “This academy does that by advancing alternative pathways for students and residents while ensuring that our growing workforce will be ready and able to meet the needs of our trade businesses.”
A vote is slated by the county commission is next week on whether or not to approve a five-year lease agreement with John H. Daniel to secure the company’s warehouse. Associated Builders and Contractors — Greater Tennessee (ABC Greater Tennessee) would run the school.
The academy will focus on teaching a variety of trades “framing, masonry, electrical, welding, and mechanical.” The schools will be taught by instructors currently practicing their trade in the field, and the courses will be Department of Labor approved.
ABC – Greater Tennessee President/CEO Clay Crownover said, “For decades, students have been told that college is the only route to a high paying, rewarding career. Through this program and our 25 years of providing training in Tennessee, we will be able to show potential students that working while learning is a quality and financially prudent path to take.”
The Association has an academy in Nashville, and is “part of 69 state chapters across the country representing 21,000 merit shop construction and construction-related firms.”
“Currently, there are tremendous opportunities in the skilled trades. We need more welders, plumbers, electricians, mechanics, carpenters, masons, and many others. The START Center will help folks interested in these careers get the training they need to be successful!” Mayor Jacobs wrote on Twitter about the effort.
Currently, there are tremendous opportunities in the skilled trades. We need more welders, plumbers, electricians, mechanics, carpenters, masons, and many others. The START Center will help folks interested in these careers get the training they need to be successful! https://t.co/YGwYNzbGty
— Glenn Jacobs (@GlennJacobsTN) December 6, 2021
The state of Tennessee will provide ABC of Greater Tennessee with $1 million to complete the training center to build a classroom space for proper training. Any leftover money will be put towards creating a scholarship program, the Knox County statement notes.
If the academy is approved, Knox County would take control of the warehouse. The academy would be built by March of 2022, and by August, ABC General Tennessee would begin teaching classes, the statement said.
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Morgan Nicole Veysey is a reporter for The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network. Follow her on Twitter. Email tips to [email protected]
Photo “Glenn Jacobs” by Gage Skidmore. CC BY-SA 2.0.
Make no mistake, Glenn Jacobs is NOT paying for a school to teach construction trades! He’s just trying to take credit for something that the citizens have to pay for.
Jacobs is just another slick politician trying to sound as if he’s all “conservative”. Remember him backing Leftist Eddie Mannis as a Republican? Remember him selling the new stadium to move the Smokies back to Knoxville, and help out poor old Randy Boyd? And remember, his stage name is Kane, not Able!
FYI: Tennessee Star….the light gray on white font in the comments field is incredibly difficult to read. It’d be nice it if was changed to a the standard black color. It would make proofreading comments before posting a lot easier. Or add an edit button.
With vocational offering disappearing from public schools, this need to happen. Not everyone has the aptitude to go to college. Yes, that’s right I said it. It’s not your God given right to have a college education. More often than not, you never finish and left with a huge government backed student load that you have to pay off or else.
Any idiot with 2 brain cells to rub together should have known that ‘college or else McDonalds’ are not viable nor reasonable choices.
I wish he would run for Governor against Lee.