Title: FEWC:
1FEWC
- Partnering with Education and Workforce to
prepare our Future Talent
Jennifer Grove Gulf Power Company Founding Chair,
FEWC
2Gulf Power Company
- Subsidiary of Southern Company
3Florida Energy Workforce Consortium
- Formed in 2006 to develop solutions to meet the
current and future workforce needs of Floridas
energy industry - Comprised of energy industry, construction, preK
12 and post-secondary education, and workforce
representatives 60 members - Compete for a talent puddle or work together to
build a talent pool?
4The Challenge
The need for skilled, well-educated workers is
growing
More than half of todays utility workforce
will be eligible for retirement over the next 10
years. - US Bureau of Labor Statistics
Demandisup
The positions that will experience the highest
rates of attrition over the next five years are
those most difficult to fill Engineer
technicians and skilled and craft employees.-
APPA
1 in 3 U.S. workers is age 50 or older. By
2015 a 15 decline is projected in ages 35 44.
5The Challenge
There are not enough skilled workers to fill the
jobs
More than 70 of HR executives say that incoming
workers with inadequate skills are their most
serious problem over the next three years.
Deloitte Consulting
The number of high school students taking trade
or industry-related vocational and technical
courses in preparation for a skilled or craft
labor job has declined by 35 in the past
decade. - UWPN Issues Update
6Simply put, demand exceeds supply
7This shortage directly impacts the Energy Industry
- Utility workforce is four years older than
national average - US Bureau of Labor Statistics
- Demand for technical and craft workers increasing
- Failure rates on pre-employment tests are
increasing - Potential threat to both productivity and
reliability
8The New Economic Development Reality
- A skilled workforce has become more important
than land and buildings - As layers of middle management have been
eliminated, these workplace skills are
increasingly required of all employees - Critical thinking
- Problem-solving
- Communication skills
- Teamwork and Self-direction
- Global, civic, financial, economic
entrepreneurial literacy
INNOVATIVE and CREATIVE thinking!
9The Workforce Gap
Where 9th Graders Are Headed Where The Jobs Are
9
SOURCE Carol DAmico, Workforce 2020 Work
Workers in the 21st Century
10The Changing Workforce
Demand Triples
( of Total Workforce)
10
SOURCE Bureau of Labor Statistics.
11Post-Secondary Education
11
SOURCE National Center Education Statistics.
(2010)
12Workforce Misperceptions
U.S. Census Bureau
- 8 of the 10 fastest growing occupations through
2014 do not require a bachelor's degree
They Require a 2-year Associate's Degree or
Post-Secondary Training these can often be
earned in high school now have to rethink the
traditional boundaries of secondary/
post-secondary
12
SOURCE "Educate the Work Force of Tomorrow" by
Luke Bellsnyder Jon Fisher. (03/06/2009)
13So What Is Our Need?
- A qualified, diverse workforce for us and our
contractors - Various career entry points with various
educational attainments technician-level and
degreed engineers, accountants, etc. - Pipeline of students
- Core values
14Top Occupations of Concern
- Line Installers and Repairers
- Plumbers, Pipefitters Steamfitters
- Welders
- Maintenance and Repair Workers
- Electricians
- Engineering Technicians
- Engineers (electrical, mechanical, chemical,
civil) - Instrumentation Control Technicians
- Power Plant Operators
15What Are These Careers Like?
- All are high-skill, high-wage
- All require some basis of knowledge/skill prior
to entry, but we provide training - All have opportunities for advancement both
through technical and management paths - Provide world-class benefits, including pensions,
401k matches, tuition reimbursement, career
development, etc. - For more information, visit www.getintoenergy.com
16So How Do We Get There?
- PARTNER and COLLABORATE!
- Work locally, regionally, at state, and at
national levels to brand our industry careers and
create talent pipeline programs - Focus on key areas
- - State National Outreach - Career Awareness
- - Policy Education - Untapped Labor Sources
- - Funding Resources
17(No Transcript)
18Energy Competency Model
19www.getintoenergy.com
20State and National Outreach Highlights
- Collaborate with 23 other state energy consortia
- Represent and/or present at multiple state and
national energy and workforce conferences
recent and upcoming events - Sunshine State Scholars Event January, 2011
- Academies on the Hill February, 2011
- CEWD Southeast Region Meeting March, 2011
- WFI/FACTE NGLC Conference March, 2011 (Bay,
Clay, Polk, Pinellas) - Ford Partnership for Advanced Studies National
Hub Directors Meeting March, 2011 - Clay County NGLC Stakeholders Meeting May, 2011
- Polk County VPSC Strategic Planning Conference
June, 2011 - FACTE Annual Convention July, 2011
21State and National Outreach Highlights
- Collaboration with Workforce Florida
- WFI Strategic Plan explicitly addresses Energy as
key Infrastructure Industry to focus on and has
STEM focus - WFI Banner Centers (Jennifer Grove chairs ad hoc
committee) In addition to Banner Centers for
Energy, Clean Energy and Construction, the Banner
Center for Water Resources was established in
2010 - Floridas Green Jobs Workshop (5/09)
- Collaboration with STEMflorida and Florida
Chamber Talent Education Caucus through
Jennifer Groves membership on both
22Policy and Education
- Partnered with Florida Department of Education to
gain approval for the addition of an Energy
Industry Cluster - FIRST IN NATION! - Partnered with FDOE to develop energy curriculum
framework for five (5) courses - Energy Foundations
- Introduction to Alternative Energy
- Power Generation Technician
- Power Distribution Technician
- Solar Energy Technician
23Policy and Education
- Develop curriculum materials for Energy Courses
- Create Florida Energy Teachers Network will add
teacher toolkit to Get Into Energy Florida web
site - Complete and publish compilation of readily
available resources for K-12 teachers to use to
integrate energy concepts into the math, science
and reading curriculums - Develop an FEWC teacher externship program for
CTE, Science and Math teachers - Replicate energy career academies
- Partner with CEWD to ensure aligns with national
competency model and curriculum pathways
242011 Policy Education Action Items
- Develop Virtual format for energy curriculum
- Publish the Florida Energy Career Cluster Career
Guide - Continue to seek opportunities to present at
various state Teacher Workshops to introduce
Energy curriculum and STEM - Continue the Careers in Energy Week (3rd week
in October) and gain approval as an annual
proclamation. (Governor Scotts signature for
2011)
25Energy Career Academies
- Have 22 in Florida, including our Gulf Power
Academy at West Florida High School in Pensacola
(2001) - Many utilize NCCER Electrical curriculum,
resulting in industry-recognized and valued
credentials - Most offer articulation, energy industry
pre-employment testing, and local energy company
engagement - Will pilot the new energy courses at multiple
locations throughout state, both as part of
Energy Academies and as part of Get into Energy
Career Pathways pilot
26Career Awareness
- State-wide student competition to brand energy
careers (www.getintoenergyflorida.com) - Purchase of brand items marketing display,
USBs, etc. - Recognize energy-related projects at Florida
Science Fair - Recognize winners at Florida SkillsUSA state
competition - Partner with CEWD on Energy Career Pathways
program - Partner with STEMflorida on career awareness
efforts and student internship/teacher externship
programs
27Critical Success Factors
- True business engagement, for both educators AND
students - Inspire early and often (both educators AND
students), particularly in STEM disciplines - Project-based learning in teams
- Integration of academics and CTE BOTH
DIRECTIONS Reinforce CORE in CTE and teach in
context in academic classrooms! - Have to address the CTE squeeze funding and
class time - Must continue to overcome perceptions students,
parents, counselors, administrators, etc.
28Final thoughts
- STEM literacy and workforce preparedness is a
foundation for personal, community, state, and
national economic growth. - These foundations cannot just be for those
students in advanced STEM or CTE courses we
must figure out how to provide to ALL of our
students! - If we dont figure out how to do this, our
children will be working for someone in another
state or another country who did. Susan Story
at STEMflorida Business Roundtable
Thank you for what you do!
29- Jennifer Grove
- jlgrove_at_southernco.com
- www.fewc.org
- www.getintoenergy.com