Newton manufacturers give input to legislators about skilled worker shortage

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owa State Sen. Dennis Black, Iowa State Rep. Dan Kelley and Newton Community Development Director Bryan Friedman listen as Iowa Senate Majority Leader Mike Gronstal (second from left) speaks about the need to fill Iowa's "skilled worker gap." (Bob Eschliman/Daily News)

Iowa ranks fifth out of the 50 states in manufacturing as a percentage of its gross domestic product. But, as more baby boomers prepare to retire and leave the workforce, Iowa’s strong manufacturing sector could be in danger.

“We have a skilled labor shortage,” Iowa Senate Majority Leader Mike Gronstal told a group of more than two dozen Newton manufacturing executives and community leaders during a town hall meeting Thursday afternoon at the Newton Development Corporation office.

“I’m sick of hearing about it. I want to know what we can do about it,” he added. “I want to see what the Legislature can do to expand the training available in Iowa, but I want to hear what those gaps are from you.”

DMACC Business Resources Director Kim Didier said most of those in attendance were manufacturing businesses that had already benefitted from the community college’s “260E” and “260F” job training programs that help qualified businesses offset the cost of training new and existing workers, respectively. DMACC President Rob Denson, who also was in attendance, said he hoped legislators would look at expanding the 260F program.

“Currently, there is a cap of $25,000 per qualified business, and the fund — which used to sit at about $10 million — is now funded at about $4 million,” he said. “I’d like to see the cap raised to $50,000 and the fund brought back to about $10 million.”

Denson also asked for the ability to levy more revenue to build more physical space for training programs. He said DMACC currently offers 150 programs, all of which are full and have waiting lists, despite some programs offering classes around the clock.

“We can only create so many students at a time,” he said. “Each class can only have about 16 students, based on accreditation and space constraints.”

Thombert Inc. president Dick Davidson said DMACC produces 16 employees per class, but the manufacturing section could use about 60. He said even his business, which he said is small in scale, is constrained by its ability — or lack thereof — to fill skilled positions.

Several manufacturing executives echoed those sentiments. More than half of those in attendance said they had current skilled openings they have been unable to fill with the current workforce.

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