Birmingham Workers To Receive High-Tech Job Training

The Innovate Birmingham Regional Workforce Partnership will train young adults for 925 technology jobs, with the help of $6M in federal funding.

The Innovate Birmingham Regional Workforce Partnership will train young adults in Alabama’s largest metro area for 925 high-paying technology-focused jobs, thanks to $6 million in U.S. Department of Labor funding. The training is expected to begin in spring 2017.

Innovate Birmingham
(Credit: Comstock)

The Innovate Birmingham partnership is supported by a broad coalition of business, community and education leaders who are committed to spurring economic growth in the region and improving opportunities for young adults.

“The main focus of this effort is to offer new educational opportunities for the young adults in our community to provide them with training and expertise that will enable them to have prosperous, bright futures,” said Ray Watts, president of the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). “It will positively change their futures and the futures of their families and communities.”

The Innovate Birmingham program aligns with the priorities of Accelerate Alabama, the state’s strategic economic development growth plan, according to Greg Canfield, secretary of the Alabama Department of Commerce. The Accelerate plan identified information technology (IT) as a key target area because its impact spans across many industry sectors and the jobs typically pay above-average wages.

“The Innovate Birmingham partnership is a great example of how vision and teamwork can create opportunity and drive long-term growth in a community by building on a foundation of valuable skills,” said Canfield. “Across Alabama, we’re committed to equipping our citizens with the know-how and capabilities they need to succeed in the workplace.”

The Innovate Birmingham program will be administered in the UAB Innovation Lab (UAB iLab) at Innovation Depot, a business incubator that’s home to more than 100 startups. Innovation Depot will connect participants in the program with its tenants and other partner businesses.

Birmingham
Innovation Depot stands at the center of Birmingham’s “Innovation District.” (Image: Jerry Underwood/Alabama Department of Commerce)

“At Innovation Depot, we know that IT skills stimulate entrepreneurial activity and benefit our startup companies in the highly competitive and fast-moving technology space,” said Innovation Depot President and CEO Devon Laney.

UAB said the program will use TechHire data in combination with local resources to align education and training providers with regional employers, ensuring industry-aligned skill development for workers. Birmingham was selected in 2015 to take part in TechHire, a White House program that acts as a gateway to to well-paying tech jobs.

According to TechHire data, the Birmingham region experienced the second-fastest IT job growth in the country during the first half of 2016, meaning regional workforce supply of IT skills is critical moving forward.

“As a result of this grant, a new tech talent pipeline will connect our community with high-demand information technology jobs and training,” said Brian Hilson, president and CEO of the Birmingham Business Alliance, which is involved in the partnership.

Other organizations participating in the Innovate Birmingham partnership team include the City of Birmingham, Lawson State Community College, Jefferson State Community College, Jefferson County’s Alabama Career Centers, the Central Six Workforce Development Council, and Tech Birmingham. Many of the region’s largest employers are also participating in the program.

“Our partners all want to see young adults succeed, as well as our local economy’s continued evolution as it grows and thrives,” said UAB’s Josh Carpenter, director of External Affairs in the Office of the President, who spearheaded the application.“Preparing this grant submission was an inspiring team effort indicative of the collaborative work we will do together that will absolutely change lives and transform communities.”

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