Pitching manufacturing careers a challenge amid slump

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 It’s hard to imagine a more discouraging environment to lure high school students into manufacturing
work.

The uncertain future
of Detroit automakers casts a pall over thousands of workers in central Indiana. Companies of all sorts,
from hospital equipment maker Hill-Rom Inc. to office supplies maker Deflect-O Corp., are shedding workers left and right.
From December 2007 through December 2008, Indiana lost 46,000 manufacturing jobs, or 8.4 percent.

Yet, the message that Steve Dwyer, recently retired
chief operating officer of Rolls-Royce North America, will take to central Indiana educators is that
they still need to train students for careers in manufacturing.

"There’s going to be demand for manufacturing. That doesn’t go away," Dwyer said. "The
manufacturing is going to go where people are most skilled."

Dwyer is chairman of a $1.2 million initiative called "Dream It. Do It." launched by
Conexus, a division of the Central Indiana Corporate Partnership. Conexus is using a $500,000 grant from
the Department of Workforce Development, plus $700,000 in private donations, to try to raise the number
of high school students in pre-engineering or manufacturing-trade courses over five years.

The effort has its roots in the more promising
business climate of 2006, when Cummins Inc., Toyota Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co. all announced they
would bring new jobs to Indiana.

The state’s commitment to work-force training is what tipped Cummins in favor of Columbus, where it already has 5,500 workers.
Adding a line of fuel-efficient diesel engines could bring 600 more jobs to the southern Indiana city.

Other states offered bigger tax incentives,
but company spokesman Mark Land said Cummins was more interested in building "a world-class work
force that will be able to serve us, and others, down the road."

The "Dream It. Do It." Initiative was launched in 2007 in southeastern Indiana. So far,
the focus has been on introducing middle and high school students to a nationally recognized pre-engineering
curriculum, developed by Purdue University, called Project Lead the Way.

Chairman John Burnett said educators embraced the idea of exposing more students to engineering
and math. What might be more difficult, he said, is convincing high school students to invest effort
into the same four-part certification course a laid-off auto worker would find at Ivy Tech Community
College.

The course was
created by the Manufacturing Skills Standards Council, and the Indiana State Board of Education approved teaching
it in high schools in 2007. Few have taken up the MSSC certificate so far.

"Students are going to need to know that if they receive this certification, that employers
are going to honor it," Burnett said.

He said his group is trying to get local manufacturers, including Cummins, to guarantee interviews,
or some other incentive, to students earning the certificate.

Closer to Indianapolis, the McKenzie Career Center in Lawrence Township is already selling kids
on manufacturing, Assistant Director Frank Svarczkopf said. The Project Lead the Way curriculum has been
in use for seven years, and manufacturing is one of several career-oriented components students may choose
to explore.

"They
start seeing the dollars and the competition, and how fun it can be to work with a robot in a manufacturing setting,"
Svarczkopf said. "We get some interest."

Long-term decline


Even after manufacturers recover from the current economic turmoil, jobs aren’t
expected to be plentiful in the short term.

"We’ll get a little bit of a rebound coming out of the recession, but not much," said
Mike Helmar, director of industry services at economic analysis provider Moody’s Economy. com.

The firm predicts the job market will improve
3 percent from 2010 through 2013. Then it will resume the long-term downward trend that began in 1969.

"Our forecast goes out through 2038,"
Helmar said. "We’ve got it gradually declining the whole time out there." But productivity
will grow. "We have [productivity] continuing to expand because output per employee becomes greater with efficiency gains
" Helmar said.

Indiana
has seen the same trend—downward employment with upward productivity. That’s why manufacturing still accounts for
a large portion of the state’s GDP—$70 billion, or 28 percent, in 2006.

Part of that wealth has gone to relatively high wages for people lacking college degrees. The
Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning Washington, D.C., think tank, found that, in 2006-2007, Hoosiers
without four-year degrees who worked in manufacturing earned an average $16.77 an hour, compared with
$14.80 in other fields.

Burnett, a human resources expert who is the "Dream It. Do It." leader in Columbus, thinks manufacturing will continue
to provide middle-class jobs.

"As productivity increases, the positions available to people are going to require higher
levels of skill and higher levels of pay," he said.

And he said those jobs aren’t necessarily dirty, or repetitive. "Manufacturing includes things
like embedded systems, on-board diagnostics, software systems, controls engineers."

The buzzword educators and students will likely
hear from Conexus is "advanced" manufacturing.

"How do you take someone who’s used to running a machine and teach them to program and troubleshoot
that machine?" Dwyer asked. "That’s advanced manufacturing."

Economic development consultant Graham Toft noted
that several Midwest states have initiatives that promote "advanced" manufacturing, which can
refer to the making of high-tech products or innovative processes that take their cues from the Japanese automakers.

"It’s a bit like biotech—everybody’s
got one," he said.

Indiana is still far from complete renewal of the manufacturing landscape that auto-parts makers have dominated for decades,
but Toft said it’s a vital effort.

"Singapore, Taiwan, Korea, Denmark, they take their manufacturing economy very seriously," he said. "It creates
wealth. It’s hard to grow economically unless you have a healthy component of manufacturing. It may not
be a large component, but it has to be a prosperous component."

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