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E-TEAM
MACHINIST TRAINING PROGRAM
  
The E-Team Machinist Training Program is a young partnership
through which a union and a community organization join forces
to retain and expand good jobs in their community. It exemplifies
the start-up of a small, tightly-focused new partnership in
a smaller geographic area.
History
Until recently, people grew up in the working-class Boston
suburb of Lynn, Massachusetts expecting to work at the local
General Electric (GE) plant like their parents did. As GE
and other manufacturers in the area reduced their workforces
over the last decade, firms eliminated most internal training
programs. Workers worried that their children might never
work at GE, and also that they themselves might lose their
jobs and not have the skills needed to get another job as
good. At the same time, the Essex County Community organization
(ECCO), an Industrial Areas Foundation model community organization,
found that its members were concerned about the lack of good
jobs, and began to address both unemployment and underemployment.
In response to worker and community concerns, members of
ECCO, and of International Union of Electrical Workers (IUE)
Local 201, to which most GE employees belong, reached out
to each other and formed the E-Team, a training program designed
to respond to unemployment and underemployment. Lynn is the
home to both ECCO's leading parish and the IUE Local 201.
Goals
- To create and retain good jobs and a stronger economic
base for the community;
- To establish standards that assure high-quality, worker-focused
training delivered by experienced instructors;
- To maintain wage and benefit standards and opportunity
for trainees;
- To meet employer needs for new workers and new skills
in the existing workforce.
Activities
The E-Team Machinist Training Program offers entry-level
training and placement, including some basic skills remediation,
for machinists. This is a small training program without an
institutional home. Training occurs in multiple locations,
including a local vocational school's machine shop. The community
college provides screening and basic skills training.
- To increase opportunities in immigrant community the union
helped sponsor English as a Second Language (ESL) classes.
The ESL program serves as a feeder program. Upon graduation,
ESL participants are recruited into the machinist training.
Results
- Standards for training were raised because of union experience
and knowledge that improved trainee employment opportunities.
Of the first 32 graduates, three continued in school and
25 were placed or promoted in their existing jobs.
- Community partners at the insistence of the union came
to accept higher wage and benefit expectations for graduates.
Graduates received better job offers.
- Unions have contributed leadership and experience to the
design and delivery of the curriculum. They have also played
a significant role in recruitment, accounting for a third
of all of the people entering training.
- The visible leadership of the religious communities helped
to keep the coalition intact, and opened the door for broader
activity with the union. Discussions of a broader coalition
effort are underway.
- Increased participation by the immigrant community through
the union-promoted ESL program and recruitment of graduates
for machinist training.
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