Baker-Polito administration announces $9.3 million in workforce skills capital grants
Governor Charlie Baker and Lt. Governor Karyn Polito announced last week $9.3 million in workforce skills equipment grants made to 35 high schools, community colleges and vocational training providers across the Commonwealth. The money will underwrite vocational-technical education and training equipment purchases that connect Massachusetts students and residents to economic opportunities in high-demand industries.
“Workforce skills education and training plays an enormous role in economic and personal development by helping residents acquire the skills they need to connect with promising careers,” Baker said. “These vocational-technical education equipment grants will help build stronger communities and a more competitive business environment that ensures more residents have the skills they need to succeed in and support the Commonwealth’s economic future.”
The Workforce Skills Capital Grant Program is a new initiative of the Governor’s Workforce Skills Cabinet, which seeks to align education, workforce and economic development strategies across the state. Baker tapped Labor and Workforce Development Secretary Ronald Walker II, Education Secretary James Peyser and Housing and Economic Development Secretary Jay Ash to work together to develop policies to improve economic and job training opportunities for residents of the Commonwealth.
“These grants will immediately transform the quality of vocational programs and cutting edge technological opportunities,” Peyser said. “They will also enable deeper partnerships between vocational schools, community colleges, and employers.”
As part of the Workforce Skills Cabinet’s efforts to align resources to better meet common goals, the Workforce Skills Cabinet consolidated two separate capital grant programs – the former Manufacturing Training Equipment grants (administered by the Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development) and the former Vocational Opportunity Challenge grants (administered by the Executive Office for Administration and Finance) – into one unified, integrated and expanded workforce development capital grant program.
The inaugural round of the Workforce Skills Capital Grant program received 68 applications, requesting a total of $18 million in funding.