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Chapter Corner: AGC Supports Chapters'
Training, Air Quality Initiatives
Two western chapters earn national
recognition for their programs
AGC's relationships with influential
associations and federal government agencies pay off time
and time again. Two of AGC's western chapters were the recent
recipients of well-deserved grants that will improve the quality
of life for both their areas and the construction industry.
The Wyoming Contractors Association (WCA)
recently received a $2.4-million President's High Growth High
Impact Jobs Training Grant from the U.S. Department of Labor.
"Our chapter was awarded the grant
because of our involvement in national work force issues,
because Wyoming has a great need for heavy trade workers and
because we already had a first-rate facility for hands-on
training," said Charlie Ware, WCA executive vice president.
The two-year grant will provide tuition
funding for construction and construction-related industry
training at WCA's McMurray Regional Training Center. Classes
will be offered in truck driving, equipment operation, mobile
crane operation and drilling floor hand.
"Our goal is to recruit, train and
place 750 entry-level workers in construction and energy jobs
during each year and to have a high-profile, first-class regional
training center for heavy construction trades," said
Ware.
Since the training center began in February 2001, students
have been recruited from 39 states and placed in jobs in seven
states, including Wyoming.
WCA has added an additional 38 acres
to the original facility and expanded to include lockers and
showers, a 1.1-mile, off-road truck driving course, two drilling-rig
pads and a 500-hp gas-drilling rig. The center has also hired
a full-time recruiter and placement specialist to assist participants
in their job search, resulting in 100% of graduates receiving
jobs offers since last year.
In Oregon, as part of the National Clean
Diesel Campaign, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
awarded a grant for $120,000 to the AGC Oregon-Columbia Chapter
Foundation to implement diesel retrofits on heavy-duty diesel
equipment used to repair Oregon's highway bridges.
"Diesel engines are the heart and
soul of a contractor's ability to build the strong and durable
bridges, highways and buildings that Oregonians expect and
deserve," said Craig Honeyman, executive director of
the Oregon-Columbia Chapter AGC. "We are excited to be
able to participate in this proactive approach to improve
the air quality in this state. We believe that we can show
that diesels are not only efficient but environmentally protective
as well."
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L.A. Glasgow, a Philadelphia-area business executive,
has been elected to the top volunteer leadership position
of Transportation Road Information Program (TRIP), a
national nonprofit transportation research group. She
has been a member of the TRIP board since 1999.
Glasgow is a member of the Contractors Association
Eastern Pennsylvania and AGC of New Jersey, the president
of Glasgow Inc., a heavy/highway contractor and materials
producer located in Glenside, Pa. and has spent nearly
30 years working in the construction industry.
She is a Life Director of the AGC Board of Directors,
was the chair of the AGC Highway Division in 2001-2002,
president of the Contractors Association of Eastern
Pa. in 1998-1999, and is a board member of AGC of New
Jersey and the Contractors Association of Eastern Pennsylvania.
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The grant funds were awarded to the chapter
foundation on November 7 and will be distributed to members
over a two-year period. The foundation is one of only two
nongovernmental recipients in the country, and the only organization
affiliated with a trade association to receive funding under
the program.
Through the assistance of the Oregon
Department of Environmental Quality, the value of the award
to the foundation will likely be doubled with in-kind contributions
from equipment manufacturers like Caterpillar Inc. and Cummins
NW.
"We want our program to help get
the word out that these technologies are available,"
said Honeyman. "We know that our members are concerned
about managing the environmental impact of their operation,
as they demonstrate in many ways on an ongoing basis. We felt
that with this project our chapter would be able to provide
the framework for leadership not only for our members, but
also for the entire industry in the Pacific Northwest."
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