Glades County Regional Training Center  Paul Carlisle

FORT MYERS, Fla. (Feb. 5, 2016) – The Southwest Florida Community Foundation, a FutureMakers Coalition partner, has awarded the Glades County Regional Training Center a $50,000 Community Impact Grant.

The grant will be used to install a much needed telecommunications network to the center including Wi-Fi and Internet so that training classes may begin.

“For the first time ever the Southwest Florida Community Foundation is providing a grant in Glades County with the potential for real change around developing workforce and supporting economic development in Glades and the surrounding area,” said Sarah Owen, president and CEO of the Southwest Florida Community Foundation. “Our hope is that by providing these resources and getting the training center up and running, more businesses, as well as individuals, will benefit and more FutureMakers Coalition partners will come on board to support the training center and increase the post-secondary attainment of working-age adults in Southwest Florida.”

According to Glades County Manager Paul Carlisle, this is the last piece of funding needed to open the center and get training programs up and running.

“This funding is vital in being able to begin utilizing the center as it was meant to be,” said Carlisle. “Now we will be able to begin our training programs to start making an impact on not only Glades and Hendry counties but our region as a whole.”

The new 40,000-square-foot Glades County Regional Training Center represents the future for Glades and Hendry residents to improve their job outlook and marketability by training for state and national certifications needed by companies throughout Southwest Florida and the Heartland region. Both counties are included in the FutureMakers Coalition, an initiative to transform the workforce by increasing the number of degree and certificate holders from 27 percent to 40 percent by 2025.

The manufacturing training center aligns with the mission of FutureMakers and is one of the first examples of the Coalition’s emphasis on creating collaborations between government, educators, area businesses and community stakeholders to offer certification training in skills needed by regional employers. Polk State College, Florida SouthWestern State College and Palm Beach State College are working cooperatively to establish curricula.

“Roughly 80 percent of young adults in Florida enter the job market without necessary skills,” said Carlisle. “Manufacturers in the South Central Florida and Southwest Florida regions are facing the perfect storm when it comes to workforce recruitment, training and retention.”

Carlisle said companies are caught between the retirement and succession of their current workforce, largely due to age and changing technology in their plants. There is a tremendous and immediate need for skills trades and certificate based training to supply the needed trained workforce for just the existing companies in the area.

Carlisle wants to see high-school students, out-of-school youth (ages 16 to 24), veterans, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) recipients and others in the Glades service area who are unemployed or underemployed receive training. The training would be comprised of soft skills training and stackable certifications that can lead to advanced training and employment opportunities in manufacturing and logistics in such a way that they can step on and off the training path until they reach a level of employment where they can provide a sustainable lifestyle for themselves and their families. Carlisle also wants to make additional training opportunities available to incumbent employees for advancement so that a continuous pipeline of entry-level positions is created and there is trained staff to fill those positions.

“This is the way to get more people certified in the trades,” Carlisle added. “If we don’t have tradespeople, we don’t have a house, a working air conditioner or auto mechanic.”

Tradespeople are the backbone of many major industries. Construction jobs require skilled labor and employees certified in plumbing, electrical work, HVAC installation, and more. The training center will offer fast-track routes to certification with requirements completed as early as six months to two years depending on the program.

The center also houses office space for CareerSource, a state program that pays for certification and college training for the unemployed, and provides relocation assistance, on-the-job training and hiring incentives for businesses.

“The center is the pinnacle that turns things around for us,” said Carlisle. “Not everyone is going to college. This is exactly what the FutureMakers Coalition is looking for.”

The center, midway between Florida’s East and Gulf coasts, will initially target residents of rural Glades and Hendry counties, and eventually expand its reach to provide certification and specialized training for residents and businesses throughout Southwest Florida.

“We’re not going to bring manufacturing companies here unless we have a steady skilled workforce,” he said. “We feel it will happen when businesses realize there are talented employees in this area.”

The training center can also decrease downtime for manufacturers establishing a location within the industrial park location. Carlisle said employees may train on the company’s equipment within the warehouse while a manufacturer completes build-out then moves to its new location.

“Everything is in place, and businesses don’t have to jump through hoops,” Carlisle said. “We’re ready to get our residents to work.”

About the Southwest Florida Community Foundation

As leaders, conveners, grant makers and concierges of philanthropy, the Southwest Florida Community Foundation is a foundation built on community leadership with an inspired history of fostering regional change for the common good in Lee, Collier, Charlotte, Hendry and Glades counties. The Community Foundation, founded in 1976, connects donors and their philanthropic aspirations with evolving community needs. With assets of more than $93 million, the Community Foundation has provided more than $63 million in grants and scholarships to the communities it serves. Last year, it granted more than $3.2 million to nonprofit organizations supporting education, animal welfare, arts, healthcare and human services, as well as provided regional community impact grants and scholarship grants.

About FutureMakers Coalition

The FutureMakers Coalition is working to increase post-secondary certification completion in Southwest Florida and promote the knowledge and skills needed for success in the workplace and in life. Formed in 2015 around existing regional collaborations, the Coalition’s goal is to transform the workforce by increasing the number of college degrees and post-secondary certifications from 27 percent to 40 percent by 2025 throughout Charlotte, Collier, Glades, Hendry and Lee counties.

As one of Lumina Foundation’s 75 national Community Partners in Attainment, the FutureMakers Coalition is a regional partnership involving education, government, business, nonprofit and citizen stakeholders, and advocates committed to creating a cradle-to-career pathway to ensure success for traditional students and adult learners.

The Southwest Florida Community Foundation serves as the anchor organization for the Coalition. The FutureMakers Coalition’s collective effort encourages residents to join and support this community-changing initiative. It is looking for partners from all sectors to invest resources including time, expertise, funding and more. For more information, visit www.FutureMakersCoalition.com, call 239-274-5900 or email Tessa LeSage at TLeSage@floridacommunity.com.