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HBJ 25th Anniversary — October 2, 2017

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OCTOBER 2, 2017 • HARTFORD BUSINESS JOURNAL | 27 including Stratford-based helicopter-maker Sikorsky and East Hartford-based Pratt & Whitney are also growing. In fact, while the general perception is that Connecticut has become a less desirable state to do business in, Pratt, and its parent company United Technologies Corp., began building a new 425,000-square-foot headquarters in East Hartford in 2015. So rather than bemoaning the decline of manufacturing, Del Conte says the big manufacturers as well as their suppliers are focused on "how to fill that capacity." And that's where organizations like CONNStep, as well as technical high schools and community colleges, come in, designing programs to help train workers to fill the newly created jobs. The programs also have to help train workers to fill the slots left vacant by an aging manufacturing workforce that is nearing retirement age. Added to the workforce pressure is a general trend away from technical schooling in favor of four-year degrees that has created what Del Conte called a "skills gap." "We've had to build a different career path that excites [younger workers]," she said. Part of that excitement comes from the increased use of technology and robotics, which has steadily risen over the last 25 years. While basic assembly jobs that might have been more common in Connecticut 25 years ago have left the state for lower-cost locales in other parts of the United States or world, advanced manufacturing processes that require highly trained workers remain. Manufacturing Employment in Connecticut Year (as of June) Total Employment 2017 156,000 2007 187,900 1997 245,100 1992 272,600 Source: CT Dept. of Labor Connecticut Center for Advanced Technology CEO Elliot Ginsberg has expanded his nonprofit's investment in additive manufacturing, or 3D printing technology.

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