Worcester Business Journal Special Editions

Stuff N.H. 2017

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10 S T U F F • N e w H a m p s h i r e , 2 0 1 7 28% Increase in average annual pay for New Hampshire manufacturing workers vs. education and healthcare workers Brenda Cardenas Age: 23 Title: Mechanical Inspector Company: Omni Components Location: Hudson Residence: Nashua Education: Currently a student at Nashua Community College studying mechanical engineering design Salary: $13.30/hr at 40 hours per week Off time: She cosplays, which she has been doing since high school. report issued by the NH Manufacturing Sector Partnership Initiatives (SPI). And it's poised to get even stronger – so long as manufacturers have the workforce to do it. Right now, today's manufacturing workforce is aging out. About 59 percent of all manufacturing workers are 45 and older, says Phil Przybyszewski, SPI workforce solu- tions project director. This means in the coming years there could be tremendous opportunities for those who get into the field to advance and grow as compa- nies look to replace retiring workers. "They are the future for this, and quite frankly all, the sectors," says Przybyszewski. "The next generation of workers must come from our youth." Clean, creative jobs Lauren Head, marketing assistant at Lupine Pet in Conway, was convinced walking onto the factory floor – where all employees are expected to pitch in and make pet leashes, collars and harnesses from time to time – was going to be filthy like walking into a mechanic's shop. Continued from page 9 FA C T O I D P H O T O / J E S S I C A A R N O L D

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