SkillsUSA helps Pensacola highlight a path to success


  • February 3, 2016
  • /   Shannon Nickinson
  • /   training-development

Pensacola State College President Ed Meadows announces Pensacola will host the SkillsUSA Conference from 2018-2020. Photo credit: PSC

Does Pensacola have the skills to pay the bills?

Signs may be turning toward yes.

The announcement that Pensacola State will host the state conference for one of the leading career and technical education conferences from 2018 to 2020 may be a sign that we’re getting there.

PSC will host SkillsUSA Florida State Leadership and Skills Conference and Worlds of Possibilities Career Expo. The events bring thousands of people to town to participate in the conference — and exposes hundreds of students to the options that career and technical education can offer them for the future.

In addition to Gulf Power CEO Stan Connally and PSC President Ed Meadows, executive committee members working to secure the upcoming SkillsUSA State Conferences were Sandy Sansing of Sandy Sansing Dealerships; Debbie Calder, Navy Federal Credit Union; Richard McLeod, Lowe’s Home Improvement; Michael Murdoch, AppRiver; Brian Masterson, Jerry Pate Co.; Mark Faulkner, Baptist Health Care; and Randy Ramos, Global Business Solutions.

PSC President Edward Meadows said the last time his college hosted the conferences, from 2012-2014, thousands of attendees generated nearly $10 million in economic activity for the Pensacola metro economy.

That’s important of course to the local economy, which relies on tourism and visitors for a critical piece of our overall economic puzzle. Conventions and conferences can be an important addition to a beach-based tourism economy.

And there are a piece that the community has struggled with given the constraints of the aging Pensacola Bay Center and the absence of a true convention center in our market.

Bringing SkillsUSA back to Pensacola also will shine a much-needed spotlight on the impact that education beyond high school can have on a person’s life.

Data from the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity shows that workers with an associate’s degree earn a median income of $51,159 in the Escambia-Santa Rosa county area, compared to the $25,777 those with only a high school diploma can expect to earn.

SkillsUSA is a chance to broadcast loud and clear the message that technical and career training is a vital and viable path to a good life.

That a four-year liberal arts degree is not the only path to success.

{{business_name}}Gulf Power CEO Stan Connally speaks at the announcement that Pensacola will host the SkillsUSA conference from 2018-2020. Photo credit: Pensacola State College.

Gulf Power CEO Stan Connally speaks at the announcement that Pensacola will host the SkillsUSA conference from 2018-2020. Photo credit: Pensacola State College.

That was clearly on the mind of Gulf Power CEO Stan Connally as he spoke at the event. Connally is part of a group of Pensacola business leaders who are working with StriveTogether, a consulting company based in Cincinnati that helps communities focus on a continuum of education.

Gulf Power, Navy Federal Credit Union, Baptist Health Care and Sacred Heart Health Systems are paying Strive $50,000 to bring that process to Pensacola.

“The cradle to career view of education is important,” Connally said. “It underscores this community’s commitment to young people.

“We’re going to stand up and show the rest of the state and, frankly, the rest of the country that this is a community that gets it when it comes to career and technical education,” he said.

 

The national shortage of workers with the technical skills needed to be successful in the workforce impacts Pensacola, too. It is linked to the social stereotype of technical and two-year training being for people who couldn’t cut at “real” college.

Today’s workforce shows nothing could be further from the truth.

For Pensacola, where only 24.5 percent of the population has a bachelor’s degree or higher, embracing all forms of higher education is the key to improving the quality of life for all of our friends and neighbors.

Not just the ones with a four-year degree.

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