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East Lyme High School gets behind workforce training push

May 31—EAST LYME — High School junior Gavin Winchester's goal is to land a job at General Dynamics Electric Boat, and the timing is right.

The East Lyme school district this year rolled out the new Pathways program focused on building the skills and connections to foster what East Lyme High School assistant principal David Fasulo calls a "win-win" situation — providing skilled workers for competitive companies willing to pay well for them.

Electric Boat President Kevin Graney earlier this year said the company plans to bring in 5,750 new hires this year alone, including 1,300 trades workers in Groton. U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, has predicted the company could be ramping up production to levels not seen since the Cold War.

Winchester, 16, was hired as a summer intern through Electric Boat's carpenters union. The job description promises the chance to work side by side with experienced employees to learn firsthand about shipbuilding processes and tools.

The teen credited the Pathways program with giving him training in various trades that made him a more attractive candidate on paper.

"I was able to load my resume with all different kinds of stuff that Electric Boat uses," he said. "I had experience prior to the internship."

Winchester learned how to change tires and oil at Firmin's Garage in East Lyme, how to weld virtually and in real life at Porter & Chester Institute in New London, and how to install metal framing at the North Atlantic States Carpenters Union Training Center in Wallingford.

The high school junior, no stranger to shop classes in construction, transportation technology and woodworking, identified his mother as the one who made him sign up for the extra job training opportunities.

Now he has his eyes set on a welding career at Electric Boat.

"I'm glad I was forced into it," he said.

'Hire for character'

Chris Jewell, president of the Bozrah-based Collins & Jewell manufacturing company, exemplified the Pathway program's win-win philosophy when he hired David Day to start work upon his June graduation.

Day was offered the job along with a young woman from Norwich Free Academy after they attended an eight-hour welding workshop at Collins & Jewell this winter. The group included other students from East Lyme and Norwich.

Jewell said the all-day class was divided into classroom fundamentals and hands-on metal arc welding techniques.

"They were doing horizontal and spray arc; they were doing vertical. Some of the kids even messed with overhead a little bit," he said.