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Monday, August 20, 2018

Ivanka Trump hears about workforce development in Illinois




Ivanka Trump hears about workforce development in Illinois


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Ivanka Trump, adviser to President Donald Trump, takes part in a round table discussion at Lewis and Clark Community College where Brad Schaive, a Springfield-area labor leader, talks about focusing on ex-offenders
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President Donald Trump’s daughter said she’ll take what she heard about workforce development from a roundtable in the Metro East to the White House to help improve the administration’s efforts.
Ivanka Trump joined a roundtable discussion Wednesday at Lewis and Clark Community College in Godfrey, Illinois. The group heard from employers, a labor leader and students about what is being done to get workers trained for skilled jobs.
Welding student Charlie Umphrey was on the panel. She said she started going to a four-year school for business and engineering. Many of her friends were also going to four-year schools. After a few semesters, Umphrey said she knew she wanted something more hands on.
“I enrolled in the welding program at Lewis and Clark. Right away I loved it,” Umphrey said. “It was the most amazing thing that I have done with my life thus far.”
Trump said part of the goal of her father’s administration is to work toward rebranding education to get to what it’s really about.
“Obviously that’s to prepare people to be able to thrive and to be able to succeed and to be able to provide for themselves and ultimately their families if they chose to have one,” Trump said.
Springfield-area labor leader Brad Schaive was also on the panel and said his organization visits with prisons to tell them about the opportunities available for people getting out.
Trump took note. She said conditions are great for ex-offenders to get jobs.
“Having an economy such as we do today really enables them that chance, so those who have served their time, who have paid back their debt to society, they should be afforded that opportunity to thrive,” Trump said.
After the panel discussion, Schiave said not only does a job help ex-offenders become productive members of society, it also saves taxpayers.
“They would have maybe gone back [to prison], we pay for that,” Schaive said. "They would have been receiving healthcare on the state, we would have been paying for that. So now they're part of society and they're living the American dream and I think that’s what we should be doing trying to work toward that goal.”
Trump said prison reform and job training for ex-offenders is an important issue intersecting with workforce development her father’s administration is focused on.
Before the discussion, Trump toured Lewis and Clark’s new welding training facility, where she tried a virtual reality welding training machine and talked to a few of the program’s graduates.
Izabella Stockton, of Alton, got to talk one-on-one with Trump.
“It was pretty neat,” Stockton said. “She asked about my dad, if he was a welder, and I told her ‘no he was just kinda of like [doing it] on the side. I’ve got family who does it. I actually got my brother to go here for school. He graduated high school last year … he’s going to start welding. Pretty cool.”
Trump said she’ll take the stories she heard Wednesday with her back to D.C.

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