Enzweiler celebrates groundbreaking of new Latonia campus

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The Enzweiler Building Institute of Northern Kentucky held a groundbreaking ceremony in Latonia on Monday afternoon to celebrate its new campus.

Covington city leaders, Northern Kentucky state lawmakers and local construction industry leaders gathered in front of the newly christened Enzweiler Building Institute Covington Campus to dig the ceremonial first shovelful of dirt.

“We look for opportunities here in Covington to give our residents the opportunity to access training that gets them into high-wage, high-growth sectors in the economy,” Covington Mayor Joe Meyer said. “What is more natural than the construction industry?”

Meyer, a Latonia native, said the neighborhood is perfect for the new campus due to its blue-collar background.

“Latonia is blue-collar heaven,” Meyer said. “On every street, there’s an electrician, there’s a plumber, there’s a welder, there’s a drywall guy. This is the neighborhood that, amongst all of them in Covington, respects the trades. It’s just part of our DNA.”

The Building Industry Association operates the Enzweiler Building Institute, the longest running, continually operating private trade school operated under the auspices of the National Association of Home Builders.

When completed, the Enzweiler Building Institute’s Covington Campus state-of-the-art training center will house hands-on laboratories for welding, carpentry and masonry. Total investment in the project is over $1.3 million. The campus is located at 3901 Winston Ave. in Covington.

The 10,500 square foot campus will feature combination classrooms with hands-on laboratories that will house programs in electric, HVAC and plumbing. Facilities maintenance students will utilize the majority of the space, as well as laboratory instruction for the Covington Academy for Heritage Trades.

The inside of the Enzweiler Building Institute Covington Campus, which is currently under construction. Photo by Kenton Hornbeck | LINK nky

Classes are anticipated to begin in January 2023. Post-secondary evening adult courses will be offered in all trades from 6 to 9 p.m. Most courses can be attended two nights a week, while some accelerated options are available. 

Daytime instruction will be offered to all area high school students through school districts that enter into an agreement to train at the facility. Courses of study for high school students include an Introduction to Trades program that earns students four hours of school credit. 

The four goals the City of Covington hopes to accomplish with the EBI Covington Campus include:

  • Target chronic unemployment by “skilling up” Covington’s workforce
  • Improve accessibility to skills training for residents of the city’s urban core
  • Help the construction industry fill a critical need for skilled workers
  • Continue the transformation of the Latonia Plaza shopping center located along the Winston Highway

“In recent years, the (Enzweiler Building Institute) has seen rapid growth and expansion of programming, collaborations and partnerships to address the skilled workforce shortage the industry faces, not just in Northern Kentucky, but regionally and in fact nationally,” said Ben Taylor, president of Building Industry Association.

According to recent surveys by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics for the regional market, there will be a need for over 65,000 professionals in these trades alone over the next 10 years. 

“Partnering with the Building Industry Association on this project is what economic and workforce development should be about,” said Tom West, Covington’s economic development director. “This school will address the needs of our citizens looking to skill up for better jobs, and they’ll do so without incurring debt or high tuition rates. Plus, it’s going to help contractors meet critical labor demands that have plagued the construction industry. This school will have a considerable impact.”

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Enzweiler Building Institute announces groundbreaking for second training facility

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Boone County Campus Welding Lab

COVINGTON, Ky. — The Enzweiler Building Institute of the Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky (BIA) announces a groundbreaking ceremony to celebrate the commencement of the renovation of an existing retail space to house their Covington Campus.  The ceremony will be held on Monday, September 12 at 2:00 pm at 3901 Winston Ave. Covington, KY (Latonia).

The renovation project will be the site of a 10,500-square-foot facility that will house programs in Carpentry, Electrical, Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning (HVAC), Plumbing, Masonry, Facilities Maintenance and Remodeling, and Welding and will serve as the home base of the Covington Academy for Heritage Trades. “Covington welcomes the Enzweiler Institute to Latonia,” said Covington Mayor Joe Meyer. “There is great demand for training in the construction trades. The Latonia location is very convenient and accessible for all Covington residents. It gives city residents a wonderful opportunity to acquire a skill that provides excellent economic prospects.”

According to recent surveys by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics for the regional market, there will be a need for over 65,000 professionals in these trades alone over the next ten years. “Partnering with BIA on this project is what economic and workforce development should be about,” said Tom West, Covington’s Economic Development Director. “This school will address the needs of our citizens looking to skill up for better jobs, and they’ll do so without incurring debt or high tuition rates. Plus, it’s going to help contractors meet critical labor demands that have plagued the construction industry. This school will have considerable impact.”

The project is funded through various sources, including the Kentucky Work Ready Skills Initiative, the Duke Energy Foundation, Kentucky Workforce Innovation & Opportunity Act funds from the Commonwealth of Kentucky Education and Labor Cabinet and through a Workforce Development Agreement with the City of Covington. “We are very pleased to support the BIA and the City of Covington on this impactful opportunity they are providing to residents in Northern Kentucky. In the economic development work we handle each and every day, we see the need for additional skilled construction workers. We can’t afford a shortage in order to keep up with the pace and continued trend of business and residential growth in our region,” said Rhonda Whitaker Hurtt, Vice President of Community Relations, Duke Energy Ohio and Kentucky.

The total investment in the project is over $1.3 million.  When final, the Enzweiler Building Institute’s Covington Campus state-of-the-art training center will house hands-on laboratories for Welding, Carpentry and Masonry.  Combination classrooms and hands-on laboratories will house programs in electric, HVAC and plumbing.  Facilities Maintenance students will utilize most of the space as well in class and laboratory instruction for the Covington Academy for Heritage Trades.

Classes are expected to begin in January of 2023.  Post-secondary evening adult courses will be offered in all trades from 6-9 pm in the evenings.  Most courses are attended two nights a week, while some four-night-a-week accelerated options are available.  Daytime instruction will be offered to all area high school students through schools that enter into an agreement to utilize training at the facility.  High school courses of study include an Introduction to Trades program that earns the student four hours of school credit.

The BIA operates the Enzweiler Building Institute, the longest running, continually operating private trade school operated under the auspices of the National Association of Home Builders. Since 1967, the Institute is housed at the Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky’s Building Center at 2751 Circleport Drive, Erlanger, Kentucky and in January 2023 in Covington at the Latonia Commerce Center.

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Enzweiler Building Institute announces September 12 groundbreaking ceremony for Covington Campus

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The Enzweiler Building Institute of the Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky (BIA) will hold a groundbreaking ceremony to celebrate the commencement of renovations of an existing retail space to house their Covington Campus.

The ceremony will be held on Monday, September 12 at 2 p.m. at 3901 Winston Ave. in Latonia.

The renovation project will be the site of a 10,500 square foot facility that will house programs in Carpentry, Electrical, Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning (HVAC), Plumbing, Masonry, Facilities Maintenance and Remodeling, and Welding and will serve as the home base of the Covington Academy for Heritage Trades.

The new Covington campus will offer many amenities like the carpentry lab at the institute’s Boone County facility (above) (Photo from BIA NKY)

“Covington welcomes the Enzweiler Institute to Latonia,” said Covington Mayor Joe Meyer. “There is great demand for training in the construction trades. The Latonia location is very convenient and accessible for all Covington residents. It gives city residents a wonderful opportunity to acquire a skill that provides excellent economic prospects.”

According to recent surveys by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics for the regional market there will be a need of over 65,000 professionals in these trades alone over the next ten years.

“Partnering with BIA on this project is what economic and workforce development should be about,” said Tom West, Covington’s Economic Development Director. “This school will address the needs of our citizens looking to skill up for better jobs, and they’ll do so without incurring debt or high tuition rates. Plus, it’s going to help contractors meet critical labor demands that have plagued the construction industry. This school will have considerable impact.”

The project is funded through various sources including the Kentucky Work Ready Skills Initiative, the Duke Energy Foundation, Kentucky Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act funds from the Commonwealth of Kentucky Education and Labor Cabinet and a Workforce Development Agreement with the City of Covington.

The blueprint of the EBI Covington campus (Image from BIA NKY; click for larger image)

“We are very pleased to support the BIA and the City of Covington on this impactful opportunity they are providing to residents in Northern Kentucky,” said Rhonda Whitaker Hurtt, vice president Community Relations, Duke Energy Ohio and Kentucky. “In the economic development work we handle each and every day, we see the need for additional skilled construction workers. We can’t afford a shortage in order to keep up with the pace and continued trend of business and residential growth in our region.”

The total investment in the project is over $1.3 million. When final the Enzweiler Building Institute’s Covington Campus state-of-the-art training center will house hands-on laboratories for Welding, Carpentry and Masonry. Combination classrooms and hands-on laboratories will house programs in electric, HVAC and plumbing. Facilities Maintenance students will utilize most of the space as will in class and laboratory instruction for the Covington Academy for Heritage Trades.

Classes are expected to begin in January of 2023. Post-secondary evening adult courses will be offered in all trades from 6-9 p.m. Most courses are attended two nights a week while some four-night-a-week accelerated options are available. Daytime instruction will be offered to all area high school students through schools that enter into an agreement to utilize training at the facility. High school courses of study include an Introduction to Trades program that earns the student four hours of school credit.

The BIA operates the Enzweiler Building Institute, the longest running, continually operating private trade school operated under the auspices of the National Association of Home Builders. Operating since 1967, the Institute is currently housed at the Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky’s Building Center at 2751 Circleport Drive in Erlanger and beginning in January at the Latonia Commerce Center.

Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky



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As college becomes more one-size-fits all, trades bring opportunity for many

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Ryan Hernandez always loved working with his hands. When he was a teenager, he helped his father fix cars in their garage.

While Hernandez was a student at Campbell County High School, he began weighing his career options as his senior year drew closer. Hernandez was unsure a traditional four-year college education was the right career path for him straight out of high school. 

Hernandez told LINK nky he was weary of accumulating student loan debt, and was excited for an opportunity to earn wages after he graduated. That’s when he translated his love for working with his hands into pursuing trade education though the Campbell County Area & Technology Center.

“I started getting into being an electrician in high school, Hernandez said. “A few people I knew were electricians. That was the start of my journey from there. I knew I’d be able to work somewhere and have an opportunity to get paid while I was working.”

The 22-year-old Hernandez is now an electrician working for M&M Service in Covington. He’s pursuing his journeyman’s license and master electrician license.

Statistically speaking, earning a college diploma is the most surefire way to improve employment prospects and earning potential throughout a person’s lifetime. According to the Association of Public & Land Grant Universities, people with a bachelor’s degree annually earn $32,000 more than those whose highest degree is a high school diploma.

However, attending college is not a one-size-fits-all proposition. According to the National Student Clearinghouse, three out of 10 high school grads who go on to four-year public universities haven’t earned degrees within six years. The number is more than one in five for students attending four-year private colleges.

Increases in college tuition prices are seen as a deterrent for some prospective students. College tuition prices have risen 169 percent from 1980 to 2020, according to a report from the Georgetown University Center on Education & the Workforce. 

The report cites structural changes to the US economy, increasing postsecondary education costs, and racial and class inequality as some of the factors facing modern young people when transitioning toward economic independence as adults. 

Austin Stull, a former student at Pendleton County High School, personally thought pursuing a career as an electrician would be the most financially responsible decision for him and his family.

“I wasn’t sure I wanted to go into debt,” Stull said. “There’s also not always a guaranteed job after you’re done getting the degree.”

Similar to Hernandez, Stull enjoyed working with his hands while growing up. Stull felt he could earn more money right out of high school if he pursued a career as an electrician. Now 23-years-old, Stull is an electrician for United Electric in Cincinnati. 

In Covington, there are open jobs for skilled laborers as the city continues reviving historic buildings within their urban core. There are 94 jobs each year supported by permit activity in Covington’s local and national register historic districts, according to a labor analysis done by consultant Donovan Rypkema of PlaceEconomics.

To fill these roles, city leaders in Covington are supporting the development of a Heritage Trades Academy. The school would teach students artisan trades such as masonry, carpentry and plastering.

“These are as much workforce development issues as they are business development, but in reality you can’t separate the two,” Covington Economic Director Tom West said. “The more talented and skilled the local workforce, the more vibrant and sustainable the local economy.”

When Interstate 75 was constructed through Kenton and Boone counties, a laborer working on the project was paid enough to own a home and support a family of four with a single income stream.

Over the years, the appeal of trade professions has diminished in the eyes of younger generations. The U.S. is facing a widening age gap for skilled laborers such as plumbers and electricians. In 2019, U.S. Bureau of Labor statistics showed that nearly 40 percent of skilled laborers are 45-years or older. In contrast, only 22 percent of skilled laborers are 25 to 34-years-old.

“A substantially bigger percentage of people in the trades are age 55 plus,” said Vicki Berling, director of professional development at the Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky. “A substantially smaller number are even in that middle age range, age 30 to 45,” 

Some local businesses say they’ve been hard pressed to find young workers willing to go into the trades. DuPont Plumbing, a family owned plumbing business in Newport, emphasizes recruiting young people into their business, while recognizing the overall challenges of recruitment.

“Any trade, in almost any industry, is extremely pressed to find young workers,” said John Caim, a consultant and general manager at DuPont Plumbing. “It’s very difficult. We’ve gone through maybe a generation of telling everyone that the only path for career success is through traditional academic corridors.”

Caim said DuPont actually expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic, as many workers found the monotony of their office jobs unfulfilling, quitting their old career to pursue a new career in plumbing.

Employers and trade educators say one reason for the skilled trade shortage has been the institutional push by K-12 school districts, and universities, for students to attend a four-year college. Students can incur thousands of dollars in student loan debt in pursuit of a degree.

The average public university student borrows $30,030 in order to earn a bachelor’s degree, according to educationdata.org.

“We were indiscriminate about the message,” Berling said. “We didn’t let students know there were other options for great careers if that’s the path they want to pick. Everyone went off to college, which meant nobody was really entering the trades at the same percentage as it happened two decades ago. Now we have people who would like to retire doing the work, but they can’t because there’s no one coming behind them.”

Caim attributes a negative societal stigma to the labels “blue and white collar” for discouraging students to pursue trade careers. Blue collar is regarded as a working class person with a career in manual labor, such as a plumber or welder, while white collar is referred to as a person who works in a professional, administrative or managerial job, such as a lawyer or doctor. 

“In the manufacturing age of education it was: Go to school, get a lot of education, find a job, work for a big company. Things will be happy ever after,” Caim said. “As opposed to, at that time, going out and working in the trades. You don’t want to work in a factory. You want to work up in the office. We started that differentiation of blue collar, white collar and no collar. People started saying, ‘well you don’t want to be blue collar, you want to be white collar.’” 

Northern Kentucky business leaders, government officials, and educational institutions have begun to grapple with the shortage of trade laborers among the youth of the region. Now, there has been a concerted effort by local leaders to reverse the trend. Private institutions such as the Enzweiler Building Institute have continued to devote greater resources into trade education.

Berling works with the EBI, a local trade school based in Erlanger. The EBI has been teaching Northern Kentuckians trade skills since 1967, when they first offered a carpentry training program. The school expanded in later years, and now offers comprehensive programs for seven trades and a four-year program for electricians. The program boasts approximately 2,000 graduates who have gone on to work in trades.

EBI is expanding into Covington in 2022, and will open a Covington Campus at the former Burlington Coat Factory space in the Latonia Plaza shopping center. 

EBI says the primary goals of their expansion into Covington is to target chronic unemployment by educating the workforce on trade jobs, improving residents’ access to skills training, and helping the construction industry fill a critical need for skilled workers. 

Berling said addressing the representation gap among women and students of color in skilled labor trades is also a main focus of the EBI.

“If you look at the representation within the skilled trades from students of color and women, it’s a very small percentage,” Berling said. “They’re not relying on a pathway that is common to them. We’re still looking at incentives to get those two groups in particular into the trades.”

According to an analysis by Contractor Magazine, women represent 10 percent of the workers in skilled trades, despite comprising nearing half of the national workforce, and black people represent 6.3 percent of all construction workers.

Northern Kentucky K-12 institutions are also placing a spotlight on career and technical education. Phil Griffin, founder of AnyWeather and Trades NKY, a nonprofit involved in promoting trade education to students, said he’s been impressed with many local school districts’ pursuit of advancing their trade education curriculum.

“One of the things that I’m most impressed with over the last several years is going back and talking with the schools and trying to figure out solutions for career and technical education,” Griffin said. “Just to see their openness and how far the schools have come has been impressive.”

David Hartman is an assistant principal at Holmes High School and is the Director of the Career and Technical Education (CTE) program at the school. Hartman said approximately 85 percent of the students at Holmes are enrolled in the CTE program.

“The end game for us is that when a student walks across the stage for graduation, we want them to have the opportunity to go to college, a technical school, or go into a trade,” Hartman said. “We want our students to have those options.”

Education leaders at Holmes say they want students to get true, hands-on experience in the classroom so they can apply it to their future careers.

Holmes offers pathways in a variety of clusters such as health sciences, information technology, construction technology, manufacturing technology, business and marketing and media arts. Underneath those clusters are courses offered for trades such as carpentry and welding. Hartman said carpentry is one of the most popular trade classes at Holmes.

Holmes works hand-in-hand with Gateway Community and Technical College and local industry leaders in order to tweak their CTE offerings to better suit the needs of regional employers. Holmes, in coordination with Gateway, offers dual-credit courses so students can earn credits for their technical education earlier in their high school career. This eases financial burden and shortens the timeline for students. 

“We try to stay ahead of the curve in regards to industry needs,” Hartman said. “Manufacturing is a need. Healthcare is a need. We want to prepare all our students to enter their career fields with the proper education, so they can seamlessly transition into the workforce.”

As the Northern Kentucky economy expands, so too must their workforce. Leaders in all sectors, from employers to educational institutions, are diversifying educational opportunities for all students, not just the ones preparing to enter university.

“I had a mother tell me that a student had his best year academically as a senior because there wasn’t really a place for him, and our program helped him see that he could really be a shining star too,” Berling said. “We can help students find something that does make them excited about the prospect of working. I don’t have to have too many stories like that to make me happy to come into work everyday.”

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Talk the Trades With These Pathway Programs

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Starting in the fall, adults interested in the trades can attend evening classes twice a week in the industries that are most hungry for new employees.

Photograph courtesy the Enzweiler Building Institute

The Intro to Trades Pathway at Kentucky’s Enzweiler Building Institute is split into two programs that offer the same material: the long-running high school-based program for students, and the new evening program, for those 18 and older.

High schoolers spend four days a week at the part-time program, says Vicki Berling, the director of professional development for Enzweiler Building Institute in Erlanger, which has been working with students since 1967; the adult-focused program will kick off this fall at Enzweiler’s new Latonia branch. This is closer to the bus line, or even within walking distance, for the potential students who could most benefit from the program.

“This is an apprenticeship model,” Berling says. “We know you learn on the job.” Which means after receiving the hands-on experience during the day, students attend evening classes to the learn the “why” behind the daytime’s “what.”

The new Latonia classes have gotten a lot of support through the City of Covington. City council voted in favor of the building, she says, and provided some financial support for first few years there. The Latonia opening has also received a grant from Duke Energy.

“Lots of community partners are cheering us on,” Berling says.

The Intro to Trades Pathway focuses on a variety of areas, including plumbing, electric, HVAC, and masonry. Those interested in attending the evening program can sign up through Berling, who will help them figure out the best program to study.

The variety of programs offered is helpful, too, for the participating high schoolers.

“When they come out, we like them to have been exposed to all of the major skill trades in the hopes that in their senior year, they can find placement for a co-op,” Berling says. “Usually the co-op will lead to a full-time job for most students.”



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Covington Academy of Heritage Trades would mean more jobs, better pay, analysis finds

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Training workers to become skilled in the trades needed to preserve and rehab historic homes could lead to more jobs, higher pay, and a more stable base of old, historic homes in the community.

Those are the findings of a detailed analysis of the local market and workforce dedicated to repairing, maintaining and restoring historic buildings. The report was completed by PlaceEconomics, a Washington, D.C.-based consulting firm, for the city of Covington.

The city is moving ahead with a plan to “skill up” workers in the trades essential to maintaining old homes and buildings. It’s working with the Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky and its Enzweiler Building Institute to start an academy devoted to such “heritage building trades.”

READ MORE: Creating a workforce dedicated to historic preservation  

The PlaceEconomics report, presented in May, supports the need for the program. “Virtually every finding of this report supports the establishment of the Covington Academy of Heritage Trades,” it concludes.

Among the findings:

  • Nearly 100 jobs a year are supported by repair and restoration work in Covington’s local and national register historic districts alone. But there’s a pressing need for workers trained in the historic building trades, a need aggravated by a nationwide shortage of construction workers in general.
  • Workers with training and expertise in historic preservation trades are paid 9% more than workers in non-historic construction trades.
  • The collective wages paid to workers on projects in Covington’s historic districts amounted to $8.5 million a year between 2013 and 2021.

Covington officials are exploring ways to make the training as accessible to as many people as possible, including finding ways to overcome barriers to transportation, costs, child care, language, and scheduling.

“The more talented and skilled the local workforce, the more vibrant and sustainable the local economy,” says Tom West, director of Covington’s Economic Development Department.

Covington so far has received funding for the academy from federal grants, the Greater Cincinnati Foundation, the American Rescue Plan Act, as well as city funding.
 

 

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Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky to host career exploration and job fair June 8

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A career exploration and job fair for the skilled construction trades will take place on Wednesday, June 8 from 3 to 4:30 p.m. at the Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky (BIA) offices located at 2751 Circleport Drive in Erlanger.

The public is invited to attend.

(Photo from BIA NKY)

About 20 employers from the construction industry will be onsite to provide hands-on exploration of their trade and to discuss current and future job opportunities. The event is geared to students who are interested in the skilled trades as well as adults who are seeking to transition into these high-need, high-wage jobs.

“This is a unique event in that it is exclusively geared toward the skilled construction trades,” said Dr. Vicki Berling, BIA Director of Professional Development. “Plus, participants will get to ‘try-out’ the trades through the many employer exhibits.”

Registration is not required to this drop-in event. Inquiries may be directed to Dr. Vicki Berling at vicki@buildersnky.com or by phone at 859-640-4294.

The BIA operates the Enzweiler Building Institute, the longest-running, continually operating private trade school operated under the auspices of the National Association of Home Builders. Operating since 1967, the Institute is housed at the Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky’s Building Center at 2751 Circleport Drive, Erlanger, Kentucky with a future site expected to open in January of 2023 in Covington at the Latonia Commerce Center.

From Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky



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Building Industry Association earns two awards of excellence from National Assn. of Home Builders

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The Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky has been recognized as a leader in best association operations and home shows, with two Association Excellence Awards presented by the Executive Officers Council (EOC) of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB).

The projects receiving recognition are the BIA’s 2021 Annual Team and Leadership Planning Retreat, winning in the Best Association Operations Program Administered category, and HomeFest Sanctuary Village in the Best Home or Industry Trade Show category.

Awarded Best Home or Industry Trade Show

“HomeFest Sanctuary Village was an outstanding show in a wonderful community that represents a more traditional approach to what builders’ associations do and to be recognized for the quality event that the show was is greatly appreciated,” said Brian Miller, Executive Vice President.

The Association Excellence Awards is an annual program recognizing outstanding accomplishments of state and local builders’ associations and executive officers in the field of association management. EOC membership is comprised of the staff executives who direct more than 650 NAHB-affiliated state and local builders’ associations representing more than 140,000 builders in communities across the United States.

“We are being recognized in back-to-back years with awards that commemorate the association’s excellence in operations. We pride ourselves on being a data driven organization that is keenly aware of emerging trends in association issues. It is significantly noticeable that we are an always changing, vibrant and constantly refreshed association,” said Miller.

The BIA was awarded 32 Association Excellence Awards since the program’s inception in the early 1990’s. During Miller’s tenure as the Executive Vice President of the association, the BIA garnered 16 awards for the organization’s work since 2009. During that period, the association was recognized six times for its efforts involving the Enzweiler Building Institute and Workforce Development initiatives. Other awards over the past 12 years were earned for Council development, non-dues revenue, communications and services to members.

“Our leaders accept change as a foundational component of our culture and work closely with an amazing staff team to plan, establish and experiment in areas that most other organizations fear to tread,” Miller concluded.

To learn more about the Association Excellence Awards, go to www.nahb.org/aea.

The mission of the Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky is to promote and enhance the integrity and visibility of the construction industry and the members of the organization through advocacy, communication, education and political action. For more information, visit www.BuildersNKY.com.



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Covington to host discussion with heritage trades employers Tuesday to gain input for new academy

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Learning the “lost skills” related to repairing, restoring, and maintaining historic buildings is a viable career choice that will earn workers a living wage and make them highly sought-after by a wide array of potential employers.

That’s the clear takeaway from a new labor and market analysis of this region that confirms what anecdotes have been suggesting: There is a huge and critical need for an ongoing effort led by the City of Covington to work with its partners to train a new generation of workers.

In fact, writes consultant Donovan Rypkema of PlaceEconomics: “Virtually every finding of this report supports the establishment of the Covington Academy of Heritage Trades.”

In a public event Tuesday, Rypkema and City officials will discuss the report, and workforce needs and opportunities related to heritage trades, with would-be employers and potential investors.

(Photo from City of Covington)

Targeted invitations have been going out for weeks, but there are still spots available. If you fit those categories and are interested in attending the event, held at 4 p.m. at the Kentucky Career Center at 1324 Madison Ave., you can sign up at Heritage Trades Presentation. Doors open at 3:30 p.m. Later events will be set up for prospective students and instructors.

Later Tuesday evening, Rypkema, the author of The Economics of Historic Preservation, will present the findings of “Historic Trades Labor Analysis: Baseline Data for Covington, Kentucky” to the City’s Board of Commissioners.

Among the findings:

• 94 – The number of jobs each year already supported by permit activity in Covington’s local and National Register historic districts alone since 2013.

• 9% — How much more a trades worker with training, experience, or expertise in historic preservation reported being paid, compared to those in non-historic construction trades.

• $8.5MM – Collective wages paid to workers on projects in Covington’s local and National Register historic districts per year between 2013 and 2021.

Meanwhile, on Wednesday, another consultant working on the project, Bob Yapp of Missouri-based Preservation Resources Inc., will join with City officials to hold one-on-one meetings with potential employers/contractors to continue discussing the most effective and accessible model for the program, classes, and “academy.”

The City announced the initiative in October 2021. Then in December, it announced a related effort to support the Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky’s plans to open a satellite campus in Latonia of the Enzweiler Building Institute, which teaches more “mainstream” construction trades like carpentry, plumbing, electric, and HVAC. That proposal is available at www.covingtonky.gov.

Workforce development and skills training are priorities of Covington’s Economic Development Department, which seeks to raise the quality of life throughout the city by “skilling up” the workforce, said its director, Tom West.

“These are as much workforce development issues as they are business development, but in reality you can’t separate the two,” West said. “The more talented and skilled the local workforce, the more vibrant and sustainable the local economy.”

That’s why the City and its partners are taking pains to create a heritage trades program that is accessible to the largest number of potential workers, said Christopher Myers, Covington’s Historic Preservation Officer and Regulatory Services Manager. This includes overcoming barriers related to transportation, cost, child care, language, and scheduling. Most of all, it requires setting up a model that makes the training feasible without forcing people to give up all current household income.

“We’re exploring the best model to make the training as accessible as possible and effective,” Myers said. “If people can’t attend because of hurdles that we could have overcome, then we didn’t set up the right framework.”

Dual framework

Many details still need to be worked out. But Myers said the program could wind up with a dual framework:

• Weekend workshops focused on specific skills that would introduce new workers to the heritage trades by giving them hands-on training and familiarity with tools and materials.

• Certificate programs for 11 specific trades requiring a set number of “contact hours,” with an average of 190 hours across the 11 trades.

The goal of the introductory workshops, Myers said, “is to get people to ask themselves, ‘Is this something I can see myself doing? Is this something I’m physically capable of doing, and find interesting?’ We want basically to give them a taste so they can figure out how far they want to go into a trade.”

(Photo from City of Covington)

The goal of the certificate programs, on the other hand is larger: “to create a workforce of skilled craftspeople who are ready to work,” he said.

One proposal being discussed is whether construction companies and contractors would hire new employees at entry-level positions and then, one week a month, pay them to attend training, Myers said. In return, the companies – many of which are desperate for workers – would directly support Academy trainees who could fill in their workforce and thereby grow their businesses and help them bid on more jobs.

“In essence, the comapanies would be building a talent pipeline tailored to their needs,” Myers said.

Among the 11 programs are those related to historic masonry and plaster, preservation carpentry, box gutters, stained glass, and window restoration.

Rypkema’s presentations on Tuesday will show a “snapshot” of the current heritage trades labor force across Covington, Northern Kentucky, and Greater Cincinnati. Yapp’s sessions with contractors on Wednesday will take a deep dive into curriculum for each program.

Financial support

The search for financial support is ongoing, although several parts have already been nailed down. Those are:

• Two federally funded grants totaling just over $38,000 received last year through the Kentucky Heritage Council, along with the City matches, paid for the consultants’ work to date.

• A $30,000 grant awarded to the City by the Greater Cincinnati Foundation (GCF) earlier this year will be used for marketing, creation of a website, student recruitment, and a student screening tool. The foundation is the region’s leading community foundation. “Thanks to the Greater Cincinnati Foundation, we will be able to change the trajectory of the lives of that many more Covington families,” Myers said. “Its support is critical.”

• The Covington Board of Commissioners earlier this year set aside $250,000 in federal American Rescue Plan Act funds for the academy’s start-up.

• And the City recently received notice that it stands to receive funds from three separate but related grant applications, although it’s not authorized yet to talk about those.

Myers said the City and its consultants have engaged a long list of partners in discussing the program, the best model to offer the training, and how to overcome barriers facing students. He said he and others involved in the effort are blown away by the enthusiasm, interest, and engagement shown from students, instructors, potential employers, and community partners.

West, whose background is in workforce development, said City officials – both in his department and serving on the Commission – are acutely aware of four driving factors behind the heritage trades academy:

• 47.9 percent of buildings in Covington date to 1939 or earlier, and many property owners report difficulty finding contractors with the skill and expertise to work on old buildings.

• Renewed interest in helping architecturally significant buildings reach their potential.

• Challenges related to quality of life and financial security among some Covington families because of chronic problems of unemployment or underemployment.

• And the construction industry’s desperate need for workers, measured at 2.2 million over the next three years, according to Rypkema’s analysis.

“The Covington Academy of Heritage Trades is more than just a job-training program – this is a holistic approach to strengthening the capacity of our economy, our workforce, and our families’ futures,” West said.

City of Covington



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Heritage trades employers invited to Tuesday discussion > City of Covington, KY

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Labor analysis, training model for new academy on table as City moves to skill up workforce

COVINGTON, Ky. – Learning the “lost skills” related to repairing, restoring, and maintaining historic buildings is a viable career choice that will earn workers a living wage and make them highly sought-after by a wide array of potential employers.

That’s the clear takeaway from a new labor and market analysis of this region that confirms what anecdotes have been suggesting: There is a huge and critical need for an ongoing effort led by the City of Covington to work with its partners to train a new generation of workers.

In fact, writes consultant Donovan Rypkema of PlaceEconomics: “Virtually every finding of this report supports the establishment of the Covington Academy of Heritage Trades.”

In a public event Tuesday, Rypkema and City officials will discuss the report, and workforce needs and opportunities related to heritage trades, with would-be employers and potential investors.

Targeted invitations have been going out for weeks, but there are still spots available. If you fit those categories and are interested in attending the event, held at 4 p.m. at the Kentucky Career Center at 1324 Madison Ave., you can sign up at HERITAGE TRADES PRESENTATION. Doors open at 3:30 p.m. (Later events will be set up for prospective students and instructors.)

Later Tuesday evening, Rypkema, the author of The Economics of Historic Preservation, will present the findings of “Historic Trades Labor Analysis: Baseline Data for Covington, Kentucky” to the City’s Board of Commissioners.

Among the findings:

  • 94 – The number of jobs each year already supported by permit activity in Covington’s local and National Register historic districts alone since 2013.
  • 9% — How much more a trades worker with training, experience, or expertise in historic preservation reported being paid, compared to those in non-historic construction trades.
  • $8.5MM – Collective wages paid to workers on projects in Covington’s local and National Register historic districts per year between 2013 and 2021.

Meanwhile, on Wednesday, another consultant working on the project, Bob Yapp of Missouri-based Preservation Resources Inc., will join with City officials to hold one-on-one meetings with potential employers/contractors to continue discussing the most effective and accessible model for the program, classes, and “academy.”

The City announced the initiative in October 2021 with this HERITAGE TRADES RELEASE. Then in December, it announced a related effort to support the Building Industry Association of Northern Kentucky’s plans to open a satellite campus in Latonia of the Enzweiler Building Institute, which teaches more “mainstream” construction trades like carpentry, plumbing, electric, and HVAC. That proposal can be seen in this CONSTRUCTION TRADES release.

 Workforce development and skills training are priorities of Covington’s Economic Development Department, which seeks to raise the quality of life throughout the city by “skilling up” the workforce, said its director, Tom West.

“These are as much workforce development issues as they are business development, but in reality you can’t separate the two,” West said. “The more talented and skilled the local workforce, the more vibrant and sustainable the local economy.”

That’s why the City and its partners are taking pains to create a heritage trades program that is accessible to the largest number of potential workers, said Christopher Myers, Covington’s Historic Preservation Officer and Regulatory Services Manager. This includes overcoming barriers related to transportation, cost, child care, language, and scheduling. Most of all, it requires setting up a model that makes the training feasible without forcing people to give up all current household income.

“We’re exploring the best model to make the training as accessible as possible and effective,” Myers said. “If people can’t attend because of hurdles that we could have overcome, then we didn’t set up the right framework.”

Many details still need to be worked out. But Myers said the program could wind up with a dual framework:

  • Weekend workshops focused on specific skills that would introduce new workers to the heritage trades by giving them hands-on training and familiarity with tools and materials.
  • Certificate programs for 11 specific trades requiring a set number of “contact hours,” with an average of 190 hours across the 11 trades.

The goal of the introductory workshops, Myers said, “is to get people to ask themselves, ‘Is this something I can see myself doing? Is this something I’m physically capable of doing, and find interesting?’ We want basically to give them a taste so they can figure out how far they want to go into a trade.”

The goal of the certificate programs, on the other hand is larger: “to create a workforce of skilled craftspeople who are ready to work,” he said.

One proposal being discussed is whether construction companies and contractors would hire new employees at entry-level positions and then, one week a month, pay them to attend training, Myers said. In return, the companies – many of which are desperate for workers – would directly support Academy trainees who could fill in their workforce and thereby grow their businesses and help them bid on more jobs.

“In essence, the comapanies would be building a talent pipeline tailored to their needs,” Myers said.

Among the 11 programs are those related to historic masonry and plaster, preservation carpentry, box gutters, stained glass, and window restoration.

Rypkema’s presentations on Tuesday will show a “snapshot” of the current heritage trades labor force across Covington, Northern Kentucky, and Greater Cincinnati. Yapp’s sessions with contractors on Wednesday will take a deep dive into curriculum for each program.

The search for financial support is ongoing, although several parts have already been nailed down. Those are:

  • Two federally funded grants totaling just over $38,000 received last year through the Kentucky Heritage Council, along with the City matches, paid for the consultants’ work to date.
  • A $30,000 grant awarded to the City by the Greater Cincinnati Foundation (GCF) earlier this year will be used for marketing, creation of a website, student recruitment, and a student screening tool. The foundation is the region’s leading community foundation. “Thanks to the Greater Cincinnati Foundation, we will be able to change the trajectory of the lives of that many more Covington families,” Myers said. “Its support is critical.”
  • The Covington Board of Commissioners earlier this year set aside $250,000 in federal American Rescue Plan Act funds for the academy’s start-up.
  • And the City recently received notice that it stands to receive funds from three separate but related grant applications, although it’s not authorized yet to talk about those.

Myers said the City and its consultants have engaged a long list of partners in discussing the program, the best model to offer the training, and how to overcome barriers facing students. He said he and others involved in the effort are blown away by the enthusiasm, interest, and engagement shown from students, instructors, potential employers, and community partners.

West, whose background is in workforce development, said City officials – both in his department and serving on the Commission – are acutely aware of four driving factors behind the heritage trades academy:

  • 47.9 percent of buildings in Covington date to 1939 or earlier, and many property owners report difficulty finding contractors with the skill and expertise to work on old buildings.
  • Renewed interest in helping architecturally significant buildings reach their potential.
  • Challenges related to quality of life and financial security among some Covington families because of chronic problems of unemployment or underemployment.
  • And the construction industry’s desperate need for workers, measured at 2.2 million over the next three years, according to Rypkema’s analysis.

“The Covington Academy of Heritage Trades is more than just a job-training program – this is a holistic approach to strengthening the capacity of our economy, our workforce, and our families’ futures,” West said.

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