Not all Illinois’ jobless fit for manufacturing, companies say

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SPRINGFIELD — David Del Castillo worked on an assembly line at the Knapheide Manufacturing Co. in Quincy for five years, until the economic downturn caused the company to lay off 185 employees in April 2009.

Some 400,000 Illinoisans lost their jobs in the Great Recession from February 2008 to January 2010 and 118,000 of those losses were in manufacturing, according to the Illinois Department of Employment Security.

After earning an associate’s degree in advanced manufacturing, Del Castillo, who lives in Quincy, returned to Knapheide truck plant and has doubled his income and responsibilities.

“It’s neat, because it’s doing a lot of logistics, computer programming and chemistry, like testing anti-rust paint,” said Del Castillo, a former Marine and father of two teenage boys.

He said that in his previous job at Knapheide, he put together parts of the truck bodies as they came by on an assembly line.

Del Castillo is the type of skilled worker manufacturing companies desperately want, but cannot find.

“Companies are literally starving for qualified workers,” said Tucker Kennedy, spokesman for the Illinois Manufacturing Extension Center, a nonprofit offering advice, training and technical expertise to Illinois manufacturers.

A survey of more than 1,000 employers nationwide found a wide gap in jobs and workers. Eighty percent of those surveyed said they cannot find enough qualified workers to fill open positions, according to a 2011 survey by the Manufacturing Institute, an affiliate of the National Association of Manufacturers, a manufacturing trade group.The survey polled executives from 1,123 companies, half of those from industrial products companies.

Driven by advanced technology and globalization, manufacturing in the United States has evolved and is “vastly different today than it was even 20 years ago,” said Kennedy said.

“It’s much more of a computer-aided, collaborative process that requires math and science as well as good communication,” he said.

Kennedy said the industry, as a result, has undergone a “mid-skills gap” — a shortage of U.S. workers who have mechanical or technical skills that require industry training or government certification, but not necessarily a bachelor’s degree.

At Knapheide, “we get lots of applicants, but finding ones with the right skills has been hard,” said Jim Rubottom, the company’s vice president of human resources. He said most applicants do not have welding or machine-cutting experience.

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