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AI News Tech Giants AI in workforce training

Google commits $50 million to train more than 300,000 skilled trades workers

by TechDefused Newsroom
Workers, staff, recruitment, HR: The image features a diverse group of professionals standing shoulder to shoulder in a spacious warehouse, each dressed in authentic workwear representative of their respective trades. The lineup includes a chef, construction worker, nurse, welder, electrician, software developer, mechanic, lab technician, carpenter, security guard, and farmworker, all positioned in a relaxed manner, embodying the spirit of teamwork despite their varied backgrounds. aiImage created using AI — nano_banana_2

Google is expanding its skilled-trades support with a $50 million commitment from Google.org to help prepare more than 300,000 American workers across more than 20 states.

The funding will flow directly to training organisations and support 14 labour unions and four trade and contractor associations, the company said in an announcement.

TradesFutures, created by North America’s Building Trades Unions (NABTU) and industry partners, will scale placement from apprenticeship-readiness programs into registered apprenticeships and integrate AI operational tools to improve graduate placement.

The electrical training ALLIANCE (etA), formed by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) and the National Electrical Contractors Association (NECA), will pilot a mobile training centre to bring resources to high-demand infrastructure hubs.

The United Association’s International Training Fund (ITF), working with the Mechanical Contractors Association of America (MCAA), will develop a five-year roadmap to scale skills in plumbing, heating, ventilation, air conditioning and refrigeration.

The International Training Institute for the Sheet Metal and Air Conditioning Industry, backed by Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transportation (SMART) Workers and SMACNA, will modernise coursework, expand apprentice support and deploy new AI tools.

The move builds on prior Google funding that helped etA train tens of thousands of electrical workers and the Manufacturing Institute train tens of thousands of manufacturing workers in AI skills.

Google said the funding comes from Google.org’s AI Opportunity Fund and forms part of more than $1 billion the company has provided globally in training and skilling initiatives since 2022.

by TechDefused Newsroom