Processing Your Payment

Please do not leave this page until complete. This can take a few moments.

Updated: November 3, 2020

SMCC’s workforce training class teaches welding skills to new Mainers

Courtesy / Southern Maine Community College Southern Maine Community College welding instructor John Gallagher offers some welding instruction to Luvundisa Kalombako.

A group of new Mainers is learning the trade of welding in a Southern Maine Community College class that provides immigrants valuable skills for the state's workforce.

Eight Maine residents from the African nations of Angola, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Rwanda are enrolled in a beginning welding class that meets for four hours once a week. The 60-hour class is held in the welding lab at SMCC’s South Portland campus and continues through January.

One of the students, Luvundisa Kalombako, moved to Portland two years ago in search of stability and opportunities that aren’t available in his homeland of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the school said in a news release. A pipefitter by trade, he hopes to build a career in construction.

“My goal is to be an engineer in metal construction,” he said. “To learn how to weld is one step for me to reach my goal.”

The class provides basic skills that will benefit those working toward a career in the welding field or a field in which welding skills are required. The course is funded by a grant from the Morton-Kelly Charitable Trust through the Foundation for Maine’s Community Colleges.

The grant is designed to support new Mainers in workforce training or academic programs. SMCC worked with the Portland Adult Education program to recruit students for the class. SMCC and Portland Adult Education established a partnership, called Building the Pipeline, a year ago to enhance workforce training and educational opportunities for new Mainers.

Building the Pipeline aims to improve the screening, testing, evaluation and prior learning assessment of immigrant populations in southern Maine to align more closely with workforce training and credential-awarding programs at SMCC.

“Through our workforce development department and initiatives like BTP, SMCC is helping new Mainers receive the training and education they need to secure bright futures,” Jim Whitten, SMCC’s dean of workforce development, said in the release. “At the same time, the training provides students with the skills that businesses are looking for to fill their workforce needs.”

Lievino Lobi, who moved to Maine from Angola, said no matter what career path he chooses, he knows the welding class will help.

“I want to increase my skills,” he said. “Becoming a welder is a dream for me.”

Sign up for Enews

Related Content

0 Comments

Order a PDF