Advertisement

Header Utility Menu

  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Events

LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Instagram Get Our App

  • Login

Virginia Business

Mobile Menu

  • Issues
  • Industries
    • Banking/Finances
    • Business Law
    • Commercial Real Estate
    • Economic Development
    • Education
    • Energy/Green
    • Federal Contracting
    • Government
    • Healthcare
    • Hotels/Tourism
    • Insurance
    • Ports/Trade
    • Small Business
    • Technology
    • Transportation
  • Regions
    • Central Virginia
    • Eastern Virginia
    • Northern Virginia
    • Roanoke/New River Valley
    • Shenandoah Valley
    • Southern Virginia
    • Southwest Virginia
  • Reports
    • Best Places to Work
    • Business Person of the Year
    • CEO Pay
    • Coronavirus 2020
    • Generous Virginians Project
    • Legal Elite
    • Most Influential Virginians
    • Maritime Guide
    • Site Locator
    • The Big Book
    • Virginia CFO Awards
  • Company News
    • For the Record
    • People
  • Opinion
  • Lists
  • Awards/Events
    • Diversity Leadership Series
    • Vote Now for Women in Leadership
    • Virginia 500
    • Legal Elite
    • CFO Awards
    • Big Book of Lists
    • 100 People To Meet
    • Best Places To Work
  • Virginia 500
    • Read the issue
    • Order a copy
    • Buy an award plaque
    • Nominate execs for 2021

Advertisement

Header Primary Menu

  • virginiabusiness.com
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Home News Regions Eastern Virginia Groups partner to build world-class workforce

Groups partner to build world-class workforce

Published September 3, 2019 by Elizabeth Cooper

Shawn Avery and William Mann collaborating on regional workforce
development. Photo by Mark Rhodes

Business leaders across eastern Virginia are demonstrating how cooperation can bridge skills gaps between the current workforce and job openings in local industries.

After forming the Southeastern Virginia Regional Workforce Collaborative last fall, the Hampton Roads Workforce Council and the Greater Peninsula Workforce Board funded a report this year on the region’s workforce demographics, the supply-demand gap in work skills and a workforce strategy to improve the talent pipeline.

Delivered in June, the Talent Alignment Strategy report notes that the region has a labor shortage and is operating at close to full employment, echoing the national employment rate. As a result, the gain of 30,000 jobs over the past five years has outpaced growth in the working-age population of 9,600 people. Information technology is at the top of the industries seeking qualified employees.

The report notes that a single regional talent development strategy “will be key to Hampton Roads’ ability to create a robust workforce and world-class talent development system.”

Serving approximately 4,500 businesses and employers, the new regional collaborative is working with local school systems, community colleges, technical schools, apprentice programs and four-year colleges and universities to identify needed skillsets and develop programs to meet those needs.

It’s also working to address regional labor shortages, especially in high-growth fields such as shipbuilding and ship repair, health care, information technology and hospitality.

Additionally, the collaborative will work to encourage military veterans to remain in Hampton Roads and to convince millennials that the region’s employment opportunities, lifestyle and other amenities are on par with areas such as Charlotte, North Carolina, and Northern Virginia. “Young people look for a certain style and quality of life,” says William Mann, executive director of the Greater Peninsula Workforce Board. “We have to work really hard to make the case for millennials that this is the place to stay.”

In a region long plagued by fragmentation, the collaborative also seeks to be a template for the formation of other alliances. “We’re probably setting a really good example for how other organizations in the area might consider working together,” Mann adds.

“We’re speaking with one voice when meeting the needs of the business community in Hampton Roads,” says Shawn Avery, president and CEO of the Hampton Roads Workforce Council. “It shows we’re unified when it comes to workforce development for businesses looking to come into our area.”

Related Stories

Topgolf International to build 65,000-square-foot entertainment center in Virginia Beach

Virginia Business logo

Virginia Beach apartments sell for $33.6 million

Virginia Business logo

Wilmik to expand Virginia Beach headquarters

Trending

Finance/Insurance: STEPHAN Q. CASSADAY

Finance/Insurance: PAUL B. MANNING

Federal Contractors/Technology: JASON PROVIDAKES

Education: ANNE M. KRESS

Artemis I to launch with help from Va. contractors

Sponsored Stories

Why is my Less Than Truckload (LTL) freight pricing going up and my service level going down?  

Beyond Juneteenth – How Capital One is Commemorating and Implementing Change

How We Help Your Business Operate Better

Before the Breach: Get Serious About Cyber Resilience

Professionals are Discovering What it Means to Live Uniquely in the Alleghany Highlands of Virginia

Riverside Logistics Celebrates 25th Anniversary!

Girls for a Change Empowers Black Youth for the Future Workforce

The Jackson Ward Collective is equipping Black-owned small businesses with the tools for success

Advertisement

Advertisement

Trending

Finance/Insurance: STEPHAN Q. CASSADAY

Finance/Insurance: PAUL B. MANNING

Federal Contractors/Technology: JASON PROVIDAKES

Education: ANNE M. KRESS

Artemis I to launch with help from Va. contractors

Sponsored Stories

Why is my Less Than Truckload (LTL) freight pricing going up and my service level going down?  

Beyond Juneteenth – How Capital One is Commemorating and Implementing Change

How We Help Your Business Operate Better

Before the Breach: Get Serious About Cyber Resilience

Professionals are Discovering What it Means to Live Uniquely in the Alleghany Highlands of Virginia

Riverside Logistics Celebrates 25th Anniversary!

Girls for a Change Empowers Black Youth for the Future Workforce

The Jackson Ward Collective is equipping Black-owned small businesses with the tools for success

Get Virginia Business directly on your tablet or in your mailbox!

Subscribe to Virginia Business

Advertisement

Advertisement

Footer Primary Menu

  • virginiabusiness.com
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Footer Secondary Menu

  • Industries
  • Regions
  • Reports
  • Company News
  • Events

Sign Up For Our Newsletter

Sign Up

LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Instagram Get Our App

Privacy Policy Cookie Policy

Footer Utility Menu

Copyright © 2023 Virginia Business. All rights reserved.

Site Maintained by TechArk