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Nighthawks develop host national
workforce program
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Brazil,
Ind,
native Spc. Ean Blakley of the Indiana National Guard’s 76th
Infantry Brigade Combat Team registers an Iraqi worker at
the host national workforce program center. Blakley has been
has been working to identify workers with developed trade
skills in order to provide Iraqis with more employment
opportunities and Logistical Support Area Anaconda with a
more developed host nation workforce. Photo by Staff Sgt.
Les Newport
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BALAD,
Iraq
- Hundreds of local Iraqis arrive each work morning at the
pedestrian gate of Logistical Support Area Anaconda, bustle through
security inspections then are bussed to the directorate of public
works’ local national workforce program center.
Some of the workers have spent years, since
shortly after the coalition invasion, helping to establish and
sustain Anaconda as a model for a counter-insurgency logistical hub.
They have also learned a lot about Americans, their culture, their
language and their motivations.
As units cycle through deployments, the Iraqi
workers support Soldiers from across
America, the most recent, Soldiers
of the Indiana National Guard’s 76th Infantry Brigade Combat Team.
Sgt. 1st Class James Sarson coordinates the host
national workforce and military escort duties necessary which
enables the Iraqis to work on Anaconda. After several weeks of
sending Iraqi workers on typical details of grounds keeping and
unskilled labor assignments, Sarson began to wonder what untapped
resources were passing through the gate each morning.
The citizen-Soldier, a food
service manager at St. Mary’s of
Woods
College
near Terre Haute,
sensed that the Iraqi workforce had a lot more to offer, and more
importantly, wanted to contribute more.
“They see what’s happening here on Anaconda,” and
according to Sarson, they naturally want to be a part of it.
Sarson began documenting skills in which workers
claimed to have training or experience, cautiously. He wanted to be
confident they could deliver and had not overstated abilities in
order to secure more stable employment. So far, he has not been
disappointed.
“What were doing is documenting identifiable trade
skills that the Iraqi workforce has,” said Sarson. Sarson has
identified plumbers, electricians, carpenters and painters through
the local national workforce program.
Sarson says the next step is to let Anaconda know
the talent that is available: “We’re working to build an awareness
of skills.”
Spc. Ean Blakeley works for Sarson and spends more
time with the workers than any other Soldier on Anaconda. Blakeley
says there are so many advantages to identifying the special skills
and talents of the workforce, that it is probably difficult to gauge
all the long-term effects.
“Anytime we send a skilled worker on a project, he
takes at least one or two helpers,” said Blakely. “I don’t know if I
can call it an apprentice program, but if I had to put a label on it
that’s exactly what I’d call it.”
Blakely, a technician with
Arial Arts Fireworks Displays in Brazil,
Ind.,
said that identifying skill also gives the workers the opportunity
to advance and earn higher wages. Blakely was looking for someone
with carpentry skills to help temporarily in his work area. He was
so impressed with his volunteer’s work, he recommended him to the
Anaconda carpentry shop. He was hired, given a raise is now
guaranteed full-time work.
“He was pleased with that,” said Blakley, adding
there is a lot of satisfaction for a worker who has an opportunity
to work in an area in which they have experience and even formal
training in some cases.
Interest in the local national workforce program
has come from the Iraqi-Based Industrial Zones initiative, a program
to build industrial, retail, wholesale and service support
facilities on the perimeters of coalition installations. IBIZ also
includes plans for a vocational training program.
If the initiative has a readily available pool of
workers with developed skills, or workers with an interest in
developing skills, the prospect for success is increased, according
to Lt. Col. Patrick Thibodeau, 76th operations officer.
Sarson and Blakely hope the program can not only
make a difference in the efforts of coalition forces and the Iraqi
government to bring greater stability to the region, but that the
local workers can find encouragement in the prospect of a brighter
future.
Story & photos by Staff Sgt. Les Newport, 76th
Infantry Brigade Combat Team Public Affairs
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