When Pedro Juan Alicea Jr. was promoted to a supervisor’s role, he felt unprepared for his new responsibilities. That all changed by the time he completed a Registered Apprenticeship program.
Alicea is a fabricating supervisor at Columbia Manufacturing Inc. in Westfield, Massachusetts, which makes furniture for schools and colleges around the country. He started working at Columbia Manufacturing as a laborer when he was 18. He eventually learned to weld and worked as a welder and fabricator before being asked to become the supervisor of his department.
“Not having gone to college, I didn’t think I could do it,” he said.
But with the support of his employer, Alicea enrolled in a program that prepared him to succeed in the new job: the Front Line Supervisor Apprenticeship sponsored by MassMEP, the Manufacturing Extension Partnership in Massachusetts.
Jobs for the Future (JFF) supports the MassMEP program with technical and financial assistance through its Improving Diversity and Equity in Apprenticeships for Manufacturing (IDEA-M) project.
Easing the Transition
Karen Myhaver, program manager for the Front Line Supervisor Apprenticeship, said MassMEP created the program in 2019 in response to requests from the state’s manufacturers.
In manufacturing, it’s not uncommon for employers to ask members of their production teams to become supervisors. And as was the case with Alicea, the transition can present challenges for those who are tapped for promotion. Often, the new supervisors have little training and aren’t prepared for their new responsibilities.
“We expect them to be able to do it. But a lot of people didn’t sign up for that—going from working with your hands to dealing with human-resources-related issues,” Myhaver said.