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United Way partners with STC on jobs program
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SAVANNAH — United Way of the Coastal Empire recently announced it selected Savannah Technical College as a strategic-initiative partner for economic independence with a grant for $290,000.
According to a news release, the goal of the grant is to build career paths that provide career advancement opportunities for lower-skilled workers and job-seekers to obtain family supporting wages.
“We appreciate the United Way’s support of our workforce development programs and applaud its visionary support of economic independence,” STC President Dr. Kathy Love said. “We know that those without a high-school diploma have challenges securing meaningful employment. This program will provide a combination of GED-preparation classes and training that will put these students on the path to self-sufficiency. Their success will create a ripple effect throughout our communities.”
After workshops with UWCE partners and stakeholders throughout the spring and summer of 2013, the focus of the strategic initiative turned to the area of economic independence. UWCE invited funding proposals for a multifaceted strategy effective in connecting individuals to employment with self-sustaining wages. The UWCE Vision Council received 12 submissions, and the Accelerating Opportunity program of STC stood apart as an innovative approach to creating career opportunities, while augmenting UWCE investments in other services across our community.
Accelerating Opportunity employs an evidence-based, nationally recognized best-practice approach to career training that focuses on linking training, basic-skills education and credentialing to high-demand jobs that provide adults a path to a family sustaining wage ($12/hour with benefits, $15/hour without benefits).
Traditionally, students must possess a high school/GED prior to enrolling in courses that lead to a degree or certificate. Through Accelerating Opportunity, students will be enrolled in GED-prep classes, while accelerating their training for work. The collaboratively taught classes integrate basic skills with practical, occupational training that build toward degrees and/or certificates. Students will work with a career navigator who will help them succeed in the program, overcome obstacles, and ultimately graduate with the credentials.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, a person with a high-school or GED credential earns $10,000 more annually than a non-high-school graduate.
For more information about Accelerating Opportunity, call 912-443-5352 or email bstubbs@savannahtech.edu.

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Record April boosts Savannah's container trade at port
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The Port of Savannah moved 356,700 20-foot equivalent container units in April, an increase of 7.1 percent. - photo by Provided

The Georgia Ports Authority's busiest April ever pushed its fiscal year-to-date totals to more than 3.4 million 20-foot equivalent container units (TEUs), an increase of 8.8 percent, or 280,000 TEUs, compared to the first 10 months of fiscal 2017.

"We're on track to move more than 300,000 TEUs in every month of the fiscal year, which will be a first for the authority," said GPA Executive Director Griff Lynch. "We're also anticipating this to be the first fiscal year for the Port of Savannah to handle more than 4 million TEUs."

April volumes reached 356,700 20-foot equivalent container units, up 7.1 percent or 23,700 units. As the fastest growing containerport in the nation, the Port of Savannah has achieved a compound annual growth rate of more than 5 percent a year over the past decade.

"As reported in the recent economic impact study by UGA's Terry College of Business, trade through Georgia's deepwater ports translates into jobs, higher incomes and greater productivity," said GPA Board Chairman Jimmy Allgood. "In every region of Georgia, employers rely on the ports of Savannah and Brunswick to help them become more competitive on the global stage."

To strengthen the Port of Savannah's ability to support the state's future economic growth, the GPA Board approved $66 million in terminal upgrades, including $24 million for the purchase of 10 additional rubber-tired gantry cranes.  

"The authority is committed to building additional capacity ahead of demand to ensure the Port of Savannah remains a trusted link in the supply chain serving Georgia and the Southeast," Lynch said.

The crane purchase will bring the fleet at Garden City Terminal to 156 RTGs. The new cranes will support three new container rows, which the board approved in March. The additional container rows will increase annual capacity at the Port of Savannah by 150,000 TEUs.

The RTGs will work over stacks that are five containers high and six deep, with a truck lane running alongside the stacks. Capable of running on electricity, the cranes will have a lift capacity of 50 metric tons.

The cranes will arrive in two batches of five in the first and second quarters of calendar year 2019.

 Also at Monday's meeting, the GPA Board elected its officers, with Jimmy Allgood as chairman, Will McKnight taking the position of vice chairman and Joel Wooten elected as the next secretary/treasurer.

For more information, visit gaports.com, or contact GPA Senior Director of Corporate Communications Robert Morris at (912) 964-3855 or rmorris@gaports.com.

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