Miller Electric, Hobart Brothers Donate $1 Million to Aid Welder Shortage

Oct. 3, 2006
The American Welding Society (AWS) announced today that its foundation has received a $1 million pledge from Miller Electric Mfg. Co. and Hobart Brothers Company

The American Welding Society (AWS) announced today that its foundation has received a $1 million pledge from Miller Electric Mfg. Co. and Hobart Brothers Company to provide initial funding for the American Welding Society Welder Workforce Development Program.

The AWS Foundation will utilize the donation to fund increased training of entry-level welders and specialized training of existing welders in order to address the shortage of trained welders in the United States.

According to AWS and other industry research, the average age of a welder is in the mid-fifties. Fewer graduates entering the profession, coupled with the projected retirement of half of the experienced welding workforce, has led to a shortage of skilled welders that could weaken U.S. manufacturing and the overall economy.

The donor companies have selected Bruce Albrecht to represent them on an AWS Foundation committee to help establish the workforce program. Albrecht is an AWS board of directors member and a trustee of the AWS Foundation.

“It is the expectation of Miller and Hobart Brothers for this gift to serve as a catalyst for other welding-related companies to support this cause,” said Albrecht.

Miller Electric President Mike Weller said, “Miller was the first corporate sponsor of the AWS Foundation when it formed in 1990 to provide scholarships to welding students, and we continue to fund two AWS welding engineering scholarships, as well as the World Skills Competition Scholarship. We are proud to make yet another commitment to the future of welding in North America

Sundaram Nagarajan, Hobart Brothers group vice president, said, “Our industry must support the efforts that AWS has undertaken. We are extremely proud to be a founding sponsor of this program, but this must be an effort of the entire welding industry to address the critical shortage of welders.”