ASE Education Foundation receives $25 million grant to enhance national tech apprentice programs

The four-year U.S. Department of Labor initiative pays for employers to hire and keep new auto, collision, and truck technicians — and gives the industry a proven way to grow the workforce, the Foundation says.

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The ASE Education Foundation has been awarded a $25 million, four-year grant from the U.S. Department of Labor to expand registered apprenticeships for auto, collision and truck service technicians nationwide. 

The grant is the largest workforce investment the Department has ever directed to the transportation service industry, and comes through the Department’s Pay-for-Performance Incentive Payments Program.

AseThe Education Foundation says the idea behind it is refreshingly simple: reward employers with registered apprenticeships for hiring apprentices and coaching them through the make-or-break first year on the job. Program sponsors — dealer groups, shop associations, franchise operators and similar organizations — will receive $3,500 for every apprentice they bring on and keep, paid in two parts as the new technician reaches 90 and 270 days on the job. 

The need is not in dispute. The Foundation states the industry has openings for far more technicians than it can find: roughly 128,000 are needed each year, while training programs produce about 37,000. The harder problem is keeping them. Only about one in eight entry-level technicians is still on the job three years in. That is the gap this grant is built to close — not by chasing more résumés, but by making sure the people who start actually stay. 

To do that, the Foundation is putting mentorship at the center. Every dollar is tied to a technician reaching real milestones, which gives sponsors a direct stake in the coaching, support and structure that keep a new hire in the bay and on a path forward. Registered apprenticeships are a proven way to grow the workforce — studies show that employers realize an average return of $1.47 for every dollar invested, and over 90% of apprentices stay with the same employer when they complete the program. 

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Employers who have an existing registered apprenticeship can participate, the Foundation says, and those who don’t won’t have to build their programs from scratch. The Foundation and National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA) provide a ready-made playbook — the free Apprenticeship-in-a-Box — covering everything from mentor training to interview guides, so a shop can stand up a credible program quickly. 

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The Foundation is leading the effort with a coalition that reaches nearly every corner of the industry. Other initial partners include the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence (ASE), the American Truck Dealers (ATD) and Jobs for the Future (JFF), which will manage the incentive payments and federal reporting. Together the Foundation states they will engage employers, schools and prospective technicians in all 50 states, the five territories and the District of Columbia. 

The Foundation is actively recruiting more partners, and apprenticeships will be created all across the industry; in franchised dealerships, retail chains, fleets, body shops, truck and diesel repair shops and independent auto repair shops. 

“Every driver on the road depends on a skilled technician they may never meet. For more than forty years, our job has been to make sure those technicians are trained to a standard the industry demands and the public can trust,” says Mike Coley, president of the ASE Education Foundation. “This grant lets us do something the industry has needed for a long time: open a clear, paid path into the trade and give employers a proven way to invest in and grow the people who keep this country moving. 

“We’re not just filling jobs. We’re building careers that can support a family for a lifetime, strengthening the shops and dealers that serve their communities, and protecting the motoring public who trusts all of us every time they start their car.”

Recruitment begins immediately. The Foundation states employers looking to develop their own technicians, schools looking to place their students, and anyone considering the trade as a career can learn more and sign up for updates at ASEeducationFoundation.org/apprenticeship.

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