U.S. Labor Secretary Marty Walsh joined Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-26) for a tour of the Northland Workforce Training Center during a visit to Western New York on December 6, 2021. Federal leaders met with students, teachers and administrators to discuss opportunities to prepare workers for the quality jobs of tomorrow.

“A major component of building back better is creating a skilled, resilient workforce for the 21st century economy,” said Secretary Walsh. “The Build Back Better Act provides the investments needed to offer quality job training opportunities and a roadmap to the middle class.” 

“Employers are in need of a skilled workforce prepared for the jobs of today and tomorrow and Americans need access to good paying jobs that lift up hardworking families,” said Congressman Higgins. “Investments, like those in the Build Back Better Act, create opportunities to fill existing workforce gaps in various fields through improved training, better pay and measures that support American business growth and success.” 

The Build Back Better Act, supported by Congressman Higgins and approved by the House of Representatives in November, makes various investments in American workers, including $13.6 billion for workforce activities administered through the U.S. Department of Labor. Included is $5 billion through 2026 for grants to industry, sector partners and training providers, such as Northland Workforce Training Center, “to expand employment and training activities in high-skill, high-wage, or in-demand industry sectors and occupations.”

Northland Workforce Training Center in Buffalo, New York, through partnerships between higher education institutions and local companies, provides skilled training for jobs in clean energy and advanced manufacturing fields. Northland was made possible thanks to several federal investments including $14 million in New Markets Tax Credits, Community Development Block Grant funding, and one of the region’s largest recent federal Historic Tax Credit allocations totaling over $13.5 million. 

The Build Back Better Act also supports increased wages and training opportunities to address the direct care workforce shortage, makes investments in nursing home staffing, support an expanded Veteran Administration healthcare workforce, delivers grant programs to train new teachers and address shortages, provides $1 billion for Registered, youth and pre-Apprenticeships, reauthorizes the Health Profession Opportunity Grant Program, prepares workers for good-paying jobs in positions that address the climate crisis, and supports clean technology investments protecting manufacturing jobs and America’s competitiveness.