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  April 19th, 2017 | Written by

Port of Oakland: Hundreds of New Jobs On the Way

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  • Major developments are underway at the Port of Oakland that provide construction and warehouse jobs.
  • 60 percent of 542 construction jobs on Oakland rail yard project went to local workers.
  • Port Maritime Director John Driscoll: “We don’t have a good base of fundamental skills.”

Industrial development will soon create hundreds of new jobs at the Port of Oakland.  The challenge: finding enough skilled workers to fill them.  That was the message port officials delivered to a visiting delegation from the philanthropic Kellogg Foundation.

The port said it wants to fill the skills gap with training for job candidates.  It added that its aim is to put more local people to work.

“Our economic impact is inextricably tied to the jobs we create,” Port Social Responsibility Director Amy Tharpe told visitors from the 87-year-old foundation. “The question we must ask ourselves is how does the Port’s business activity translate into maximum community benefit?”

Officials from Battle Creek, Michigan-based Kellogg Foundation, along with some foundation grant recipients, traveled to Oakland to learn how the port creates jobs for underserved populations. Among the ways discussed by port officials: project labor agreements that establish local-hiring goals and workforce development funding for capital construction projects; using project dollars to pay for job training to create a local workforce pipeline; and partnerships with developers and contractors interested in putting local residents to work.

“We find good tenants for port property who drive good jobs,” said Port of Oakland Maritime Director John Driscoll.  “These are skilled entry-level jobs with upward mobility.”

The port said major developments are underway that provide jobs ranging from construction to warehouse operations, including the expansion of Oakland International Airport’s International Arrivals Building and a 280,000-square-foot refrigerated seaport warehouse. A just-completed rail yard provided 542 construction jobs, said Tharpe.  She said 60 percent of those jobs went to local workers.

Driscoll said employers are searching for workers with skills such as truck driving or forklift operation.  “We don’t have a good base of fundamental skills,” he said.

Tharpe said the port assists local agencies that train workers for skilled blue-collar jobs.  She said developers pay into a job-development fund 30 cents for every employee-hour worked on a port project.

About 73,000 jobs depend on the Port of Oakland, Tharpe said, adding that workers in the San Francisco East Bay where the port is located fill two-thirds of those jobs.