Lawmakers emphasize need to bolster tech, education in workforce development
Lawmakers on Wednesday stressed the need to focus on technology and education as drivers of job growth in both the near and long term.
Speaking at The Hill’s “Future of Jobs Summit,” Rep. Greg Murphy (R-N.C.) argued that science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education will play a key role in shaping the workforce.
“The future is in technology and technology starts with STEM education. It starts at a young age, it starts with a love of learning, and it starts with trying to get young people involved and interested…in science and technology,” he told The Hill’s Steve Clemons.
.@RepGregMurphy: “I think what our future shows, is kind of what the last five, ten, fifteen, twenty-five years has shown, that the future is in technology. And technology starts with STEM education” #TheHillJobs https://t.co/4Uy4LTqeLa pic.twitter.com/PDCsq9T9Ji
— The Hill Events (@TheHillEvents) April 28, 2021
Murphy is the ranking member of the House Education and Labor Committee’s Higher Education and Workforce Investment Subcommittee.
Rep. Haley Stevens (D-Mich.), who also spoke at the Nokia-sponsored event, said technology-based “jobs of the future” are already available but are often overlooked.
“The jobs are here…we’ve got advanced technology, advanced manufacturing jobs ready for people who have that expertise or that interest,” she said.
Stevens, a co-chair of the New Democrat Coalition Future of Work Task Force, said concerns over future job losses due to automation often distract from employment that’s currently available.
She said while autonomous vehicles may eventually make truck drivers obsolete, people today are “not talking about the open truck driving jobs that we have available right now that need to be filled.”
.@RepHaleyStevens: “This workforce shortage that we have, coupled with the reality that the census data just showed us, that we’ve got the lowest level of population growth since the 1930’s, right, this is a national security imperative” #TheHillJobs https://t.co/4Uy4LTqeLa pic.twitter.com/pKy7vgou06
— The Hill Events (@TheHillEvents) April 28, 2021
The lawmakers’ remarks come just hours before President Biden is slated to address a joint session of Congress, where he’s expected to tout his $2.3 trillion infrastructure proposal as a way to boost employment in areas like renewable energy, manufacturing and construction.
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