Success Story: Auto repair skills in high demand

December 21, 2016

Jackson PierceAfter a couple years as a ski bum out west, Jackson Pierce felt the tug of home.

The former 17³Ô¹Ï automotive technology student’s timing was perfect for his skills. Pierce traded ski groomers for cars, and has spent the last two years working at Bill Marsh Automotive, one of several regional repair shops to which Automotive Technology program director Wayne Moody has built an employment pipeline.

“Everyone needs their car fixed,” said Pierce, of Northport, who attended 17³Ô¹Ï’s automotive program in 2007-08.

But not everyone can fix them. Moody said an aging auto repair workforce combined with increasingly complex, computerized cars has created an opportunity gap that he has worked to fill with 17³Ô¹Ï students like Pierce.

“The last three years (demand) has gone north by leaps and bounds,” Moody said, who fields calls daily from shops locally, downstate as well as in the U.P. “They are vying for the technicians. I could put two jobs on every student if they want them.”

The Grand Traverse area’s population growth also fuels the local hiring demand. At least six former 17³Ô¹Ï students work at Bill Marsh’s Garfield Road locations. Fox Grand Traverse employs another eight, including its first female technician since 1992, KT Rafferty. As it has traditionally, the job attracts students who like hands-on work. But it’s more than turning a wrench nowadays.

“It’s not rudimentary. There’s an immense amount of problem-solving,” Pierce said.

That variety attracts students, too. “Anything can happen here,” said Rachel Smith of Elk Rapids, who started 17³Ô¹Ï’s program in 2013 and has worked at Bill Marsh for about a year and a half. “I like learning new things.”

With cars loaded with dozens of on-board computers, electronics is another important skill set.

“What’s the Ohm’s law? I can’t tell you what it is, but our very best electronics technicians do and it helps them in their job every day,” said Rich King, fixed operations director at Bill Marsh. “They’re learning it in Wayne’s program.”

Bill Marsh techniciansPierce added that he appreciated the real-world instruction he got at 17³Ô¹Ï. “I liked that all the teachers actually owned shops.”

Technicians are financially rewarded for that greater knowledge and as they gain experience. While an entry-level technician might make $12-$14 per hour, Moody said a graduate of the two-year program could be earning between $50,000 and $70,000 after five years. Six-figure salaries are not out of the question for the most experienced technicians.

King said it’s also rewarding at the end of the day. “There’s a huge sense of accomplishment when you fix that car that’s a tough one.”

Registration for spring semester programs, including automotive, is going on now. Find out more about the program here.

Above: From left, former 17³Ô¹Ï automotive students working at Bill Marsh's GM store are Mike Bouchey, technician; Tom Garrity, parts; Rachel Smith, Dave Panek, Jackson Pierce and Zach Schaub, technicians.

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