Learning Logistics of Life

Adult students find route to job opportunities

A headshot of Robert Gonzales, a smiling middle-aged man in a collared shirt.
Robert Gonzales, as an alternative education administrator, takes helping his students find job opportunities seriously. Photo courtesy of Robert Gonzales.

There’s a boom growing in the Tulare-Kings counties region, as commerce and industry make their way back from the pandemic and new ventures move in. Consequently, job opportunities are growing.

On the scene to help its students find their career pathways and connect them to employment is the Sequoias Adult Education Consortium (SAEC) and its many partners.

SAEC’s goal is straightforward: To provide its adult students with the education they need to find jobs. The variety of career choices offered to students are varied, from business and manufacturing to health care and food service.

“We’re trying to be on the cutting edge. We’re here to support our students in making better lives.”

Robert Gonzales, Alternative education administrator, Cutler-Orosi Adult School

Especially vibrant in the community is the industrial segment, sparked by e-commerce and logistics, points out Devon Jones, economic development manager for the City of Visalia.

The scenario works like this: Consumers order goods, which in this case are warehoused (and sometimes manufactured) in Visalia’s Industrial Park. Some of the Park’s distribution centers are global and national in scope, such as VF Corporation (apparel and footwear) and Jo-Ann Fabrics (fabric and crafts).

How to keep track of all that merchandise? The answer: Logistics. It’s the science of managing the flow of goods between Point A (their origin) and Point B (their destinations), as well as curating the goods while they’re in the warehouses.

“Industrial job growth is of particular interest, as these tend to be primary jobs, producing goods and/or services for customers that are predominantly outside the community, which in turn generates new ‘outside’ dollars for circulation in the local economy,” Jones says.

The Cutler-Orosi Adult School, 15 miles north of Visalia, is part of the SAEC and that “local economy.” “We’re enrolling some of our students in Visalia Adult School’s Global Warehouse Logistics program,” says Robert Gonzales, COAS alternative education administrator. “Some of them have already worked at the Industrial Park and had employment at VF.”

The majority of his students continue to work in agriculture, he says, “But we give them educational opportunities to move on from that. We get them diplomas that can start the pathway to logistics through Visalia Adult School or the Logistics Workplace Skills Academy at the College of the Sequoias in Visalia.”

The COAS mantra is “eliminate all barriers to education,” Gonzales says. The school does that by offering digital literacy classes, citizenship classes, face-to-face small-group instruction and, until the pandemic, transportation to classes and day care for the children of parents attending classes.

“We’re trying to be on the cutting edge,” he says. “We’re here to support our students in making better lives.”

For more information on CutlerOrosi Adult School, visit http://www.cojusd.org/Student-Services/AdultSchool/.

Written by Alan Pierleoni.

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