Open / Close Advertisement

Fairfield Works Opens Maintenance Training Center

June 21, 2006 — United States Steel Corp.’s Fairfield Works has opened a new Maintenance Training Center.

"Fairfield Works historically hired maintenance employees directly from the community and supplemented them with graduates from an internal Maintenance Learner Program," said Fairfield Works General Manager Merle Stein. "Recent changes in the labor market have significantly reduced the availability of qualified maintenance employees in the Birmingham area. These include changing demographics, increased use of technology, the time needed to adequately train workers in key competencies, and the significant increase in automobile assembly plants and their suppliers in Alabama. Our new facility will permit Fairfield Works to develop the skilled workforce critical to our plant's long-term viability."

Fairfield Works’ Maintenance Technician program is centered on sixty-three specially developed courses and associated hands-on exercises. To successfully complete the program, students will be required to demonstrate proficiency in 30 mechanical modules or 33 electrical modules.

The new Maintenance Training Center occupies 11,000 square feet in the Flintridge Building, which was remodeled to accommodate classrooms and labs and to expand an existing in-plant welding lab. Classes, which began on June 5, are being taught by current Fairfield Works employees who have undergone an extensive three-tiered Train-the-Trainer program, consisting of observing training activities at U. S. Steel's Gary Works in Indiana, a three-day training seminar conducted at Fairfield Works, and several months of close observation and coaching by a training consultant.