US to Fight Labor Shortage With New Chips Act Worker Program

(Bloomberg) -- The Biden administration is kicking off a program to cultivate the US computer-chip workforce, aiming to stave off a labor shortage that threatens to undermine domestic semiconductor production.

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The program, described as a workforce partner alliance, will use some of the $5 billion in federal funding set aside for a new National Semiconductor Technology Center. Officials plan to award grants to as many as 10 workforce development projects with budgets of $500,000 to $2 million.

They’ll launch additional application processes in the coming months, and will determine the total level of spending once all the proposals have been considered.

The money comes from the 2022 Chips and Science Act, a landmark law that set aside $39 billion in grants to boost US chipmaking, plus $11 billion for semiconductor research and development, including the NSTC. Firms have pledged to invest more than 10 times that in response to the incentives — a surge that’s set to reshape the global supply chain for semiconductors. Monday’s effort is the legislation’s first workforce-focused funding opportunity.

Industry and government officials have warned that those new factories could falter without significant investment in labor. Some estimates project that the US will be short 90,000 technicians by 2030 — when the country aims to produce at least a fifth of the world’s most advanced chips.

“It is imperative that we develop a domestic semiconductor workforce ecosystem that can support the industry’s anticipated growth,” said Michael Barnes, senior manager of workforce development programs at Natcast, the nonprofit organization set up to operate the NSTC.

Since Biden signed the Chips Act two years ago, more than 50 community colleges have announced new or expanded semiconductor-related programs. The four biggest Chips Act manufacturing awards — to Intel Corp., Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Samsung Electronics Co. and Micron Technology Inc. — each included $40 million to $50 million in dedicated workforce funding.

The Commerce Department unveiled its 12th grant from that manufacturing program on Monday: $6.7 million for Rogue Valley Microdevices. That money will support a new Florida factory focused on chips with defense and biomedical applications.

(Updates with chart after sixth paragraph.)

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