DULUTH – Kieran Cummings has a year of school left, but he's already making a living repairing commercial jets. After a day of classes at one hangar at the airport here, he heads to another where he works late into the night — some caffeine required.
"We're tearing these things apart, and we're doing everything," said the Lake Superior College student. "The experience, you can't beat it."
It takes a lot of people on the ground to keep airplanes in the sky, and a shortage of aircraft mechanics around the country is causing employers to get creative and some school programs to swell.
As aviation booms in the Duluth area, led by plane maker Cirrus Aircraft and aviation services company AAR Corp., Lake Superior College (LSC) is doubling down on the industry thanks in part to cash and material donations that have stretched into six figures in recent years. Enrollment in the aircraft maintenance technology program hit another record this year.
"We're seeing these workforce shortages across the board in manufacturing, health care, but aviation is stepping up and putting some skin in the game," said Daniel Fanning, the school's director of institutional advancement.
Minneapolis Community and Technical College has likewise seen enrollment grow for its aircraft maintenance program, located inside the Delta Air Lines hangar at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. The airline has also partnered with LSC and dozens of other schools around the country to "mentor and source the next generation of aircraft maintenance technicians" as it faces more than 2,000 retirements in the next decade, said Delta spokesperson Morgan Durrant.
Across North America, Boeing estimates there will be demand for 193,000 aircraft mechanics over the next 20 years.
Still hard to recruit
But aviation programs are costly to maintain and still hard to recruit for. The University of Minnesota Crookston recently suspended its program — which had been around since the school was founded in 1967 — citing increasing expenses and only modest enrollment. Northland Community and Technical College in Thief River Falls has seen its aviation enrollment shrink as a strong economy deters those who might want to go back to school to change careers.