As the child of a Nigerian civil engineer, Afeez Ibrahim shadowed his dad on job sites and figured he would grow up to become a projects inspector just like him.
At 37 years old and now living halfway around the world, Ibrahim is finally getting that chance. He has been hired by WSB as a full-time pipeline inspector thanks to the WSB Opportunity Plus civil-engineering training program he graduated from last week in Minneapolis.
"I am so happy," he said. "I emptied my savings to move up here. It was a big risk. It was hard. ... Some days I didn't have money to buy gas but I am proud I did it."
Golden Valley-based WSB's training program uses 30 of its engineers to train participants as construction surveyors, technicians, construction materials testers and gas- and water- pipeline inspectors.
The unpaid program meets nights and weekends and uses city and county agencies and nonprofits to find recruits.
Nine students in the training program's inaugural class last year were just weeks shy of graduating when COVID-19 hit. WSB was forced to truncate its training. Undaunted, it restarted training in January. Five participants graduated April 14, including Ibrahim, who had quit his sales job in Rochester and moved to the Twin Cities for the training.
He will make $23 an hour, the most he has made since arriving in the U.S. five years ago. He also will receive benefits and have an opportunity to earn additional industry certifications.
"Now my kids will have more," Ibrahim said.