09/30/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/30/2025 12:24
WASHINGTON - The U.S. Department of Labor today announced the award of more than $86 million in Industry-Driven Skills Training Fund grants to 14 states to accelerate innovation, strengthen domestic production, and address critical workforce needs across the country, with more than $20 million of the funding supporting the revitalization of the domestic shipbuilding industry, training workers in welding, marine electrical, manufacturing, and other skilled trades.
Administered by the department's Employment and Training Administration, these grants will provide outcome-based reimbursements to employers for providing training in high-demand and emerging industries that align with President Trump's Executive Order 14278, Preparing Americans for High-Paying Skilled Trade Jobs of the Future,and Executive Order 14629, Restoring America's Maritime Dominance. These priorities are also in line with the goals published in America's Talent Strategyand America's AI Action Plan.
"President Trump has directed the Labor Department to Make America Skilled Again by providing states with the resources they need to expand on-the-job training opportunities," said Secretary of Labor Lori Chavez-DeRemer. "By investing more than $86 million in workforce development initiatives across the country, we are carrying out our responsibility to prepare American workers to fill the mortgage-paying jobs being created by this Administration's efforts to revitalize American manufacturing, shipbuilding, energy production, and other critical industries. This is how we keep America working and winning."
Applicants were required to propose a model to award funds to employers for training and retaining newly hired and incumbent workers in high-growth and emerging industries critical to American competitiveness.
The department awarded Industry-Driven Skills Training Fund grants to the following recipients:
The department initially announcedthe funding availability in early August. Dependent on the availability of funding, the department anticipates additional rounds of grants.