Huntington receives $15.7 million toward manufacturing sites

Millions of dollars in grant money, which will be used to turn former industrial properties...
Millions of dollars in grant money, which will be used to turn former industrial properties into 21st Century manufacturing sites, are soon coming to the city of Huntington.(wsaz)
Published: Sep. 2, 2022 at 5:25 AM EDT
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HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) -- Millions of dollars in grant money, which will be used to turn former industrial properties into 21st Century manufacturing sites, are soon coming to the city of Huntington.

The Appalachian Climate Technologies (ACT) Now Coalition of West Virginia has been named as one of the 21 winners of the U.S. Economic Development Administration’s Build Back Better Regional Challenge, President Joe Biden and U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo announced Friday.

The ACT Now Coalition will be awarded a package of grants totaling $62.8 million through the nationwide competition to use for several economic revitalization projects throughout Southern West Virginia. Of that amount, $15.7 million will go toward the transformation of two former industrial sites in Huntington into centers for 21st Century manufacturing, the city of Huntington announced Friday.

The former American Car and Foundry (ACF) industrial site, will get $8.2 million to set up a new manufacturing hub. The first tenant, the city says, will be a new Welding & Robotics Technology Training Center. Marshall University’s Robert C. Byrd Institute (RCBI) will oversee the Training Center in partnership with Mountwest Community and Technical College (MCTC). RCBI will utilize robotic welding technology at this new Training Center and integrate it into its advanced welding program.

Coalfield Development Corp., a nonprofit organization headquartered in Wayne that focuses on rebuilding the Appalachian economy from the ground up, will receive $7.5 million to partner with Solar Holler and transform the former Black Diamond factory in Huntington’s Westmoreland neighborhood into a new “Mine the Sun” solar training and logistics center.

“The ACT Now Coalition proves that we are infinitely stronger in West Virginia when we stand together,” Mayor Steve Williams said. “Because Coalfield Development is partnering with our major cities, leading academic institutions, economic revitalization organizations and so many others who are working for positive change, Southern West Virginia is becoming an economic force that is prepared to compete in the ever-changing world market. We now are proud to say our efforts are bolstered by a partnership with the federal government as we embrace the challenges of the digital age.”

The ACT Now Coalition is led by Coalfield Development and includes the cities of Huntington, Charleston and Logan; Marshall and West Virginia universities; and several economic revitalization organizations and private-sector innovators. The Coalition’s efforts focus on building a new economy for Southern West Virginia.

Traditionally, Southern West Virginia’s economy has been dominated by the coal industry. ACT Now is an opportunity to diversify the region’s economy and make it more sustainable. Doing so will help ensure a just transition to a better economy with better-paying jobs and broader community improvement than what has been realized in years past.

According to a release by the city, the ACT Now Coalition will receive an additional $30 million in match and leverage support from Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation, the Just Transition Foundation and other philanthropies for its economic revitalization efforts.

U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin was a strong backer of the ACT Now Coalition, and U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm, Appalachian Regional Commission Federal Co-Chair Gayle Manchin and other supported the coalition’s progress and efforts.

“As an anchor tenant of the H-BIZ manufacturing hub on the former ACF industrial site in Huntington, RCBI’s Welding & Robotics Technology Training Center will support the City of Huntington’s efforts to grow additional manufacturing job opportunities,” said Charlotte Weber, longtime RCBI director and now vice president of Government Relations for Marshall University.

RCBI has a nationally-recognized welding training program that includes direct customized training for manufacturers and a student program in partnership with MCTC. The program, however, does not have a permanent home and is only able to conduct welding training on three evenings per week.

Despite this limitation, in seven years of its existence, RCBI’s welding program has produced 230 students who also earned more than 1,100 American Welding Society (AWS) certificates, and the program was recognized by the National Energy Technology Laboratories as an Advanced Welding Workforce Initiative, the release states.

The city says a new, dedicated welding training site at the H-BIZ manufacturing hub will allow for a major increase in enrollment, the installation of state-of-the-art training technologies and the ability to run day and evening courses throughout the whole week to meet student and industry demand.

“As owner and developer of the former ACF site, the Huntington Municipal Development Authority (HMDA) considers it a privilege to spearhead the redevelopment of this historical, 150-year-old brownfield property into an environmentally clean industrial and commercial site with modern amenities, said Cathy Burns, executive director of HMDA. “The Build Back Better Regional Challenge investment will allow existing businesses to retain and add jobs and strengthen partnerships with the renowned training programs of RCBI to expand to meet the growing needs of a transformative workforce.”