Tech School Receives “Gold Rush” Haul Truck from Volvo CE

Hauler will be used for training in basic truck operation as well as to support students learning loading techniques with wheel loaders and excavators

Volvo Career Tech School Receives Gold Rush Haul Truck
Volvo Iron Mark

Volvo Construction Equipment (Volvo CE) has donated an articulated haul truck to train future equipment operators at Lehigh Career & Technical Institute (LCTI) in Schnecksville, PA. The Volvo A35D hauler had been used on Discovery Channel’s “Gold Rush” television series and will now serve as a training tool for high school students enrolled in the institute’s Heavy Equipment Operations and Preventive Maintenance program.

“We will use the Volvo hauler across the full curriculum. In addition to basic truck operation, it will be a support piece for students who are learning loading techniques with wheel loaders and excavators,” said Jim Wabals, instructor at LCTI. “The hauler will also give students experience on preventive maintenance and help them understand the value it adds to reducing operating costs and increasing productivity over the machine’s lifetime.”

The Heavy Equipment Operations & Preventive Maintenance program teaches machine operation skills for a range of equipment, basic machine maintenance, surveying, grading, and erosion and sediment control techniques. Since its inception in 2005, the program has maintained 90 percent placement rate of graduates directly hired into construction equipment-related positions.

Volvo Career Tech School Receives Gold Rush Haul Truck 2The 2006 articulated haul truck has over 15,000 hours and is valued at $80,000. It was used by “Gold Rush” star Tony Beets at his Yukon mine. He added his signature to the front fender (left) as a personal touch-point for the students. Fellow “Gold Rush” miner Juan Ibarra assisted with the truck handover at the school. Ibarra also spent classroom time with the students, sharing his career experiences and exploring where the construction equipment field can take them.

Heavy equipment operators are among the most in-demand employees, with a projected growth rate of 12% from 2016 to 2026 — faster than the average for all occupations, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Closing this operator gap is vitally important to Volvo as an advocate for the construction industry and as an equipment manufacturer.

“Opportunities like this exemplify how business can partner with education,” said Stephen Roy, president of Volvo CE Americas. “The availability of the Volvo hauler intersected with LCTI’s need to broaden its training. Giving students practical experience in the seat and under the hood will give them a strong advantage when they enter the workforce, where Volvo haulers are a mainstay on many job sites.”

LCTI is the largest career tech school in Pennsylvania and one of the largest of its type in the United States. It offers more than 45 skills-based programs of study, as well as academic instruction for 2,700 students each year.

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