Staff Writer
LISBON The Columbiana County Career and Technical Center has been named one of 12 schools in the state to act as a pilot site for a paid internship program for students.
The program is through the Governor’s Office of Workforce Transformation and will create internships for students where some of the wages will be paid by the state of Ohio, with the goal of long-term employment once the internship ends. Students would be placed in internship roles that have similar demands to an entry-level technology based job.
The internships will focus on software, data, cloud and IT infrastructure.
lnickel@mojonews.com
LISBON The Columbiana County Career and Technical Center has been named one of 12 schools in the state to act as a pilot site for a paid internship program for students.
The program is through the Governor’s Office of Workforce Transformation and will create internships for students where some of the wages will be paid by the state of Ohio, with the goal of long-term employment once the internship ends. Students would be placed in internship roles that have similar demands to an entry-level technology based job.
The internships will focus on software, data, cloud and IT infrastructure.
Staff Writer
LISBON The Columbiana County Career and Technical Center has been named one of 12 schools in the state to act as a pilot site for a paid internship program for students.
The program is through the Governor’s Office of Workforce Transformation and will create internships for students where some of the wages will be paid by the state of Ohio, with the goal of long-term employment once the internship ends. Students would be placed in internship roles that have similar demands to an entry-level technology based job.
The internships will focus on software, data, cloud and IT infrastructure.
Developers invited to offer plans for Youngstown s former Strouss building wfmj.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wfmj.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Brian Angelilli, owner of the Legal Arts Building, announced Tuesday he plans to reopen the iconic downtown Youngstown structure. The adjacent parking deck is expected to reopen next month.
YOUNGSTOWN The owner of the Legal Arts Building is making exterior improvements to the downtown structure with plans to reopen it.
Brian Angelilli, who purchased the building in October 2019, said Tuesday that he wants to get the parking deck open by next month, and to put a breakfast-lunch business on the ground floor.
He mentioned Dunkin’ Donuts or a “mom-and-pop” restaurant at the site as there’s “a lot of foot traffic” at the downtown location at 101 Market St. that makes it a good spot for such a business.