Workforce Institute connects students with job opportunities in Butler County

Tom Barber, quality manager at UGN, gives a tour to Middletown High School counselors on Wednesday, Dec. 10. 2025, at the manufacturing company in Monroe. BRYN DIPPOLD/STAFF

Credit: Bryn Dippold

Credit: Bryn Dippold

Tom Barber, quality manager at UGN, gives a tour to Middletown High School counselors on Wednesday, Dec. 10. 2025, at the manufacturing company in Monroe. BRYN DIPPOLD/STAFF

Local high school counselors are stepping out of the classroom and into area businesses as part of a Chamber of Commerce program designed to better prepare students for the workforce after graduation.

The program, dubbed “The Workforce Institute,” was created by The Chamber of Commerce Serving Middletown, Monroe and Trenton and its in its second year.

Rick Pearce, president and CEO of the Chamber, said the purpose of the program is to get “educators out of the building” and visit businesses to better understand the “skill sets needed for their students to obtain an entry-level position.”

“They can go back and explain that to the students and start to solve for that,” he said.

Counselors from Middletown High School, Edgewood High School and Summit Academy met Wednesday with representatives from UGN, a manufacturing company in Monroe which makes carpet and other materials for Japanese-made vehicles (Honda, Toyota and Subaru).

Its 541,000-square-foot facility in Monroe has about 400 employees, many of whom entered the workforce after high school and work through the ranks.

Kelly Widmeyer, Middletown High School counselor, said she joined the program “to learn about different opportunities” for students.

“We have a large population that don’t go straight into college or military, so we want to give them opportunities for other things in the area,” Widmeyer said.

High school counselors from area schools met with representatives from UGN in Monroe Wednesday to discuss what skills the manufacturing company is looking for in entry-level workers. BRYN DIPPOLD/STAFF

Credit: Bryn Dippold

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Credit: Bryn Dippold

Danielle Froslear, also a Middletown counselor, said the program also helps them identify what workplaces are looking for so students can be better prepared to be an “ideal candidate” after graduation.

Doug Vanata, VGN plant manager, said the business has a high rate of turnover and is looking for motivated, reliable and communicative workers.

“If they have the right attitude, we can teach the skill set,” Vanata said.

Megan Spanel, another counselor for Middletown High School, said face-to-face communication — like practicing mock interviews — and attendance are big areas of improvement for students.

Now, the counselors said they know they need a greater focus even more on these areas.

“Educators and students need to know that there’s a great deal of opportunity for them with the skills that they can gain through high school and through life, so that they can immediately start in the workforce on June 1 after they (graduate),” Pearce said.

The chamber has hosted two other tours at AMS Parts in October and BlueScope in November.

A final tour will be held in January at Atrium Medical Center.

Tours are focused on human services and resources; industrial, manufacturing and engineering systems; business, marketing and management; and health sciences.

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