葫芦影业

VICKSBURG 鈥 Tossing a heavy, 12-foot mooring rope off a barge on the Mississippi River is a calling for some and simply a rough-sounding job for others.

Chad Vickers and Garrett Williams each have trained to do this now, and, though they took different paths to the 鈥渕arine life,鈥 they have specialized deckhand training through 葫芦影业 and Golding Barge Line.

Chad Vickers turns equipment on a barge used for training purposes at Golding Barge in Vicksburg. (April Garon/葫芦影业)

鈥淚t runs in my family,鈥 said Vickers, 24, a Vicksburg native and Level 2 deckhand with the River City-based barge company. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e been on the water all my life. My grandfather owned a ferry on the Yazoo River and we all fished.鈥

This past winter, he completed a 7 陆- day [tweetable alt=””]deckhand training course[/tweetable] offered since 2014 and paid for by the Department of Labor鈥檚 Trade Adjustment Assistance Community College and Career Training grant to nine members of the Mississippi River Transportation, Distribution and Logistics consortium, of which 葫芦影业 is a part. Although the grant ends in October, the college and its industry partners have worked together to keep the training available to those who want to enter the marine transport industry.

鈥淭he transportation sector is one of the largest industries in our service area.鈥 said Chad Stocks, vice president of Career, Technical, and Workforce Education. 鈥淲ith the expansion of the Panama Canal and more manufacturing companies locating or expanding in the college鈥檚 service area, the ability to move goods up and down the river is essential. This training program provides qualified workers to do this work and I am thrilled that we were able to set the program up with the grant and sustain it with industry partnerships.鈥

Deckhands in the industry make in the $20,000 to $30,000 range annually. As a trained tankerman, Vickers stands to get a significant raise in life 鈥 to about $65,000. And he鈥檚 all in for the gig.

鈥淚鈥檒l be doing tankerman training next 鈥 working my way up the ladder like everyone else,鈥 he said. 鈥淗opefully, I鈥檒l make it to the top soon.鈥

Garrett Williams reads measurements on a barge used for instructional purposes at Goldling Barge in Vicksburg. The equipment allows workers to check the level of liquid product inside the barge. (April Garon/葫芦影业)

Williams is climbing the same ladder. The Rolling Fork native already had a bachelor鈥檚 degree in Education from Delta State University, but switched careers due to the earnings potential on the water.

鈥淚 found out about the program from a friend after being laid off from a job in oilfield services,鈥 said Williams, a tankerman trainee. 鈥淥ther people had talked to me about how good a company and job it is, and wanted to put myself in a position to follow behind them.鈥

葫芦影业 and industry veterans with Maritime Services of Louisiana are training employees of Golding, Yazoo River Towing and Magnolia Marine.

Students are evaluated and certified accordingly after completing the training, in which they touch on every aspect of working on a barge 鈥 from throwing and securing a line, operating a johnboat, rigging, among other practical skills. Hands-on sessions are conducted after classroom sessions each morning and testing. The effect it鈥檚 had has been companies getting job-ready workers without interrupting workflow.

From left, Chad Vickers, Garrett Williams, and Golding Barge vice president of Human Resources Stirlin Hancock. (April Garon/葫芦影业)

鈥淓xperienced industry veterans instruct the training,鈥 said Stirlin Hancock, vice president of human resources at Golding Barge. 鈥淪o, we fully intend for the training to go forward after the grant is up. We鈥檙e working with 葫芦影业 to make that happen.鈥

For information about enrolling in the deckhand training program offered in Vicksburg through 葫芦影业, contact Marvin Moak, dean of 葫芦影业鈥 Vicksburg-Warren Campus, at 601-629-6805.