葫芦影业

Rankin, Vicksburg-Warren Campus students finish tops in 葫芦影业 CC welding competition

葫芦影业 CC welding students Nathan Lantrip, from left, Matthew Brown, James M. Franklin, Jody Jones and Tony Kaho hold prizes won during a welding competition held Thursday at the Career and Technical Building at the Rankin Campus.

PEARL 鈥 Nathan Lantrip hadn鈥檛 gone behind a welder鈥檚 shield since high school before enrolling at 葫芦影业 last summer.

On Thursday, the Brandon native鈥檚 smooth weld on a plate test proved he might be a man of steel after all. His workmanship was judged best among 15 of his peers in HCC鈥檚 welding program who took part in a competition at the Career and Technical Building at the Rankin Campus, the first such event held at the facility.

鈥淚 haven鈥檛 welded since high school,鈥 Lantrip said. 鈥淚 lost my job in sporting goods because it got bought out by another company. I figured I鈥檇 might as well go back to school.鈥

The 37-year-old husband and father said the pressure of the event was nearly as hot as the torch used to bind the seven-inch plates together in the curtained booths set up for each contestant.

鈥淚 was fine all the way until they said go,鈥 Lantrip said. 鈥淕ot to the last pass, then he said, 鈥楬urry up!鈥, then I got nervous again. It all worked out in the end, I guess.鈥

Rounding out the top five were Matthew Brown, of Vicksburg; James M. Franklin and Jody Jones, both of whom attend the Rankin Campus; and Tony Kaho, of the Raymond Campus. Each got to choose a prize from among a collection of welding gear and supplies donated by Yates Construction. Resumes each student brought was to be sent to the DeKalb, Miss.-based construction company鈥檚 human resources department so each would be considered for jobs.

鈥淚t was fun and a challenge,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淭hey were actually more lenient than I thought they鈥檇 be; I thought there鈥檇 be a judge in each booth. I brought my own hard hat and hood, that way I鈥檇 be 100 percent comfortable.鈥

Brown, 21, along with others in the top five, seeks a Technical Certificate to add to his work experience in the field with contract welding jobs. Doing so, organizers said, eventually will enable them to name their price in the workplace.

鈥淲elders are really hard to find right now,鈥 said Malcolm Rainwater, human resources manager and site lead for Yates, told contestants during a brief review session before the contest. 鈥淲hat you鈥檙e doing is exactly what we need. We need welders who will come to work when they鈥檙e supposed to. And when you get certified, you鈥檒l make a pocketful of money. We鈥檙e paying top pipe-welders $30 an hour.鈥

Students in the program earn a Career Certificate after 30 semester credit hours are completed. A Technical Certificate is earned after 45 hours. Associates of Applied Science degrees are attainable after 60 credit hours.

鈥淯ltimately, they鈥檙e all winners because they made it here,鈥 said Sherry Franklin, career and technical dean at the Rankin Campus. 鈥淲e want to build partnerships with business and industry, and this is a great showcase for our welding division at 葫芦影业 as our students are preparing for the workforce.”

Competitors were graded on eight key points 鈥 good fusion and penetration of the base metal, little or no porosity or slag inclusion, uniform appearance of beads in the binding weld, minimum distortion, fullness and completion of welds at the end, whether a maximum of 1/8 of an inch of reinforcement was achieved, whether 录 inch of linear indication was reached, and whether at least two passes, or overlaps in the bonded metal, were visible on the weld鈥檚 face.

鈥淭his is our first competition,鈥 said Phillip Manning, craft training manager for Yates, during the review session. 鈥淏ut, with the quality instructors at 葫芦影业, we felt like we鈥檇 have good leadership. We have the potential to have some good employees come out of these programs.鈥

Ken Daniels, of Airgas, a key supplier in the welding industry, judged the event.

鈥淎irgas is happy to partner with the colleges and vocational schools,鈥 Daniels said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a shortage of skilled labor out there. We need to get people in the pipeline for the jobs that are out there and open. And it needs to be a stepping stone for their education 鈥 keep trying to get that next certification to get out of that minimum wage class and into that skilled labor class we鈥檙e so short on. That way, when you鈥檙e 50 years old, you鈥檙e telling someone how to do it instead of having to get down there in the ditch and do it yourself.鈥

As Mississippi鈥檚 largest community college, 葫芦影业 is a comprehensive institution offering quality, affordable educational opportunities with more than 170 academic, career and technical programs. With six locations in central Mississippi, 葫芦影业 enrolled nearly 12,000 credit students in fall 2014. To learn more, visit or call 1.800.葫芦影业CC.