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For these young trainees, careers in solar look like Philly’s future

(From left) Solar States students Jay Fitzgerald, Instructor and Founder Micah Gold-Markel, Malik Hunt-David, Isiah Smith, and Justine Michalczyk, inside the Energy Coordinating Agency’s solar training room.
Kimberly Paynter/WHYY
(From left) Solar States students Jay Fitzgerald, Instructor and Founder Micah Gold-Markel, Malik Hunt-David, Isiah Smith, and Justine Michalczyk, inside the Energy Coordinating Agency’s solar training room.

Malik Hunt-David stands on a model rooftop, inside a big, boxy building in Kensington. The 18-year-old names parts of a solar panel, while an instructor quizzes him on how it’s attached to the roof.

Hunt-David is among the latest graduates of the Bright Solar Futures program, which trains young Philadelphians to install solar panels. The group took a test last week that could get them entry-level credentials to start working in the industry. They now embark on summer internships.

Malik Hunt-David, 18, said he’s interested in electrical work and wants to be a panel installer.
Kimberly Paynter/WHYY
Malik Hunt-David, 18, said he’s interested in electrical work and wants to be a panel installer.

“Solar just sounded fun to learn and do,” Hunt-David said. “Just the whole thing about clean energy and just how to benefit the community and the environment.”

While Republican primary candidates in Pennsylvania double down on their support of planet-warming fossil fuels in the name of jobs, some young Philadelphians see a brighter future in the solar power industry — for themselves and their communities. Experts say training up a local workforce with renewable energy skills will be key to capturing the economic development potential of the energy transition.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics counts solar photovoltaic installer as one of the occupations projected to see the greatest percent growth over the next decade. According to the Solar Energy Industries Association, Pennsylvania is among the top 10 states for job growth in the solar industry since 2015.

“I always heard about solar, but I never really knew what it actually was until I came here,” said Jay Fitzgerald, who finished the training portion of Bright Solar Futures last week. “Then I found out, like, it’s the new thing. And it’s going to be real, real, real good in about 10 to 20 years.”

Jay Fitzgerald, 24, said he entered the Solar States program because he believes solar is the next big thing.
Kimberly Paynter/WHYY
Jay Fitzgerald, 24, said he entered the Solar States program because he believes solar is the next big thing.

Some worry wages and benefits in renewable energy jobs don’t stack up to those of traditional fossil fuel jobs at coal- and gas-powered plants. Still, many see the promise of a blossoming industry.

“That’s what renewable energy and what solar is all about: it’s jobs and jobs and jobs,” said Micah Gold-Markel, founder of Solar States, a Philly-based solar installation company that helps teach Bright Solar Futures.

Micah Gold-Markel is the founder and an instructor at Solar States, a solar energy training program at the Energy Coordinating Agency in Philadelphia.
Kimberly Paynter/WHYY
Micah Gold-Markel is the founder and an instructor at Solar States, a solar energy training program at the Energy Coordinating Agency in Philadelphia.

Training to take part in a growing industry

Bright Solar Futures is a career training program through PowerCorpsPHL, Solar States, the Energy Coordinating Agency and the Philadelphia Energy Authority. It’s a paid, roughly six-month hands-on learning experience for people between the ages of 18 and 30 who are unemployed or underemployed, and looking to get connected to a career in renewable energy (Frankford High School runs a version for students). Participants come from a variety of educational and work experience backgrounds, including those returning to the community after being incarcerated. Graduates get a workplace safety certification and other basic credentialing, and are placed in internships that often lead to jobs.

Bright Solar Futures is one of many solar job training programs across the country. These programs are important for training the workforce needed to build enough solar capacity to meet the country’s clean energy goals, said Christelle Khalaf, a professor at the University of Wyoming who studies the economic development potential of renewable energy.

“Demand [for solar industry labor] is definitely going to be a lot higher than supply,” she said. “So that sort of creates this big need for job training programs.”

Inside the Energy Coordinating Agency in Philadelphia, Solar States founder and instructor Micah Gold-Markel (left) reviews installing panels with the class using the roof and panel model.
Kimberly Paynter/WHYY
Inside the Energy Coordinating Agency in Philadelphia, Solar States founder and instructor Micah Gold-Markel (left) reviews installing panels with the class using the roof and panel model.

Job growth projections — like those for the solar industry — are imprecise, said David Passmore, professor emeritus at Penn State University, where he researched workforce development. But in general, the solar industry presents opportunities for workers.

“The first thing that people need to think about is, what [job is] available now? What can I get into? What can I learn?” Passmore said. “There’s no guarantee that you’ll still have that same job [in 10 years], but you need to get into the industry and you start developing work experience.”

Malik Hunt-David, 18, (right) works with founder and instructor Micah Gold-Markel at the Energy Coordinating Agency’s solar training room.
Kimberly Paynter/WHYY
Malik Hunt-David, 18, (right) works with founder and instructor Micah Gold-Markel at the Energy Coordinating Agency’s solar training room.

Justine Michalczyk, another Bright Solar Futures participant, plans to do several different jobs throughout her career. She entered the training program with a background in electrical work after graduating from a technical high school — and hopes to get her electrical license.

“Because that’s what I really enjoy,” she said.

Justine Michalczyk, 22, said she joined Solar States because she wanted to have a “clean and green” job.
Kimberly Paynter/WHYY
Justine Michalczyk, 22, said she joined Solar States because she wanted to have a “clean and green” job.

Micah Gold-Markel, of Solar States, was thrilled to hear his students’ dreams — because he’s seen Bright Solar Futures alumni achieve them.

“I can’t wait for another four or five years to go by to see all of these students and where they’re at — leading teams, going for their electrical licenses, taking their next steps in life,” he said.

Sophia Schmidt covers the environment for WHYY’s PlanPhilly. Before coming to Philadelphia in 2021, Sophia reported on her home state of Delaware for Delaware Public Media and produced interviews for NPR’s “Weekend Edition.” Sophia was a 2021 Metcalf Fellow.