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Lineworker

GNTC honors Electrical Lineworker program graduates for fall 2025

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Fourteen students graduated on Wednesday, Nov. 19, from Georgia Northwestern Technical College’s (GNTC) Electrical Lineworker program during a ceremony at GNTC’s Polk County Campus in Rockmart.

The students experienced a vigorous, 10-week training program that included donated equipment such as trucks, poles and climbing equipment, as well as hands-on expertise from GNTC instructors. Upon completing the program, students received four certificates of completion for Electrical Lineworker, a restricted Class A Commercial Truck Driving (CDL) license, OSHA 10-Hour General Industry and an overall certificate verifying 395 training hours completed. The program is offered through GNTC’s Office of Economic Development.

The fall 2025 cohort is the ninth cohort of the program since it began in fall 2022.

“These graduates have an outstanding career ahead of them,” said Judy Roddenberry, instructor of Commercial Truck Driving at GNTC.

“We have smaller classes and four instructors, which gives us more one-on-one time with the students to ensure their success,” she said.

Graduates from the eighth cohort of the Electrical Lineworker program are Carson Alan Brooks, Cooper Chance, Austin Edwards, Brady O’Neal Evans, Ashton Gray, Brody Henderson, Kash Lamar, Sean Mosley, Ethan Parmer, Austin Sanders, Jesus Sandoval, Cooper Smith, John Sturgeon and Ethan Willingham.

The next cohort of GNTC’s Electrical Lineworker program starts Jan. 5, and seats are still available. For more information about the program, go to https://ce.gntc.edu/ or contact GNTC’s Office of Economic Development via email at lineworker@gntc.edu.

GNTC receives donation of aircraft to Aviation Maintenance Technology program


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Georgia Northwestern Technical College’s (GNTC) Aviation Maintenance Technology program expanded its fleet of aircraft that provide hands-on training to students with the recent donation of a Cessna 401A aircraft.

Donated by a private individual from Dalton, this is the fourth 400 series Cessna airplane GNTC owns and will be used for all aspects of training for the Aviation Maintenance Technology program, said Zac Fager, program director and Instructor of Aviation Maintenance Technology at GNTC.

“GNTC could not train tomorrow’s workforce without the support of our community partners,” said Dr. Heidi Popham, GNTC president. “We are grateful for this generous gift. This donation will support students who are being trained to be the professionals needed by the aviation industry.”

Fager said the plane had been housed at the Dalton Municipal Airport hangar and was recently moved to GNTC’s Aviation Training Center, where it was reassembled.

“I used to work at the Dalton Municipal Airport several years ago, and I told the airport manager that I was looking for aircraft donations for the Aviation Maintenance Technology program,” Fager said. “An individual contacted me a couple weeks later about his aircraft.”

Fager said the donation comes at a critical time as the program needs additional aircraft.

“In the Aviation Maintenance Technology program, we are constantly taking things apart, inspecting, repairing when we can or replacing parts completely,” Fager said. “Additional aircraft help us provide the highest quality of instruction and ensure our graduates have the Airframe and Powerplant experience they need to be workforce ready.”

Today News Wire
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