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NL

Instrumentation apprentices stymied, as CNA seeks instructor

Some instrumentation students at the College of the North Atlantic have run into a wall blocking them from completing their education, as the college struggles to find an instructor.

Students at standstill while College of the North Atlantic recruits instructor

Kerry Lethbridge is one of about a dozen instrumentation students waiting to begin the next block of their apprenticeship at the College of the North Atlantic's Seal Cove campus. (Submitted by Kerry Lethbridge)

It has been a waiting game forinstrumentation students at the College of the North Atlantic who are aiming to finish their program,as the college struggles to find an instructor.

Kerry Lethbridgeis a third-year instrumentation apprenticeand until CNA's Seal Cove campus finds a new instructor, she won't be able to become a journeyperson.

All we can really do now is wait until we get a new instructor or try and transfer our credits.- Kerry Lethbridge

"Supposedly,it takes anywhere from four to five yearsto complete an apprenticeship and become ajourneyperson," Lethbridge told CBC News Tuesday.

"There are a lot ofapprenticesout there that are waiting to get into school and get their hours, get their block training and eventually write their exam, but we can't right now."

Lethbridge estimates there are about 12 other apprenticesin the same situation as her, adding the Seal Cove campus is the only one in the provinceofferinginstrumentationblocks.

Waiting game

"All we can really do now is wait until we get a new instructor or try and transfer our apprenticeship to another province," she said.

As the province deals with a dipping economy,Lethbridgeis in the fortunate position of having a job in Long Harbour.

However, without her next block, Lethbridge said shewon't be able to move up the pay scale.

"Right now I'mstuck earning the same amount until I can get in and go to school."

College of the North Atlantic's Seal Cove campus is the only school offering the instrumentation block that Kerry Lethbridge and her classmates need to further their educations. (CBC)

According to a statement from CNA, the call for students to start the next block forInstrumentation Control Technician (ICT) apprenticeship training was cancelled in September 2015 because the faculty position was vacant, "despite ongoing recruitment efforts."

Then, in February,Lethbridge received a callthe courses were available again.

Instructor recruitment

But one week before class started, CNA notified students that due to unforeseen circumstances, the instructor theyhad wasn't able to be employed with the college.

It has been vacant ever since.

"College of the North Atlantic continues to make every effort to recruit a replacement instructor so that it can reschedule and offer ICT block training at the Seal Cove campus," a CNA spokesperson said in a statement.

However, Lethbridge figures thecollege could use one of the three instructors who teach the nine-month introduction to instrumentation at campuses across the province.

"Ithinkthat would be a good solution because people could still offer the nine-month course, just have bigger classes and they will still get people through the block classes and on to fourth-year apprentices."

If the issue continues, Lethbridge said she could try and work enough hours to "challenge her exam"in other words, become a journeyperson without completing the apprenticeship blocks.