The Aerospace Department of Okanagan College, based in Kelowna, enjoys a longstanding relationship with the local firm KF Aerospace. KF’s support for the college runs deep. The company provides space in its corporate hangars for college programming, and donated $500,000 which gave lift to the KF Aerospace Atrium in the College’s new trades complex (the company also donated a chrome Cessna 172 airplane which is suspended from its ceiling).
The strength of this relationship can be seen in Okanagan College’s Aircraft Maintenance Engineer (Structures) program. The college has been offering structures courses for around 10 years, with practical instruction delivered in one of KF’s hangars. Students spend the 37-week program learning alongside KF technicians, and many have the option to land positions with the company when they graduate.
KF Aerospace’s operations have been booming, as the company’s record of success makes it a star candidate among cargo companies trying to keep up with the demand for point-to-point shipping.
In 2017, there were around 450 aerospace maintenance engineers in the region, and almost 300 jobs are expected to open by 2027. Although some students choose to take their diplomas elsewhere, KF Aerospace’s workforce is dominated by Okanagan College graduates.
With the company’s expanded hangar capacity, it was clear that its need for skilled labour outpaced the number of trained structures engineers available. While KF was hiring entire classes of graduates, Okanagan College simply could not train enough people to supply KF Aerospace with the workforce it needed.
It would have been easy for KF Aerospace to believe it had exhausted the capacity of the Okanagan region and focus on recruiting graduates from aerospace programs at other colleges in B.C. Instead, KF put faith in its long-time partners and was determined to explore a local solution. Working with partners in the college’s aerospace department, they got to work on a solution: expanding the structures program to include a complete second intake of students.
Okanagan College needed four things to produce the number of structures technicians that KF required.
With everything in place, Okanagan College’s additional cohort of structures technicians is set up for success. The program began in November 2017 and will complete in August 2018, with apprentices taking their places in aerospace companies across the country, though most of the graduates are likely to join KF Aerospace.
KF Aerospace sees the program as the answer for its skilled labour needs of the future. The company suggested offering two sessions of the structures program again in the 2018-19 academic year, the college agreed, and the ITA gave its support. The upcoming intakes, set for September 2018 and February 2019, are already full with a growing waitlist.
This successful partnership has increased enrolment at Okanagan College, introduced economic benefits to the region, and has helped KF Aerospace secure a reliable, locally grown labour force to support its future.
July 12, 2018
Population: 546,000
Location: Thompson Okanagan
Economic Base: Agriculture, tourism, mining
Contact: Steven Moores, Dean of Trades, Okanagan College
Read more about Okanagan College's Aircraft Maintenance Engineer program on their website.