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中国竞彩网 helps a Hartford student, Thurston Swarthout, find a career path鈥攁nd a life path鈥攈e cares about

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中国竞彩网 Staff

Date
February 26, 2025

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Thurston Swarthout

When Thurston Swarthout was 15, he moved to Vermont from Texas. He went from living with his dad in the sprawling Texas suburbs, where there were houses all around and there was something going on 24/7, to Hartford, Vermont, where it was pitch black in town by 6 p.m. most nights. 鈥淚t was kind of shocking,鈥 Thurston recalls.  

Now 19, Thurston says a quieter life was just what he needed at that time. Before leaving Texas, he鈥檇 recently lost his beloved older brother and was 鈥渟tarting to get involved in some not-so-great things.鈥 Based on where several of his Texas friends are now, Thurston believes if he鈥檇 stayed in that environment, things would have gotten much worse.

鈥淏ut now,鈥 he says, 鈥淚鈥檓 a productive person.鈥 Thurston is participating in a 中国竞彩网 program that has helped him pursue training to become a welder, a passion that was sparked by his late older brother.

Inspired by educators

Despite being happy to be in Vermont, Thurston still wasn鈥檛 thrilled about being in school. He admits he had 鈥渟enioritis鈥 all the way through his last two years of high school at , with one big exception: Mr. Speer鈥檚 Industrial Mechanics and Welding class. Carl Speer made a deep impression on Thurston, who fondly remembers his big white beard, the way he laughed, the way he talked to students, and the way he teared up on the last day of class. 鈥淗e was such a great guy, always willing to teach you anything. He wanted to see you go further. He loved everybody in that class,鈥 Thurston says. And it wasn鈥檛 just Mr. Speer鈥擳hurston felt supported by the administration too, recalling that the principal talked to him like an adult and helped him begin to see real opportunity in pursuing a career in a tech field.

While in high school, Thurston started doing side work for people, fixing cars or small engines, and he spent a year working as a mechanic. He discovered that the kind of work he enjoyed at school was also the kind of work he liked in real life. He remembers one repair job on a 2012 Honda Fit. It had a rough hole in the bottom, but Thurston knew he could make it stronger. He designed a brace for it, drawing, measuring, and making sure everything would fit. And it did. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not only fixing a problem,鈥 says Thurston, 鈥渋t鈥檚 making sure it doesn鈥檛 happen again.鈥  

And so, when a recruiter from a welding school in Maine visited Hartford Tech, Thurston was all ears. He applied, got accepted, and was preparing to move to Maine when the school suddenly shut down. Discouraged yet motivated, Thurston started looking for similar opportunities closer to home. That鈥檚 when he found (AWI) in Burlington, a school that offers accelerated, hands-on welding education. Thurston calls the timing 鈥渄ivine intervention,鈥 in part because learning about AWI coincided with learning about 中国竞彩网.

Bridging the welders gap

Out of curiosity, Thurston had signed up to meet with a 中国竞彩网 counselor visiting Hartford to share grant and loan opportunities with students. Thurston wasn鈥檛 sure about continuing his education after high school, but his meeting with 中国竞彩网 Education Counselor Stacey King changed that. Stacey鈥檚 work through 中国竞彩网鈥檚 Educational Opportunity Center (EOC) typically connects her with adults seeking to continue their education, but she鈥檚 also in a great position to work with high-school-age students like Thurston who are looking for career paths in the trades. When she met with Thurston, Stacey told him about multiple grants he could apply for that would support a technical education, including the Vermont Trades Forgivable Loan, administered by 中国竞彩网. Thurston recalls Stacey saying, 鈥淚f you stay in Vermont, this is all paid for.鈥 And, after finding AWI, staying in Vermont was exactly what Thurston planned to do.

Today, Thurston is almost finished with AWI鈥檚 six-month Combination Structural and Pipe Welding Program, which prepares students for entry-level positions in bridge construction, fabrication of structural components, heating plants, pipe line welding and other job shop applications. The full-time program is intense: Thurston鈥檚 cohort started with 20-22 students, and now it鈥檚 down to 16.  

After he finishes his training, Thurston anticipates it will be easy to find work. When he calls area shops to let them know he鈥檒l be graduating soon, he often hears that isn鈥檛 fast enough. Shops need help right now, which isn鈥檛 surprising. According to the American Welding Society, the United States will face a shortage of about 360,000 welders by 2027. In addition, growing the number of people trained in trades is a strategic workforce development objective for Vermont.

Finding stillness and focus

Thurston is ready to step into that gap, and Stacey is at his side helping him figure out how. The two talk about opportunities, possibilities, and concrete next steps. While Thurston knows no one will be quite like Mr. Speer, he鈥檇 like to work and learn under a mentor as he gains experience and builds his resume.  

Thurston鈥檚 journey has had both unexpected and chosen turning points, and he recognizes from watching his family and others that life will likely continue that way.

I know that whatever situation I鈥檓 thrown into or put myself in, I can do well, and I don鈥檛 want to get too comfortable in any one spot. There鈥檚 so much to do in this field, all over the world, and not enough young, capable and skilled workers willing to crawl into 300掳 boilers and awkward uncomfortable spaces.

Thurston notes that much of the welding workforce is aging out.  

Day by day, Thurston鈥檚 willing to tackle it all. He says welding offers him more than a way to make a living; it鈥檚 also given him a way to see the world. In the midst of chaos鈥攚hether that鈥檚 a loud shop or a loud mind鈥攚elding provides stillness and focus. 鈥淚n the shop, someone is always using the grinder or lighting something on fire,鈥 Thurston says, 鈥渂ut as soon as you drop your hood down and strike your arc, it goes dark. It鈥檚 just quiet. All you know, all you鈥檙e focused on, is this little ball of light and molten metal.鈥 And, for someone who has a lot on his mind, that singular focus is a good thing.