WOODLAND HILLS, Calif. — Pierce College inaugurated a $22.3 million Advanced Automotive Technology building in mid-October to expand its automotive service technology program. Community colleges such as Pierce are a vital source of service technicians for auto dealerships.
The job of automotive service technician is evolving, and funding is pouring into programs to meet the need for technicians who can work on electric and autonomous vehicles. But the job's image is still stuck in its grease and grime past, and that needs to change to help attract more young people to the field.
"People don't want their kids to be auto mechanics," says Tom Fortune, associate professor of automotive service technology and a faculty advisor at Pierce. "They want them to be doctors and dentists and lawyers."