Tacoma’s Quiet Talent Engine: How Bates, Clover Park, PLU, and UW Tacoma Are Building Pierce County’s 2026 Workforce
If you run a manufacturing shop in Frederickson, a clinic on the Hilltop, or a logistics operation near the Port, you already know the hardest part of growing in Pierce County isn’t demand — it’s people. The good news, and it doesn’t get nearly enough ink, is that Tacoma sits on top of one of the most layered post-secondary talent pipelines in the South Sound. Between a technical college that trains apprentices in six state-approved trades, a second technical college that opened a brand-new community campus in 2025, a private university quietly graduating nurses into a chronically short-staffed sector, and a public research university downtown, the machinery to staff this city’s growth is already humming. The trick for local employers is knowing how to plug into it.
This is the higher-ed and apprenticeship layer of the story — distinct from the K-12 pipeline and the new Maritime 253 program that Tacoma Public Schools is launching this fall. Here’s how the colleges feeding Tacoma’s economy are positioned heading into the 2026-27 academic year, and where the real openings are.
Bates Technical College: The Apprenticeship Backbone
Bates Technical College, anchored at its downtown campus at 1101 S. Yakima Ave, is the closest thing Tacoma has to a dedicated trades-and-apprenticeship engine. Bates works with six Washington State-approved apprenticeship training partners spanning fields from aerospace to construction. The model is the part employers tend to underrate: apprentices earn wages at a percentage of the journey-level rate while they work in the field, then attend classes part-time — usually evenings — for one to five years. On completion they receive a journeyman-level certificate from the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries Apprenticeship & Training Council (batestech.edu).
That earn-while-you-learn structure is exactly what cash-strapped young workers and budget-conscious employers both need. Eligibility is deliberately wide: typically a high school diploma or GED, a minimum age of 16, and the aptitude to complete the program.
The AJAC Manufacturing Academy Lands at Bates
The most concrete near-term opportunity sits inside Bates’ downtown campus. The Aerospace Joint Apprenticeship Committee (AJAC) runs its no-cost Pierce County Manufacturing Academy there, with the 2026 cohort scheduled for April 1 through June 10, 2026, meeting 8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. (ajactraining.org). The academy is hands-on prep that funnels graduates toward registered apprenticeships — including aerospace machinist roles — backed by AJAC’s Career Navigation Team. AJAC partners with more than 40 manufacturing companies in Pierce County alone, building products for aerospace, defense, automotive, medical, food processing, and plastics. For a region trying to capitalize on the manufacturing magnet forming in Frederickson, that’s a direct conveyor belt from classroom to shop floor. Requirements are straightforward: Washington residency, 18 or older, legal authorization to work in the U.S., and full attendance.
Clover Park Technical College: Scale, Aviation, and a New Front Door
Just down I-5 in Lakewood, Clover Park Technical College (CPTC) brings the scale. CPTC offers more than 120 certificate or degree options across seven schools — Aerospace & Aviation; Automotive & Trades; Advanced Manufacturing; Business & Personal Services; Health & Human Development; Nursing; and Science, Technology, Engineering & Design (cptc.edu). Its aviation program runs out of the South Hill Campus near Thun Field, feeding graduates toward major and regional airlines, repair stations, and aircraft component manufacturers.
CPTC also broke ground on credential ladders early: it was the first two-year college in Pierce County to offer a baccalaureate degree, the Bachelor of Applied Science in Manufacturing Operations. That matters because it lets a worker start as a mechatronics technician and climb to a four-year applied degree without leaving the regional system.
The Eastside Training Center: College Comes to the Neighborhood
The newest development is geographic. In January 2025, CPTC opened the Eastside Training Center at East 60th and McKinley Avenue in Tacoma, in partnership with WorkForce Central and the City of Tacoma (blog.cptc.edu). The center deliberately targets communities that haven’t traditionally been well served by higher education, blending CPTC’s skills training with WorkForce Central services that connect job seekers, employers, and community organizations under one roof. Early programming includes HVAC training and Running Start access for high schoolers. For Tacoma’s East Side, it’s the difference between a 30-minute drive to Lakewood and a walkable front door.
The Invista-to-CPTC Corporate Education Shift Employers Should Know About
Here’s a piece of institutional history that still trips up local business owners. Invista Performance Solutions — the long-running collaboration of Pierce County community and technical colleges that delivered customized employer training in lean process improvement, leadership, ESL, and industrial skills — was formally dissolved on June 30, 2023. Clover Park Technical College, Pierce College District, and Tacoma Community College ended the limited liability partnership, and Invista’s training professionals were brought on directly at CPTC (choosetacomapierce.org).
What that means in practice: if you’re an employer who used to call “Invista” for a custom training contract, that capacity now lives inside Clover Park Technical College Corporate Education. The offerings — and crucially, access to Washington State’s Job Skills Program (JSP) matching grant, which can offset the cost of training built to your company’s specific needs — carried over. If your last conversation about workforce training predates mid-2023, it’s worth a fresh call.
Pacific Lutheran University: The Nursing and Business Pipeline
On the private side, Pacific Lutheran University (PLU) plays a different but essential role. PLU offers more than 40 undergraduate majors and graduate programs across business, education, kinesiology, marriage and family therapy, and nursing, with a total undergraduate enrollment of 2,446 as of fall 2024 (plu.edu). For a regional economy fighting a healthcare staffing shortage, PLU’s School of Nursing is the standout. It runs a traditional BSN and an Entry-Level Master of Science in Nursing (ELMSN) on the Tacoma campus, plus an accelerated BSN in Lynnwood — all accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (plu.edu/nursing). Those graduates feed directly into MultiCare, CHI Franciscan, and the rest of the South Sound’s clinical employers.
UW Tacoma: The Four-Year Anchor Downtown
The University of Washington Tacoma is the research-university anchor of the whole system, with seven schools offering more than 50 undergraduate majors and minors and 15 graduate degree programs, including engineering and technology tracks that align with the region’s advanced-manufacturing and tech ambitions (tacoma.uw.edu). One programmatic note for prospective students: UW Tacoma’s Educational Administration program is set to pause following the 2025-26 academic year, so anyone eyeing that track should confirm timing directly with the school.
Reading the Enrollment Tea Leaves
Zoom out and the statewide context shapes what local employers can expect. Washington’s community and technical college system — 34 colleges overseen by the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges (SBCTC) — trains roughly 307,000 people a year for the workforce, transfer, or continuing education (sbctc.edu). Enrollment dropped sharply during the 2020 pandemic and has held steady with modest gains since, though it hasn’t fully returned to pre-pandemic peaks. Community college baccalaureate programs tell the same story — a slight rebound, with certain career clusters gaining share even as the overall number lags.
The takeaway for Tacoma employers is counterintuitive but useful: a system running below its enrollment peak is a system with capacity. The seats and the training infrastructure exist; the constraint is awareness and the willingness of local companies to build the partnerships — apprenticeship sponsorships, custom training contracts, internship pipelines — that turn classroom capacity into hired workers.
What This Means for Pierce County Business
The pieces of Tacoma’s talent engine don’t always talk to each other, but together they cover the map: Bates and AJAC for the skilled trades and manufacturing apprentices, CPTC for aviation, advanced manufacturing, and employer-customized training, PLU for nursing and business, and UW Tacoma for the four-year and graduate anchor. The employers who win the next few years won’t be the ones who post the most job ads. They’ll be the ones who pick up the phone — to AJAC’s career navigators, to CPTC Corporate Education, to a Bates apprenticeship coordinator — and build a pipeline before they need it.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the AJAC Manufacturing Academy and when is the 2026 Tacoma class?
The AJAC Manufacturing Academy is a free, hands-on manufacturing training program that prepares students for registered apprenticeships and manufacturing jobs. The 2026 Pierce County cohort runs April 1 through June 10, 2026, from 8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at Bates Technical College’s downtown campus (1101 S. Yakima Ave, Tacoma). Applicants must be Washington residents, 18 or older, and legally authorized to work in the U.S.
What happened to Invista Performance Solutions?
Invista Performance Solutions was dissolved on June 30, 2023, when Clover Park Technical College, Pierce College District, and Tacoma Community College ended the limited liability partnership. Its training staff were hired directly by Clover Park Technical College, and the employer-training function now operates as CPTC Corporate Education — including access to Washington’s Job Skills Program matching grant.
Where can Tacoma residents get apprenticeship training?
Bates Technical College is the primary apprenticeship hub in Tacoma, working with six Washington State-approved apprenticeship partners across trades from aerospace to construction. Apprentices earn wages while they work and attend part-time classes, finishing with a state-recognized journeyman-level certificate after one to five years.
Which Tacoma-area college offers a four-year manufacturing degree?
Clover Park Technical College was the first two-year college in Pierce County to offer a baccalaureate degree — the Bachelor of Applied Science in Manufacturing Operations — letting students advance from a technician credential to an applied four-year degree within the regional system.
What is the Clover Park Eastside Training Center?
The Eastside Training Center is a Clover Park Technical College campus that opened in January 2025 at East 60th and McKinley Avenue in Tacoma, in partnership with WorkForce Central and the City of Tacoma. It brings skills training and workforce services to Tacoma’s East Side, an area historically underserved by higher education, with programming such as HVAC training and Running Start.
Reporting reflects publicly available information from each institution as of June 2026. Program dates, eligibility, and offerings can change — confirm details directly with the school before enrolling.
Leave a Reply