Recruiting and Hiring

Meta Launches $115 Million Program to Train Plumbers, Electricians, and Welders for Data Centers



Meta is making a major push into blue-collar hiring. The social media giant announced a new $115 million initiative called **America’s Workforce Academy**, aimed at training skilled tradespeople to build and maintain its expanding network of data centers.

The program offers a five-week training course that culminates in industry-recognized credentials in high-demand fields such as electrical work, mechanical systems, plumbing, welding, and fiber optics installation. It will initially launch in **Indiana, Louisiana, Ohio, and Texas**.

“Every graduate will leave with a verified, industry-standard credential,” Meta said in a statement. The company highlighted a significant U.S. labor shortage, noting that hundreds of thousands of skilled trade workers are needed to support the country’s booming data center construction.

The academy is open to a wide range of applicants, including veterans, recent high school or college graduates, and career changers. No prior experience is required. Meta will fully fund the program, covering tuition, airfare, lodging, and providing a daily stipend during training.
 Tying AI Growth to Trade Jobs

Dina Powell McCormick, Meta’s president and vice chairman, framed the initiative as part of the broader AI revolution:

> “The AI revolution is bringing change but also historic opportunities. Skilled workers electrified rural America one pole at a time… Now a new generation will pour the foundations and lay the fiber that secures American strength in this new age.”

The timing is notable. In May 2026, Meta laid off roughly 8,000 employees worldwide as part of its aggressive shift toward AI development. The company is projected to spend **$115 to $135 billion** this year on AI infrastructure alone.

CEO Mark Zuckerberg has repeatedly emphasized his goal of “building personal superintelligence,” while executives have noted that demand for computing resources is outpacing supply.

With thousands of new data centers planned or under construction across the U.S., Meta sees skilled trades workers as critical to scaling its physical infrastructure faster than competitors.
Broader Industry View

Meta isn’t alone in linking AI growth to job creation in traditional sectors. In a recent MSNBC interview, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang argued that the AI boom will create far more jobs than it eliminates. He highlighted the need for chip plants, computer manufacturing facilities, and massive “AI factories,” describing it as a trillion-dollar industry.

> “Every job will be impacted,” Huang said. “Many jobs will be created. Some jobs will be eliminated, but every job will be impacted.”

Meta’s Workforce Academy represents a strategic move: while trimming white-collar roles tied to previous priorities, the company is investing heavily in the hands-on workforce needed to support its massive AI ambitions.