Meta Launches 'Workforce Academy' to Train Data Center Builders
Meta is betting on wrenches, not keyboards.
The company announced a new "Workforce Academy" — a free, five-week training program designed to funnel Americans directly into data center construction jobs. Graduates are guaranteed a position at a Meta construction site, and the company is committing $115 million to the initiative this year, launching it first in Louisiana, Ohio, Indiana, and Texas.
The program is a response to a widening labor crunch. As data centers multiply across the country, demand for electricians, HVAC technicians, and other skilled tradespeople has surged — yet the pipeline of qualified workers hasn't kept pace. The construction industry is estimated to need 349,000 net new workers this year alone, according to the Associated Builders and Contractors, one of Meta's partners in the program alongside CBRE.
The timing is notable. Meta recently laid off 8,000 white-collar employees as part of a broader pivot toward AI infrastructure — the same infrastructure now requiring armies of skilled builders. Its largest data center, Hyperion in Richland Parish, Louisiana, is so vast that the company has said it would cover a significant portion of Manhattan.
Meta isn't alone in recognizing the problem. BlackRock's foundation announced a $100 million trades-training initiative earlier this year, with a focus on electricians in Texas. And data center-related construction job postings have roughly doubled over the past two years.
For workers, the boom has created thousands of jobs — many in rural communities that rarely attract this kind of investment. The open question is what happens when the construction ends. Operational data centers employ far fewer people than it takes to build them, leaving some communities to wonder how long the windfall will last.
