Community
Metal Matriarchs engineering program graduates face uncertain future
A 12-month engineering skills initiative for Central Coast First Nations women has produced its first graduates, but the program's continuation remains in doubt.
Community
A 12-month engineering skills initiative for Central Coast First Nations women has produced its first graduates, but the program's continuation remains in doubt.

A group of Central Coast First Nations women have graduated from 'Metal Matriarchs', a 12-month program designed to build engineering skills and deliver a Certificate II qualification. According to program organisers, the cohort has successfully completed the qualification pathway.
The initiative represents a rare and targeted effort to address both skills gaps and employment barriers facing First Nations women on the Central Coast. Engineering trades have historically been male-dominated and under-represented in the region's vocational training landscape.
However, the future of the program is now uncertain, according to local sources. For Central Coast First Nations communities and employers seeking to build a more diverse engineering workforce, the graduation of the first cohort represents both a validation of the model and a critical juncture for whether the pathway can become permanent. The outcome will signal whether the region's training and employment systems can sustain initiatives that target underrepresented groups.
Sources: nbnnews.com.au.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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Published by The Daily Central Coast