Dayton region projecting 26K new jobs a year by 2030: 6 things to know

David Lawernce, left, with the City of Dayton talks with Johann Nielsen-Sperb Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2024 at the Montgomery County Workforce Development Fall Job Fair at the Dayton Convention Center. Job seekers had the opportunity to meet with over 100 local employers and explore a variety of jobs.  MARSHALL GORBY\STAFF

David Lawernce, left, with the City of Dayton talks with Johann Nielsen-Sperb Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2024 at the Montgomery County Workforce Development Fall Job Fair at the Dayton Convention Center. Job seekers had the opportunity to meet with over 100 local employers and explore a variety of jobs. MARSHALL GORBY\STAFF

Editor’s note: Every Sunday Josh Sweigart, editor of investigations and solutions journalism, brings you the top stories from the Dayton Daily News and major stories over the past week you may have missed. Go here to sign up to receive the Weekly Update newsletter and our Morning Briefing delivered to your inbox every morning.

The good news is that the Dayton region has seen success attracting jobs. The challenge this creates is making sure our workforce is up to the task. Reporter Tom Gnau has this story on a local effort to meet that need.

Here are six things to know from our coverage:

1. The story: A new committee of Dayton-area business leaders is launching what participants hope will be a communitywide effort to grow population, retain graduates and get former and retired workers back into the labor force.

2. Goal: The effort led by the Dayton Foundation has set a goal of getting about 23,000 people back into the workforce by 2030, plus attracting and retaining thousands more people to and in the area.

3. The need: The Dayton Development Coalition estimates there will be 26,000 net new jobs annually through the year 2030 in a 14-county region around Dayton, and a need to fill some 28,000 recurring openings each year due to natural attrition.

4. Demographics: Retirements are part of the issue. Natural aging and retirements creates some 25,000 jobs a year, coalition members said.

5. Growth: The region has seen massive new investment as well. A joint venture Honda-LG Energy electric vehicle battery plant is being built, for example, outside Jeffersonville. Sierra Nevada is here and is expanding, building a third and fourth hangar near Dayton International Airport. Joby Aviation has said its Dayton operation won’t operate until next year. DMAX has built a new truck engine plant in Brookville.

6. What they’re saying: “We’ve seen nothing like this in our lifetimes,” said Mike Parks, president of the Dayton Foundation.

About the Author