đ§ââď¸Forging Futures: How Boerne Champion High School Is Reviving the Trades
In a world increasingly obsessed with digital credentials and four-year degrees, a quiet revolution is taking place in Boerne, Texasâone that trades textbooks for torches and theory for tangible skill. At the heart of this movement is Boerne Champion High Schoolâs welding program, recently elevated through a groundbreaking partnership with HOLT CAT, the largest Caterpillar dealer in the nation. Thirty-five students earned American Welding Society certifications this spring, stepping directly into high-demand careers that are reshaping the American workforce.
This isnât just a local success storyâitâs a blueprint for how vocational education can restore dignity, purpose, and prosperity to a generation often told that college is the only path forward.
đŠ The Power of Partnership: Champion HS and HOLT CAT
The welding program at Champion High School, led by longtime instructor Dorman Vick, has become a national model for vocational excellence. With HOLT CATâs support, students gain hands-on experience with industry-grade equipment, mentorship from professionals, and real-world projects that serve their communityâfrom building fish habitats for the Cibolo Creek to crafting cemetery gates.
âThis is the first project of its kind where weâve actually worked directly with the school system to address that skills gap,â said Rick Elmore, HOLTâs talent outreach manager. The program doesnât just teach weldingâit instills discipline, teamwork, and pride. Students leave not only certified, but confident.
The program is also actively inclusive. Female students are signing up in growing numbers and are fully welcomed by their male counterparts. Evelyn Hudson, a recent graduate, shared how her classmates rallied to build a cross for her motherâs headstone after her passing. âWe honestly care about each other and know how to work as a team,â she said. That spirit of camaraderie and mutual respect is part of what makes this program exceptional.
While Champion HS builds technical skill, The Kendall Gentleman builds proactive support to revitalize the trades and cultural ethos. This Boerne-based publication champions a return to integrity, craftsmanship, and masculine virtueâvalues often lost in todayâs fast-paced, digital-first society. With articles and podcasts that celebrate hard work, tradition, and the art of being a gentleman, The Kendall Gentleman reminds us that trades are not just jobsâtheyâre callings.
đ Texas Steps Up: Government Support for Vocational Education
This local momentum is backed by sweeping state-level initiatives. Governor Greg Abbott declared career training an emergency item for the 89th Legislature, signaling a major shift in priorities. New legislation allows high school students to swap core academic classes for career and technical education, while expanding funding for apprenticeships and career advising.
Programs like the TRUE Grant and WIOA funding offer millions in support for short-term, industry-aligned training. Texas isnât just talking about workforce developmentâitâs investing in it.
đ§ Mike Rowe and the National Trades Renaissance
Nationally, this movement finds its voice in Mike Rowe, host of âDirty Jobsâ and founder of the mikeroweWORKS Foundation. Rowe argues that America doesnât have a skills gapâit has a âwill gap.â His foundation has awarded over $2.5 million in work ethic scholarships to students pursuing trades like welding, electrical work, plumbing, and manufacturing.
The urgency is real: the U.S. faces a shortage of over 450,000 skilled tradespeople, with the biggest gaps in welding, electrical work, HVAC, and general labor. Rowe warns that for every five tradespeople who retire, only two replace themâa trend that threatens not just economic stability, but national security.
His foundation is helping reverse that trend by supporting young people, women, and veterans entering the trades at rates not seen since World War II. In fact, 42% of recent applicants to BlueRecruit, a trades hiring platform supported by Roweâs foundation, were female.
đ¨ Building More Than Careers
What makes Boerneâs story exceptional is its holistic approach. Students arenât just trainedâtheyâre transformed. They learn to weld, yes, but they also learn to care, to collaborate, and to carry one another through hardship. The program is a living example of what happens when technical skill meets human connection.
This is the future of education: one that teaches skill, builds character, and fosters community. Itâs a future where a high school welding class can change lives, where a magazine can restore cultural pride, and where a state can lead the nation in workforce renewal.
đ ď¸ A Model Worth Replicating
Boerne Champion High School and The Kendall Gentleman are proving that trades are not a fallbackâtheyâre a foundation. With state support and national momentum, Texas is poised to become the gold standard in vocational education. And in Boerne, the sparks flying from a welding torch are lighting the way.
Letâs hope more communities follow suit. Because when students are given the tools, trust, and opportunity to build something real, they donât just forge metalâthey forge futures. Here are resources for those who want to dig in deeper to forge that future.
- đ§ Champion welding students receive certification through HOLT program â Boerne Star
- đ§ Boerne Champion HS students earn welding certifications â KENS5
- đ§ Forged in Fire: The Dorman Vick Story and the Revival of Vocational Education
- đď¸ Texas Reskilling and Upskilling Through Education (TRUE) Grant â Texas Higher Ed Board
- đď¸ WIOA Program â Texas Trade Careers
- đď¸ Texas workforce training legislation â Texas Tribune
- đ¨ The State of the Trades â Mike Rowe
- đ¨ Mike Rowe sounds alarm over trade worker shortage â Fox Business
- đ¨ Mike Rowe: U.S. Faces âWill Gapâ in Trades â WebProNews
- đ¨ Mike Rowe | SkillsUSA
*Featured Image – Dorman Vick by Jonathan R Mallard, courtesy of The Kendall Gentleman

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