![](http://sh030.global.temp.domains/~toolzzmy/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Kennedy-Marcum-copy.jpg)
Louisa Native Kennedy Marcum Says Layoff Was Blessing in Disguise with Assistance from Northeast Kentucky KCC JobSight
After more than a decade in the coal industry, Lawrence Countian Kennedy Marcum never thought he would utter such blasphemous words.
“Getting laid off was a blessing, honestly,” he admits, adjusting in his seat in the Northeast Kentucky Career Center JobSight offices in Louisa. “I didn’t think a layoff would become a blessing.”
In 2016, Marcum, like many others, believed he’d made it. Finishing up a decade in the industry at the same West Virginia mine his father had worked at for more than 20 years, he was finally settling into what he considered a life-long career.
“When I got the job there, I fell into what I thought was my place, to be a coal miner being the fourth generation,” he says. “I’d made my way up into the salaried departments—I was told that’s where I’d retire they had such a big coal reserve. I thought I was going to be set, but God had different plans.”
Those plans were set into motion when Marcum, along with a number of his coworkers, received their WARN notices of the layoff and were faced with the reality that they were not as set as they had been led to believe.
Shortly thereafter, Marcum took up a job at a local furniture store to help make ends meet for his family. A year into the job, he learned of a mining operation in Indiana that was hiring and decided to jump on the opportunity, although being so far from home for weeks on end ended up being a deal-breaker.
“A friend of mine was working at a mine in West Virginia, and I talked him into letting me come and work with him up there. I thought, you know what, it’s coal mining and I love it. We thought it was going to pan out,” Marcum says.
Lightning struck twice for Marcum, and in March 2019 he was laid off again.
“I started going back through a depression phase in my mind and thinking, being a father and a provider and somebody who tries to give their kids things that I didn’t have, and I thought, I can’t lose my home,” he remembers.
Luckily, things took another unexpected turn pretty quickly for Marcum when he found out about a job fair hosted by his local Kentucky Career Center JobSight.
A partner in the Kentucky Career Center JobSight network of workforce centers, Northeast Kentucky Community Action Program provides Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) services in Carter, Elliott, and Lawrence counties under contract with the Eastern Kentucky Concentrated Employment Program, Inc. (EKCEP). Those services include programs for adults, dislocated workers, and for in-school and out-of-school youth who may need assistance honing skills such as résumé building or networking with local employers, or who need assistance being retrained or going to school.
“I was laid off on a Monday, and my wife saw something about Northeast on Facebook having a job fair that Wednesday of that same week I got laid off,” he explains. “I thought, what’s the worst that could happen? I might find a job up there.”
Marcum made sure to be one of the first arrivals at the job fair that Wednesday. He made his rounds at each employer’s table but discovered a different kind of opportunity when he visited the booth for 5 Star Electric, a full service electrical contractor. The company’s representative said miners have skills that transfer well to lineman work, and there could be an opportunity for Marcum with his company.
“He said I’ll give you a job if you go to school, but I need you to go to school,” Marcum says. “I explained to him my situation, that I was laid off and I wasn’t able to pay for school, so he went ahead and got up with JoAnn that’s up at the Northeast office about it.”
Expert career advisor JoAnn Chaffin immediately got to work to see what Northeast could do to help pay for a lineman and fiber optic class offered through Ashland Community and Technical College (ACTC).
“The process was easy and very fast. She helped me with everything. If I didn’t understand something, or I couldn’t spell it, they helped me with just about everything—filling the paperwork out, getting some of the paperwork in to the college,” he explains, adding that it took only a week and a half to get everything squared away since his class was set to start that same month.
Northeast was able to not only provide funding for Marcum’s tuition but also helped him get the supplies he needed to use in his class.
“They helped me get some of the tools that I needed that the school didn’t provide. I was unable to afford them, so I would have had to have just used what I had,” he says. “They helped me with fuel, getting back and forth to school during the week, which was awesome.”
Marcum says his school days were long, 12-hour days—eight hours for lineman classes and four hours across town at another campus for commercial driver’s license (CDL) classes.
“It was a busy time . . . which was fine with me to hurry up and get it over with so I could get out and work,” he adds.
A few weeks before graduation, Marcum heard from a company working with the Kentucky Wired project that they wanted to offer him a job.
“They said you’re hired, when you graduate come to work that Monday,” he says, adding that Northeast was able to step in again and help purchase the correct set of boots Marcum would need to start work.
Though his sights were set on working as an electrical lineman with 5 Star, Marcum says he couldn’t pass up a chance at immediate employment after so long without a paycheck. After two weeks on the job, he’d heard back from 5 Star about an open lineman position and turned in his two weeks notice to his employer.
“I went to school to be a lineman, to do electric, and I can always come back to fiber optics later,” Marcum says. “I went with 5 Star and I haven’t looked back.”
Marcum says since becoming a lineman, he’s realized that this may just be his dream job.
“Anybody that works a job that they hate, it really tugs at more than just your emotions,” he says. “If you work at something you love, then when you go to work you don’t dread it.”
Now, instead of being gone from home for weeks or fearing a mass layoff may be around every corner, Marcum enjoys his life completely.
“We can actually keep up with the bills now. I was struggling even working in the mines, but I make real good money now, and I’ve learned so much—I’ve actually learned to be a little bit more humble,” he says. “I’m not out of town as much as I would be mining or something else. We just work three and a half days during the week on a normal week.”
With this new world at his feet, Marcum says he can’t see himself ever going back to coal mining.
“I’ve noticed it doesn’t matter who’s in office, it doesn’t matter what’s going on in the world. It (coal mining) has its ups and downs, and lineman doesn’t have the ups and downs,” he explains. “Mining comes and goes—it depends on the market. I don’t work for the market now. I work for an industry.”
“I know starting out, my sights are set high, but I never did like being on the bottom of the totem pole long,” he adds.
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EKCEP, a nonprofit workforce development agency headquartered in Hazard, Ky., serves the citizens of 23 Appalachian coalfield counties. The agency provides an array of workforce development services and operates the Kentucky Career Center JobSight network of workforce centers, which provide access to more than a dozen state and federal programs that offer employment and training assistance for jobseekers and employers all under one roof. Learn more about us at http://www.ekcep.org, http://www.jobsight.org and http://www.facebook.com/ekcep.
You have a real job now. That’s where all of the utility companies are putting their money. In Transmission.
you hear that Charley it’s all about the market
Oh that’s best thing that ever happened 12000 cobalt miners lost there jobs to a communist tree hugger from Kenya . You liberals make me sick go vote vote for Bernie you FOOLS !
if I am not mistaken your King said he was going to bring your coal jobs back Joe
but he also said Mexico was going to pay for the wall and he was going to pay off the debt in 8 years
KAG- The “KING” did bring back what Coal jobs he could. There’s only so much you can do to a industry that’s been destroyed for 8 years by a sole called county leader. The coal industry had been beaten so badly by your elected officials that the coal buyers had looked else where for products to compete with coal. Coal buyers, mainly power plants had all switched to gas or gone plumb out of business & once the “KING” took office & relaxed on some of the federal regulations it was to late. He done 100% his part on bringing coal jobs back, but he can’t make the buyer buy it. The liberals had already buried it to deep to even the “KING” couldn’t fix it, he tried though. Maybe we’ll see what he offers is in his next 4 years.
the KING said and I repeat I will put the miners back to work
don’t make excuses for the KING the coal miners are getting laid off again but this time they can’t even get the pay they worked out that’s your deregulation policy
natural gas took the coal miners job it’s cheaper simple
just explain why in 2011 and 2012 that just about every big coal company bought big coal reserves and other coal companies after Obama was already in office 3 or 4 years and every one of them except 1 has filed bankruptcy Alliance coal is the only one now they are filing again the second time around just maybe there is not much of a market
you see at one time the horse market was booming and guess what when the automobile came along there went the horse market
Well I’m sure all you liberals will get it right with Stalinist sanders in power . I’ll see you in bread lines or at gate to gulag when you idiots fig it out .
why are you so angry with the FACTS JOE
Joe an economic and political system in which a country’s trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.
that’s what we have in this country it’s called capitalism
that’s why gas has took over the electric generation in this country
coal was king for years now it’s gas time to move on
I bet there was guys like Joe who didn’t want to get off his horse when the automobile came out
MORE FACTS
Trust me on this. Utility companies make the most money in Transmission. Generation only accounts for somewhere around 30% of their profits. Transmission is where it’s at. Coal doesn’t have anything to do with it as Joe stated. You have a good career ahead of you.
Good luck on the new job. In today’s environment, a person can get a bachelor of science or bachelor of arts degree online. A college degree lets employers know that an employee has the grit to put in the time and effort to achieve a degree and how well they are trained. Look at college as a training school. Even if the degree is in business administration (a general overview of business), it can keep doors from closing!
Yes, it takes time but several hours a week (not including studying time) can lead to those promotions.
It took me nine and half years to get a college degree while working full-time. I was just as smart at the end as I was at the beginning but I was better trained and could prove it!!! I ended up going from a low-paying, low-skilled worker to an executive vice president position. All because of a college degree that proved I had what it took!!!
Anyone at any age can go to college if they have the ambition, grit to stick with it, and gumption. Even people on Social Security can enroll (yes, it costs money) can get a degree. It took my nine and a half years because I could only afford two classes per semester.
I knew a lady who was 75 years old and got a college degree in Education. Was it worth it? I think so. My mother-in-law went back to college at the age of 59 and got a nursing degree. She worked up until she was 70 and enjoyed every moment of it.
Remember college is a training school. Nothing more; nothing less.
I just love it when a bunch of obama communist fall back on free capitolisim to explain how he introduced laws and ordered forced reductions in emissions witch forced the power co to switch to nat gas . Another fact has your electric bill went down ? , nat gas can’t compete on a btu scale if it cost more than $3.00 a cubic 1000 ft , when U.S completes its offshore ship lpg gas docks and starts displacing Russia’s as gas supplier to Europe you electric bills will triple . ? Where’s all them solar factories , China and all the wind farms that blow hard obama promised . You socialist idea of free market are Stalinist forced politics . Those 12000 good paying mining jobs are gone because of Obama’s e.p.a and not free capitolisim . Go vote for Bernie commerade Communist !
first he didn’t pass NO LAWS on the power plants to switch to natural gas
to pass a law it would first have to pass the house and the senate then the president signs the bill into law that didn’t happen Joe
second ky power made a business decision to shut one of there coal fire plants down at big sandy and converted the other one to gas
and at the same time bought a coal fire plant in wv that was owned by wv power to make up for the plant in big sandy all payed for by there customers
so in laymen terms instead of operating 3 plants now just 2 good business decision
that’s called CAPITOLISIM JOE
your KING has rolled back every Obama rule and they are still shutting coal fire plants down after 37 months sitting on the Throne
I can tell you why Joe acts the way he does. He worked in the mines. Things continually change Joe and you and all others need to plan for that change. Just like natural gas. It will change in the future and the utility industry may go back to coal. I doubt it and for sure it won’t be in our lifetime. On Kags comment, it was AEP’s decision to shy Big Sandy down and convert one to gas. The Obama administration didn’t have anything at all to do with it. The plant that they bought part of is in WV but was owned by Ohio Power. Appalachian Power bought the other half.