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Appalachian Miners Are Learning to Code
February 4, 2016 /
Jim Ratliff worked for 14 years in the mines of eastern Kentucky, drilling holes and blasting dynamite to expose the coal that has powered Appalachian life for more than a century.
Today, he rolls into an office at 8 a.m., settles into a small metal desk and does something that, until last year, was completely foreign to him: computer coding.
"A lot of people look at us coal miners as uneducated," said Ratliff, a 38-year-old with a thin goatee and thick arms. "It’s backbreaking work, but there’s engineers and very sophisticated equipment. You work hard and efficiently and that translates right into coding."
Tim Loh
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Posted in: Workforce Development
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