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RIT to Hold Training, Certification Programs on Electronics Manufacturing for Veterans
May 11, 2016 | Rochester Institute of TechnologyEstimated reading time: 2 minutes

Rochester Institute of Technology is presenting two training and certification programs for unemployed, or under-employed, area veterans who want to work at regional advanced manufacturing and electronics assembly companies. Training sessions are free and will take place at RIT’s Center for Electronics Manufacturing and Assembly, June 6–July 1 and July 11–August 5.
RIT is partnering with Rochester Works, the Veterans Outreach Center and Adecco Staffing Agency to recruit participants for the two four-week sessions.
The university received $99,955 from the New York State Department of Labor’s Consolidated Funding Application for Workforce Development. Allocations from this fund focus on providing occupational skills for the in-demand fields of next-generation manufacturing and technology, optics, photonics and imaging, and electronics assembly in New York state, and part of the long-term strategic planning set forth through the state’s Regional Economic Development Councils.
Faculty from RIT's College of Applied Science and Technology will conduct the training sessions, along with instructors from EPTAC, a national electronics industry training organization, to attain Institute Printed Circuits certifications in the areas of electronic manufacturing processes and rework, modification and repair of assemblies.
"RIT has supported local electronics packaging industry for a long time, with workforce training, research, prototype builds and other laboratory services," said Manian Ramkumar, director of CEMA and the the training program’s coordinator. "Many local companies have benefited from this workforce training, and this new program allows us to extend what we can do to a population that really is in need of these skill sets to make them marketable in a high paying industry.
"And that particular industry has grown very well in the local region. We have local companies manufacturing products for the military and aerospace industry, and who best to serve that industry than our own veterans? They can be trained for this industry and benefit from it."
Local companies Harris Corp., Black Box Biometrics and IEC were instrumental in helping define the training and are some of the regional organizations looking for the skill sets the training could provide for placements in entry-level, supervisory or managerial level positions, said Ramkumar, who also serves as department chair of the mechanical, manufacturing and electrical/mechanical engineering technology program in CAST.
More information about the program at RIT can be found online or by contacting Michael Radler of the Veterans Outreach Center by phone at 585-295-7830, or Lee Koslow of Rochester Works at 585-258-3516.
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Magnetically Aligned Novel ACA Revolutionizes 3D Chip Stacking
02/18/2016 | Dr. S. Manian Ramkumar, Rochester Institute of TechnologyThe use of anisotropic conductive adhesive (ACA) is not new within the electronics industry; however, drop-in replacements don't exist for lead-based and lead-free solder assemblies. Also, current ACAs require pressure and sequential assembly of components. In this article, Rochester Institute of Technology's Dr. S. Manian Ramkumar writes about a novel ACA that will help revolutionize the packaging industry.