Before enrolling at Lorain, Andrea told me she was looking everywhere trying to find a new job.
She was last seen at a pay telephone booth between 2:45 p.m. and 3 p.m. along Cleveland's Lorain Avenue.
This week, I got the chance to sit down with some impressive students at Lorain County Community College in Ohio.
While walking home from her job at Burger King that night, she too took a ride from Castro on Lorain Avenue.
Knight was 21 on August 22, 2002, when Castro lured her into his vehicle along Cleveland's Lorain Avenue, according to charging documents.
Here in Lorain County, 90 percent of people who graduate from this program have a job three months later -- 90 percent.
WHITEHOUSE: President Obama Speaks on Skills for American Workers
The President will travel to Lorain County in Ohio on Friday, January 22nd, the next stop on the White House to Main Street tour.
And on Friday the President will travel, as we've previously announced, to Lorain County, Ohio, for the next stop on the White House to Main Street tour.
It's also great to be back at Lorain Community College.
WHITEHOUSE: President Obama Speaks on Skills for American Workers
Which is why the Ohio General Assembly authorized that a stretch of State Route 2 in Lorain County -- David Hall's home county -- be named, now and forever, to honor him.
Earlier today, President Obama visited Lorain County Community College in Elyria, Ohio to highlight how federal job training funding is helping unemployed workers get the skills they need to compete for jobs in high-demand, high-growth industries.
We came here to Lorain Community College and took a six-month, 12-hour-a-day course that completely retrained us, and that's what got us these new jobs, and we've been working for over a decade now at these new jobs.
WHITEHOUSE: "White House to Main Street" Town Hall: Elyria, OH
WASHINGTON, DC -- Today, the President will visit Lorain County Community College in Elyria, Ohio to highlight how federal job training funding is providing critical services for unemployed workers and helping them to get jobs in high-demand, high-growth industries.
As manufacturing jobs have shifted from assembly-line positions to advanced manufacturing, schools like Lorain County Community College have partnered with non-profits, business, and government to develop job training programs that help equip dislocated workers with skills that match employer needs.
As manufacturing jobs have shifted from assembly-line positions to advanced manufacturing, Lorain County Community College has worked with non-profit, government, and business partners to develop job training programs that train dislocated workers with the skills to meet the needs of employers today and in the future.
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