Addressing Workforce Needs: Northern New Mexico College’s Radiation Control Technician Program

The program has become something of a direct pipeline to the lab. Students learn to use detection equipment, interpret radiation data and apply federal safety standards. Then many of them walk straight into jobs at Los Alamos, one of the few employers in the region offering six-figure salaries to workers without four-year degrees.

Los Alamos National Laboratory needs people, and it needs them fast.

The sprawling nuclear weapons facility in northern New Mexico has added more than 6,000 employees since 2017, bringing its total workforce to roughly 18,000 today. The hiring spree is tied to a federal push to modernize America’s aging nuclear arsenal, but finding qualified workers in this corner of the state has proven challenging.

Northern New Mexico College saw an opportunity. The small public institution now runs a specialized certificate program training radiation control technicians, the workers who monitor radiation levels, run safety surveys, and make sure nobody gets exposed to dangerous doses.

The program has become something of a direct pipeline to the lab. Students learn to use detection equipment, interpret radiation data, and apply federal safety standards. Then many of them walk straight into jobs at Los Alamos, one of the few employers in the region offering six-figure salaries to workers without four-year degrees.

The college didn’t build the program alone. Los Alamos has funded faculty positions, supplied equipment and materials, and created paid internships that double as extended job interviews. Students get hands-on experience at one of the country’s premier research facilities while still in school.

For Northern New Mexico, the stakes go beyond just filling positions at the lab. The region has long struggled with limited economic prospects, and high-paying technical jobs remain scarce outside of Los Alamos itself. Training local residents for skilled work at the facility keeps both money and talent in communities that have historically seen young people leave for opportunities elsewhere.

The arrangement reflects a broader challenge facing the nuclear weapons complex as it tries to ramp up production after decades of declining investment. Labs need specialized workers, and they need them quickly. Traditional recruitment from other parts of the country is expensive and slow. Growing talent locally makes more sense, particularly for positions that require security clearances and long-term commitments.

Whether this model can scale remains an open question. Los Alamos continues to expand, and the need for technicians shows no signs of slowing. For now, Northern New Mexico College is working to keep up with demand, one radiation safety certificate at a time.

For corrections, news tips, and any other content requests, please send us an email at [email protected].

Hot this week

Stage II Fire Ban Hits Santa Fe National Forest as Jemez Wildfire Explodes

Emergency Stage II fire restrictions took effect Friday across the entire Santa Fe National Forest as the McCauley Springs Fire forces closures and evacuations in the Jemez Mountains. Campfires banned through July.

New Educators Gear Up for Upcoming School Year through New Teacher Academy 

APS’ new educators participated in the academy to sharpen their skills and prepare for the new school year.

Could $750 a Month and Free Therapy Change a Young Person’s Future? Albuquerque is Betting the Early Support Program Can.

Albuquerque is expanding a pilot that gives at-risk youth $750 monthly and therapy, aiming to prevent homelessness, violence and mental health crises.

Avoid Falling Victim to Fake Party Invitation Scams. Consider What Cybersecurity Experts Say.

Technology experts are warning consumers about a growing scam involving fake party invitations sent through text messages, email, and social media. Cybercriminals use fraudulent invitations to trick victims into clicking malicious links and revealing sensitive personal information.

‘Academies of Albuquerque’ Seek to Transform APS High School Experience

Albuquerque Public Schools (APS) remains committed to bridging the gap between classroom learning and career readiness through collaborations with various sectors and teacher externships.

Topics

Stage II Fire Ban Hits Santa Fe National Forest as Jemez Wildfire Explodes

Emergency Stage II fire restrictions took effect Friday across the entire Santa Fe National Forest as the McCauley Springs Fire forces closures and evacuations in the Jemez Mountains. Campfires banned through July.

New Educators Gear Up for Upcoming School Year through New Teacher Academy 

APS’ new educators participated in the academy to sharpen their skills and prepare for the new school year.

Could $750 a Month and Free Therapy Change a Young Person’s Future? Albuquerque is Betting the Early Support Program Can.

Albuquerque is expanding a pilot that gives at-risk youth $750 monthly and therapy, aiming to prevent homelessness, violence and mental health crises.

Avoid Falling Victim to Fake Party Invitation Scams. Consider What Cybersecurity Experts Say.

Technology experts are warning consumers about a growing scam involving fake party invitations sent through text messages, email, and social media. Cybercriminals use fraudulent invitations to trick victims into clicking malicious links and revealing sensitive personal information.

‘Academies of Albuquerque’ Seek to Transform APS High School Experience

Albuquerque Public Schools (APS) remains committed to bridging the gap between classroom learning and career readiness through collaborations with various sectors and teacher externships.

 Reading Remains Essential During Summer Break – APS

APS highlights summer reading initiatives designed to build literacy skills and foster a love of books among students.

Lightning‑Sparked Fires from Deer Canyon to the Gila Expose Rising Risks in Hotter, Drier Southwest

A series of lightning-caused wildfires, from Deer Canyon to the Gila National Forest, highlights New Mexico's growing vulnerability to increasingly destructive fire seasons fueled by drought, rising temperatures and expanding development in fire-prone landscapes.

Deer Canyon Fire Under Control — A Look Back at Events

The Deer Canyon Fire has already been contained, and here is the rundown of important details of what happened.

Related Articles