Every device people use daily — from cell phones to medical equipment — depends on semiconductors. Minnesota’s betting big on that fact. Hennepin Technical College recently landed a $4.1475 million grant from the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED). The award came on October 21, 2025.
Semiconductors power everything we touch — and Minnesota just made a $4.1 million bet on building the workforce behind them.
The total program costs $8.29 million. Hennepin Tech covers $4.06 million of that. Semiconductor companies chip in another $87,500 through matching scholarships. This grant is part of a larger $69 million DEED investment spread across four projects expected to create 215 jobs.
The money expands Hennepin Tech’s Automation Robotics Engineering Technology program. It also builds a new microelectronics manufacturing training pipeline. New equipment and training space will be added. Everything gets centralized at the Brooklyn Park campus. The program should be fully running by fall 2027.
Over 10 years, the program aims to serve more than 700 students. It’ll train them for jobs in semiconductor and microelectronics manufacturing. Hennepin Tech is part of the Minnesota State system, which serves about 6,000 students. Graduates will be prepared for careers in automation robotics and AI-driven production. The curriculum will also position students to work alongside technologies driving the global AI healthcare market, which is projected to grow to $208.2 billion by 2030.
The push responds to a national trend. The CHIPS and Science Act committed over $50 billion to boost domestic semiconductor manufacturing. Building a single fabrication facility can cost more than $10 billion. Minnesota isn’t chasing those giant factories. Instead, it’s focused on training the workers those facilities need.
Minnesota’s not alone in this effort. The University of St. Thomas is launching the Minnesota Semiconductor AI Hub. It’ll work with companies like Seagate, Skywater Technology, and Polar Semiconductor. The hub targets graduate-level education in smart manufacturing and aims to produce 120 skilled professionals. These initiatives together are expected to leverage $353 million in outside investment. Meanwhile, NorthWind Test LLC received $49.95 million from the Minnesota Forward Fund to develop the Minnesota Aerospace Complex in Rosemount.
Still, questions remain. Can Minnesota keep trained workers from leaving the state? Will these programs attract more semiconductor companies to the region? Can schools keep up as AI keeps changing manufacturing? Hennepin Tech, founded in 1972, holds a strong foundation for this challenge as the largest stand-alone technical college in Minnesota. Minnesota’s answer, for now, is to keep investing and building the workforce the industry needs.
References
- https://eplocalnews.org/2025/10/26/hennepin-tech-receives-4-million-in-state-funding-to-expand-robotics-program/
- https://hennepintech.edu/college-receives-4m-grant/
- https://minneapolimedia.town.news/g/coon-rapids-mn/n/374202/minneapolimedia-presents-minnesota-matters-systems-being-built-how-41
- https://mn.gov/deed/newscenter/press-releases/index.jsp?id=1045-710102
- https://ccxmedia.org/news/hennepin-tech-awarded-4-million-to-develop-automation-robotics-department/
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B4rd0OSPYoA
- https://hennepintech.edu/category/automation-robotics/