Public Notice
Sealed bids will be received by the Lorain County Joint Vocational School Board of Education as provided in this notice for the Cosmetology HVAC and Dust Collector Project. Questions may be directed to Russell Gayheart, at [email protected] and electronic copies of the Contract Documents, which include additional details, are on file and available for purchase from SE Blueprint Inc., 2035 Hamilton Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44114 (216-241-2250).
Bids shall be enclosed in a sealed envelope addressed to the Lorain County JVS Board of Education, ATTN: Jerry Pavlik, Deputy Superintendent, 15181 State Route 58, Oberlin, Ohio 44074, and plainly marked on the outside "COSMETOLOGY HVAC AND DUST COLLECTOR PROJECT BID". Bids will be received until 2:30 p.m., local time April 10, 2025 and immediately after the deadline the bids will be opened and publicly read aloud in the Superintendent’s Office Board Room located at 15181 State Route 58, Oberlin, Ohio 44074.
A pre-bid conference will be held on April 2, 2025, at 2:30 p.m. with a site visit to immediately follow at the Lorain County Joint Vocational School located at 15181 State Route 58, Oberlin, Ohio 44074.
All bids must include a Bid Guaranty, as described in the Instructions to Bidders. Prevailing wage rates do not apply. No bidder may withdraw its bid within 60 days after the opening; the Board reserves the right to waive irregularities, reject any or all bids, and conduct necessary investigations to determine bidder responsibility.
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Ken Mihaly

Ken Mihaly JVS Precision Machine Technology Grad Is Manufacturing Supervisor at Induction Tooling, Inc.

Ken Mihaly, Precision Machine Technology , Class of: 1990

On average, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that American workers change jobs more than 10 times in their careers. But JVS graduate, Ken Mihaly, is not your average worker.

Mihaly, of LaGrange, recently celebrated his 22nd year at Induction Tooling, Inc. in North Royalton, which hired him a month after he graduated from the Lorain County JVS in 1990.

"I work for a small company whose core values include respect, efficiency, cooperation, accountability, and continuous improvement," said Mihaly, a manufacturing supervisor for Induction, which designs and manufactures heat treating inductors for the automotive, aerospace, medical and agricultural industries.

"It's a clean and safe environment, with training and great benefits, so no, I'm not surprised that I've been working here since I graduated," Mihaly said.

Mihaly was hired as a machinist apprentice, where he learned the "grunt work," the basics. That evolved into a research and development position, where Mihaly collaborated with engineers and suggested changes, when necessary, to the product.

But Mihaly admits that being promoted to manufacturing supervisor was something he never really wished for.

"I was 25-years-old, sitting in my boss' office, shooting the breeze, and I remember saying that I wasn't sure that I'd ever want to be a supervisor, dealing with all the everyday drama, the responsibilities, the headaches," Mihaly recalled. "And he told me to 'never say never.'"

Promoted to manufacturing supervisor in 2007, Mihaly's responsibilities include ordering materials, selecting workers for projects and meeting deadlines.

"We often have 50-to-60 job orders at a time, some due immediately, others in the coming weeks," Mihaly said. "This work requires constant communication between office, engineering and manufacturing facilities."

"We need to be lean, fast, efficient, and watch the overtime," Mihaly said. "It's important for everybody to be on the same page."

"Anything mechanical that involves metal against metal motion requires heat-treating," Mihaly explained.

"Basic heat treating is done in ovens powered by natural gas, which is costly compared to induction treating. Building an inductor is a process that combines copper with high temperature plastics," Mihaly said. "Induction is powered by electricity which is cheaper, faster and more efficient."

"From automobile transmission shafts, spindles and hubs, to diesel engine crankshafts and oil rigs; we make induction coils for them all."

"It blows my mind how much we do for so many different industries," said Mihaly.

Mihaly now serves on the JVS Business Advisory Committee for the Precision Machine Technology Program and recently met with JVS instructors to help guide the program's curriculum to ensure it is current with industry standards.

"It was my first trip back to the JVS since I graduated," he said. "I was very impressed with how the drafting and machining programs are now located in the same wing of the building. With collaboration being such an integral part of the manufacturing process the physical layout of the programs in the JVS manufacturing academy makes a lot of sense."

As a small company with fewer than 20 employees, Mihaly said that Induction is poised for growth and optimistic about the future.

The company recently hired a graduate from the JVS Precision Machine Technology program as a machine apprentice and could be hiring more, Mihaly said.

"Everybody I work with has been here for at least 20 years," he said. "We're mostly middle-age, and we're going to need some new blood to continue growing," stated Mihaly. "The JVS continues to be a strong resource for preparing future workers for the manufacturing industry."

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The Lorain County Joint Vocational School District does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, disability or age in its programs and activities, and provides equal access to the Boy Scouts and other designated youth groups. © 2025. The Lorain County Joint Vocational School District. All Rights Reserved.