Second Academy Kick Off Session Reveals Importance of Mentors

We launched the female class for the Mentorship Academy this past week. Fifteen young women, mostly high school seniors, from districts across the region’s urban and rural zip codes. The day’s discussions left me with three significant takeaways; including the vital role of mentors, a role if you’re reading this you might be able to help serve.

These high schoolers have drive and ambition. Much like their Academy male peers, when you observe and listen to their interactions, you hear leaders, insight, creativity, individuality, and the desire for independence. It’s truly impressive when you consider these are 17 and 18 year-olds, placed in a group where they enter not knowing those around them, and sit in a new environment not knowing for certain what comes next. No doubt, the raw potential is there.

Second, these young women and men from our region’s underserved communities are keenly focused on figuring out how to progress up the economic ladder to bigger and better things. They see one of two paths: ‘making it’ ala professional sports, music, etc. or being caught in the viscous box that too many of our urban and rural neighbors are trapped in. To most of these young adults, there is an assumption that a traditional path to the middle class is not an option: either make it big or be resigned to not moving forward.

Changing this perception of these high potential individuals is the core purpose and justification for the Mentorship Academy.

Once they see what career paths are open following high school, and what those careers provide for standard of living, the light bulbs will surely go off. Couple that realization with the untapped potential of each student, and great things will begin to occur—for the person and the region.

Third, it is becoming increasingly clear that the success of this effort will hinge on what will link the raw potential/talent of the individual student to the structured program of the Mentorship Academy: the mentor.

The reality is that despite raw potential and a great program design, there are dozens of constant and ominous distractions looking to pull these young adults off the proven path. We convene once every few weeks for a day and achieve great things, but every minute of every other day is filled with pitfalls and perils that are real and entrenched.

The mentor is the key to assuring the student stays on course with the Mentorship Academy and avoids the distractions. And since every young adult is different, that means every mentor-student relationship is going to be different.

We are blessed to have a core team of mentors that know this and are all-in when it comes to focusing on keeping the participants on the critical path. The mentors are about as diverse as one can imagine: sports coaches, corporate professionals, moms and dads, educators, rural residents, urban residents, etc. All of them sharing one thing in common: experiencing a similar journey in their lives to that of the students.

We know the students of the Mentorship Academy’s inaugural class are stacked with potential. We are convinced the program is wired with experiences and content that will yield exciting career and life paths exiting high school. We are sober in recognizing real life out there is going to challenge our campaign. And we are certain the mentors are going to be the answer to that challenge.

If you hail from urban or rural roots and have a passion for mentoring young adults looking to embark on a life career in western Pennsylvania outside of college, please contact us at communityrelations@cnx.com.

Let’s Get It Started – Mentorship Academy Kicks Off

The wise inform us that every day is a gift. Some days I make the most of the gift and other days I fall short.

Then there are those precious few days that stand out above all others. The ones you know you will remember until you, as Shakespeare put it, ‘shuffle off this mortal coil.’

During my 30-plus year career, I’ve seen fire and I’ve seen rain (James Taylor), experienced good times/bad times (Led Zeppelin). And if I took stock of my top ten best, most magical, career days, August 21, 2021, would be on that list.

That’s because that August Saturday was when we put our grand plans for the mentoring academy into action. We went live. It was…awesome. It was the definition of tangible, impactful, and local.
Fifteen dynamic young men. Rural and urban, black and white, all from western PA.

Ten program leaders. Fellow CNX employees, clinical psychologists Shani and Krysta, elite diversity and inclusion experts Dr. Clyde and Ron, businessmen and entrepreneurs John and Jamal.

We gathered to get to know one another, discuss a range of issues, and look ahead to what the mentor academy program will achieve. We settled in at ease, became a bit vulnerable, expressed opinions and thoughts.

The individuals feel the group dynamic and then commit all-in. A virtuous self-fueling cycle of individual-group-individual.

What gets discussed within our sessions stay within the sessions, so I’m not going into specifics. But I can report back on my resolute takeaways:

  • Our youth in underserved communities have massive potential.
  • These young men are smart, and I don’t mean just book-smart or street-smart. I mean smart in the context of awareness and savvy: they know the big issues inside and out, and they can read situations.
  • As wise as they are and as deep as they assess, there are wide swaths of this world and life they have not had the benefit of being exposed to yet. That we can change.
  • They are driven and motivated, but they are unsure of ‘to what’ and ‘how.’ Take their dreams and aspirations, help define a path of ‘to what’ and ‘how,’ and watch achievement in action.
  • If I’m betting on this region, then I am betting on these individuals.

We intended to limit the size of the program to twelve this year. Based on what we saw that Saturday, the only logical answer is to offer admission to all fifteen. This creates a logistics issue, but a good challenge we can solve.

Next up, the kick-off event for the female portion of our program, and then our first formal site visit in late September at the Carpenter’s Training Center with our partners at the Builder’s Guild of Western Pennsylvania. Stay tuned for reports on both.

Yeah, every day is a gift. But some days are better than others (U2).

Deiuliis Addresses 2021 PIOGA Spring Meeting

On Wednesday, May 19, Nick Deiuliis served as the Pennsylvania Independent Oil & Gas Association’s (PIOGA) keynote speaker for its annual spring meeting.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette covered the meeting and Nick’s remarks, writing, “They [attendees] knew what to expect when CNX Resources’ CEO Nick DeIuliis took the podium for his keynote address. He would be the one to speak for them, unapologetically…A self-styled advocate for capitalism, the middle class and for developing nations — which he says will be hurt most by a move away from fossil fuels — Mr. DeIuliis predictably went after the ‘elites’ and ‘academia’ in his speech and said the pursuit of renewable energy gives power to the Chinese Communist Party…”

Broadening Path to Middle Class Starts with Closing Digital Divide

On May 4, 2021, Nick Deiuliis joined Pittsburgh Steeler legend and Hall of Famer Jerome Bettis to help close the digital divide at Sto-Rox High School. Through a recently formed partnership between Jerome Bettis’ Bus Stops Here Foundation, The Education Partnership and CNX Resources Corporation, Deiuliis and Bettis presented 50 Sto-Rox students with new Chromebooks.

“The natural gas and manufacturing industries are the lifeblood of southwestern Pennsylvania’s economy,” Deiuliis said. “We need to ensure our next generation has the skills to succeed in these good-paying industries after high school, and that starts with meeting essential needs, such as providing students with a working computer.”

The purchase of the Chromebooks was made possible from a generous $10,000 grant from CNX Resources to the Bus Stops Here Foundation and The Education Partnership for their joint Connecting Kids Program that launched in March 2020. The program has provided laptops or tablets to more than 1,500 Pittsburgh area students.

“While there’s much more work to do to support our region’s young people, especially those in disadvantaged communities, meeting with the Sto-Rox students and providing them with new Chromebooks was not only a great day, but an investment that will hopefully provide them and our region a better future,” Deiuliis added. “This type of targeted, local investment is how I and those I work with define social responsibility. By working with Jerome, as well as through our new mentorship Academy, I look forward to continuing to support our region’s high school students and giving them the physical and mental tools for a bright future.”

For more, click here for KDKA’s coverage of the May 4th event. And on Twitter, follow Nick at @NickDeiuliis, the Bus Stops Here Foundation at @BusStopsHereFdn, and the Education Partnership at @EduPartnership

Nick Deiuliis’ Forthcoming Book, “The Leech,” to be Released to Public

Today, Nick Deiuliis announced a digital release of his forthcoming new book, “The Leech,” at no charge. Book chapters will be individually released on a rolling basis at nickdeiuliis.com, beginning on Thursday, May 27.

“I’m excited to provide an opportunity for all to read The Leech—especially our young people, small business owners, and doers from all walks of life. I appreciate the publisher, Republic Books, partnering on this unique rollout,” Deiuliis said. “I wrote The Leech to rebut the growing segments of society who continue to take more and more from society’s producers and who vilify their success. By availing The Leech for all to read, hopefully more individuals are encouraged to speak up against the elites threatening the disadvantaged, the middle class, the individual, and free enterprise.”

Starting on May 27, the first chapter of The Leech will be released at nickdeiuliis.com. Subsequent chapters will be serially released each week thereafter. Each chapter will be accompanied by a podcast on the website, providing expanded commentary. The complete print edition will be released by Republic Book Publishers in January 2022 and can be pre-ordered at nickdeiuliis.com.

Proceeds from the sale of The Leech will go to support a new Mentorship Academy, announced by Deiuliis last month, serving underprivileged youth in western Pennsylvania.

More information on the Academy, The Leech, as well as recent commentary by Deiuliis, is available at nickdeiuliis.com. Follow Deiuliis on Twitter at @NickDeiuliis.

Nick Deiuliis is a chemical engineer, attorney, and business executive. During a career spanning 30 years, he served as the leader of several public energy companies. Nick is a thought-provoking voice in the energy and manufacturing industries, advocating for technology, labor, environmental, and capital markets policy issues. He is a regular media contributor and speaks extensively on the virtues of the carbon economy, the nobility of the worker and middle class, and the vital importance of individual rights. Nick is a proud capitalist, free enterprise advocate, and lifelong Pittsburgher.