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Choices Vocational Rehabilitation. A private-for profit counseling office.16 years of experience doing counseling, rehabilitation planning and job placement with persons with disabilities.State Workers Compensation, Long Term Disability, Office of Workers Compensation Program (Federal), Ergonomic
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1. Benefits of Becoming an Employment Network & the New Regulations Enrique Vega, MS – Choices Vocational Rehabilitation, Los Angeles, California
Mary Lynn ReVoir – Region 1 Workforce Center System (Iowa)
Doug Keast – Iowa Workforce Development
2. Choices Vocational Rehabilitation A private-for profit counseling office.
16 years of experience doing counseling, rehabilitation planning and job placement with persons with disabilities.
State Workers Compensation, Long Term Disability, Office of Workers Compensation Program (Federal), Ergonomic Assessments, Job Analyses, Disability Management, Forensic services.
3. Becoming an Employment Network In September of 2005, submitted application, within 4 weeks, we were an employment network.
Application process: easy, streamlined, simple.
Marketing: The best part of being an employment network: beneficiaries have our information.
Began operations in October 2005.
4. Services Provided Intake and Evaluation: Case Analysis
Vocational Testing: if needed
Identification of employment skills
Resume development
Job leads development
Creating on-line accounts and use of e-mail
Weekly meetings
Employer research and calls
Employment support services (once employed)
5. What works: The Screening Process Screening process that begins with the question: If I get you a job tomorrow, will you take it?
Where do you live? Location is key
Can you meet with us today or tomorrow?
Analyze financial situation: financial motivation is key, for several reasons. Avoid:
Part-timers
Self-employment
Those who believe you are employing them!
6. The Bad: The things Maximus and SSA will not tell you … The “training” conundrum.
Since becoming eligible for SSI or SSDI has participant worked above SGA any given month? Why is this important?
The reasons for payment denial: you might as well be deciphering hieroglyphs.
When did your client go to “zero cash benefits”?
Split payment consideration: the twilight zone.
To call Maximus or not? That is the question.
7. The Ugly: No $$ ? It’s been a year since I submitted payment requests
The clients who work in the cash economy
The clients who get paid by check with no deductions or employment taxes
The self-employed and allowances
The Part-timers
The client who stops working at the end of the work-trail period.
The client who disappears (they will not return calls)
The client who just wants to be your friend
No support
8. The Good: This is voluntary I don’t have to do this: we have four, five or six sources of revenue.
TTW funds do help bottom line.
Zero marketing investment.
Team approach: Worksource Centers, Employment Agencies, Employer Organizations, Training Centers.
We can make a difference in someone’s life, and it is tangible: work is life.
We enjoy helping those who want to be helped.
9. The Better: Revenues are Exponential Clients on zero cash benefits provide steady income for up to 5 years, “automatic.”
The beginning is slow going process: first year about 22 tickets assigned: second year about 65, third year???
Revenues follow similar pattern.
Expected to recoup investment in year 4 or 5.
Proposed rules to triple income.
10. The Best: Anticipate, Plan, and Get Advice From experience we know: clients will disappear at month 9: have signed releases for their paystubs.
Call employers to verify employment and earnings.
Clients are told to expect to be off benefits, and is best to provide earnings information or risk to have to pay back any overpayment.
EN Help Desk: Use it
The work-number (www.theworknumber.com)
Get training and mentorship: Look who is ahead of you:
The California Workplace – John Janda
Tulare County Office of Education – Karen Davidson
11. New Regulations that Will Make a Difference Improved Payments more services participating, more beneficiaries participating, more people working
Easier Application Process for ENs
Automatic “in use” designation for VR Customers
Encouragement for One-Stop Workforce Centers to Operate as ENs
12. Back in the Day…. Early response to the invitation to operate as an Employment Network
Why it didn’t appeal…
A Tale of Two Regions –
Renewed Discussions in anticipation of new regulations
James Smith
13. Regional LevelEmployment Network Workforce Region consists of 8 counties & 13 partners
Two of the workforce partners are EN’s (state VR & Dept Blind)
Employment Network introduced during Work Incentive Grant (pre Navigator) – not initiated
14. Initial Concerns / Solutions
15. Employment Network Implementation EN Name: Region 1 Iowa One-Stop
Lead Contact: Navigator
Effective: September, 2006
Orientation to One-Stop partners, signage
Marketing: Began January, 2007
Agreed to operate under state workforce partners EN in July, 2007
16. Iowa State Employment Network Implementation EN Name: Iowa State Workforce Partners
Partner Leaders: Navigator Project Coordinator, State VR rep, Dept of Blind rep
Effective: August, 2007
Infrastructure: State Lead Navigator conducts state level activities & regional Navigators conduct local
Marketing: Represents all workforce partners
17. Focus on Customer Service - This is a rising tide that will lift all boats, if the focus is on partnership and customer service (rather than the money).
The employment services system as it exists today is challenged in terms of customer service by it’s complexity. Making it more competitive increases those challenges. We need to meet the job seeker together.
18. Spirit of the Times Focus on Partnership
Improvements in WIPA – Increased emphasis on coordination with employment services
19. March, 2007
20. State Employment Network Partnership Agreement to Support a collaborative EN Approach
Discussion between Workforce Development and State EN’s with Vocational Rehabilitation and the Department for the Blind
Development of a written agreement
Impact of new regulations in the future
Importance of Teamwork for good customer service
21. Ticket to Work projections Evaluation and projections conducted by 7 state agency partnership implementing Navigator and WIPA initiatives
Consideration of New Regs expected Spring of 08
Looking at current service usage and registration
Demonstrates potential for stronger customer outcomes and satisfaction
22. Services Provided in Iowa Over 200,000 registered in ES, PY 06
Over 20,000 registered in VR, PY 06
Over 3,000 registered in WIA PY 06
23. Ticket Holders in Iowa Total – 82,591
What is potential for a One-Stop in Milestone payments for ticket holders?
Looked at PY 06 Ticket Holders registered in ES/Vets/WIA system (from SSA list 10/07)
Evaluated based on outcomes achieved by those individuals using the services available
Looked at UI data for those ticket holders
24. Program Year 06 Test Registered in ES/Vets/WIA – 2800
Demonstrating Income for TtW – 1777
After removing active VR clients – 1375
Potential TtW Milestones - $2,065,700
11 regions would have generated enough to support the role of a navigator, and have additional funds to invest in workforce services and infrastructure -
25. Caveats Based on 100% Ticket Assignment
Based on people being active full program year
Is a One-Term study, and doesn’t take into account that people can be enrolled multiple years and go into Phase two and outcome payments
Without benefit of focused outreach and expansion of WIPA resources
26. Also keep in mind…. Will take several years to demonstrate ticket assignment levels that might begin to approach the outcomes in this projection
Success will be more likely with the close agency partnership and coordination
27. Thank You!!
enrique@choicesvocrehab.com
mary.revoir@iwd.iowa.gov
douglas.keast@iwd.iowa.gov