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Workforce Development Partnerships Zachary Morris Energy & Skilled Trades Business Service Manager. About Workforce Development. 600 Regionally controlled, Workforce Investment Boards throughout U.S. with public/private-sector oversight
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Workforce Development PartnershipsZachary Morris Energy & Skilled Trades Business Service Manager
About Workforce Development • 600 Regionally controlled, Workforce Investment Boards throughout U.S. with public/private-sector oversight • 25 Michigan Works! organizations throughout Michigan overseeing 100 Service Centers • Provide training resources and job placement to jobseekers • Provide staffing/HR services to employers
About • We are a 501 C-3, non-profit workforce development organization, serving Berrien, Cass and Van Buren counties in Southwest Michigan • OUR MISSION • To provide a skilled workforce to meet the needs of employers • WHO WE SERVE • 2,000employerswith H.R. and staffing services • 34,000jobseekers annually (up from 20,000) • 2,361 are youth (ages 14-21)
History of WorkforceDevelopment Boards Mixture of government and non-government entities • Government-sponsored activities historically focused on unemployed and economically disadvantaged • First labor programs in U.S. started during Great Depression • Federal Manpower Development Training Act of 1962 • First nation-wide publicly provided training program • Comprehensive Employment Training Act (CETA) of 1970s • Introduced local advisory councils • Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA) of 1982 • Focused training programs on employer-demanded skills • Increased private sector participation on advisory councils to ensure local business needs
History of Workforce Development • Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act of 1996 • Federal block grants to fund income support for low-income households • Head of household must find work within specified time • Workforce Investment Act (WIA) of 1998 • Emphasized job-search assistance and job-readiness training with goal of increasing employment, retention and earnings Focus changed in 1990’s from “Welfare to Work”, to employer-driven skill development
Industry Sector Approach Tri-county labor market projections indicate labor need in 4 main industries: • Advanced Manufacturing • Healthcare • Hospitality • Energy/Skilled Trades All training resources are allocated to train the labor pool for jobs within these four industries Career Guide
Business Services Department dedicated solely to serving employers by providing: • H.R. and staffing services • labor market intelligence • Incumbent Worker Training grants (IWTs) • Regional Skills Alliances (RSAs)
Jobseeker Programs and Services • Skill level and ability assessment • Training opportunities (workshops, etc.) • Job search and placement assistance • Career counseling • Labor market information • Adult, dislocated workers & youth • Employment services • Adult education • Post-secondary vocational education • Vocational rehabilitation • Welfare to Work • NAFTA Transitional Adjustment Assistance • Veterans Employment and Training Programs • Community Services Block Grant • Employment and training programs administered by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development • Unemployment Insurance • Title V of the Older American Act • Trade Adjustment Assistance
Steps Ahead • Determine needs • More skilled workers? Retrain existing workers? New equipment? Technology? Access to labor market trends? • Form partnerships • Work with local workforce development organization, industry peers, local training providers, community organizations and key stakeholders • Support funding and training that develops skills of emerging workforce
Questions? miworks.org 1.800.533.5800