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The State of Sector Policy What States Have Achieved and Learned

The State of Sector Policy What States Have Achieved and Learned. Webinar Monday, July 23, 2007 1:30 – 3:00 pm Eastern 10:30 - 12:00 am Pacific. Today’s Agenda. Using Sector Strategies as a Policy Lever and Not Just a Program Presenter: Martin Simon, NGA

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The State of Sector Policy What States Have Achieved and Learned

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  1. The State of Sector PolicyWhat States Have Achieved and Learned Webinar Monday, July 23, 2007 1:30 – 3:00 pm Eastern 10:30 - 12:00 am Pacific

  2. Today’s Agenda • Using Sector Strategies as a Policy Lever and Not Just a Program Presenter: Martin Simon, NGA Respondent: Jack Litzenberg, Mott Foundation • Optimizing Use of Funding for Sector Initiatives Presenter: Jack Mills, NNSP Respondent: Maureen Conway, Aspen Institute • Aligning State Sector Strategies with Regional Development Strategies Presenter: Larry Good, CSW Respondent: Gay Gilbert, U.S. Department of Labor

  3. Webinar Overview & Instructions • Hosted by NNSP and the Project Partnership • Conference call line • You are all muted to keep the ambient noise to a minimum. Presenters and respondents are not muted. • If cut off, click Info tab at the top of your screen and use the call, session, and attendee info there • Technology problems or questions – • Please call WebEx at 866-469-3239, and enter the “session number” which is 802-797-684 • Questions/Comments on presentations: • Type your question using Q&A function and select “All Panelists”. We will then un-mute you so that you can ask your question, then re-mute you • If you did not log-on in the right sequence (i.e. computer then telephone), we will not be able to see your name when you type a question, thus if you submit a question it will be read aloud by the moderator or technical staff

  4. Characteristics of Sector Initiatives • Address the needs of employers by focusing intensively on the workforce needs of a specific industry sector over a sustained period of period, often concentrating on a specific occupation or set of occupations within that industry; • Address the needs of workers by creating formal career paths to good jobs, reducing barriers to employment, and sustaining or increasing middle class jobs; • Bolster regional economic competitiveness by engaging economic development experts in workforce issues and aligning education, economic, and workforce development planning; • Engage a broader array of key stakeholders through partnerships organized by workforce intermediaries; and • Promote systemic change that achieves ongoing benefits for the industry, workers, and community.

  5. Sector Strategies Strengthen the Way States Think and Act On… • Competitiveness and innovation of industries and workers • Advancement of low-income workers and sustainability and growth of middle-class jobs • Leveraging and aligning resources and strategies

  6. About Our Project Accelerating State Adoption of Sector Strategies • Partnership between National Governors Association Center for Best Practices, National Network of Sector Partners, and Corporation for a Skilled Workforce • Roundtable for States in early 2006 (75 participants from 33 states) • Three tracks: • Learning Network of 6 states: AR, IL, MA, MI, PA, and WA • Policy Academy of 5 states: GA, MN, NC, OK, OR • Knowledge Exchange: Webinar series, sectorstrategies.org, Issue Brief at http://www.nga.org/Files/pdf/06STATESECREG.PDF • Funded by Charles Stewart Mott Foundation and the Ford Foundation

  7. Using Sector Strategies as a Policy Lever Not Just a Program Presenter: Martin Simon, NGA Respondent: Jack Litzenberg, Mott Foundation

  8. Getting to Scale – Policy Challenges • Changing the focus from a single business to an industry • Balancing state and regional decision making roles • Moving from pilots and programs to scale • Developing sustainable funding policies • Aligning key stakeholder missions, priorities, and resources

  9. Building a Policy Framework • Optimize Gubernatorial leadership • Share information and information systems to identify regional assets, gaps, and challenges • Coordinate action to address cross-system challenges • Align investments strategically across programs/systems to sustain efforts • Integrate performance information systems to evaluate results

  10. Showing Results – An Evaluation Framework • Measuring Impact on Workers • Measuring Value to Employers • Measuring Quality and Effectiveness of Partnerships • Measuring System Change • Measuring Benefits to the Community

  11. Optimizing Use of Funding for Sector Initiatives Presenter: Jack Mills, NNSP Respondent: Maureen Conway, Aspen Institute

  12. Developing, Operating, and Sustaining Sector Initiatives • Strategy: Competitive grants that leverage funding from other sources • Multi-year funding • Uses: • Research, partner involvement, and design • Services to industry and workers • Systems change • Example: Pennsylvania

  13. Using Sector Initiatives to Inform Policy Development • Strategy: Target an industry • Fund development/implementation of regional sector initiatives to inform development of state strategy • Use stakeholder perspectives • Change policy and funding to support sector initiatives in multiple industries • Example: North Carolina

  14. Institutionalizing a State Sector Strategy • Strategy: develop shared mission • Build interagency approach to coordinate financing and capacity • Target industry and worker needs – especially to support economic development and increase low-wage/low skill workers’ incomes • Redeploy skill development resources and augment them; also other resources • Example: Washington

  15. Aligning State Sector Strategies with Regional Development Strategies Presenter: Larry Good, CSW Respondent: Gay Gilbert, U.S. DOL

  16. Why Regions are Important • Economic and workforce activity is localized • Artificial boundaries are not important to employers, workers, and job seekers • Laboratories for innovation and transformation • Examples of State - Regional Activity

  17. Why State Sector Strategies Go Regional Easier for: • Alignment of Resources and Strategies • Market Segmentation • Market Penetration • Rural and Urban Strategies • Innovation • Re-Imagining People, Firms, and Communities Examples of State-Regional Activity

  18. How Sectors Align with Other Regional Strategies • WIRED • Clusters and Sectors • Workforce Development and…. • Economic Development • Community Development • Education and Training at all levels • Human Services • Examples of State-Regional Activity

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