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The LiLA Program Lifelong Learning Accounts

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Boswell, Katherine and Cynthia D. Wilson. 2004. ... Annie E. Casey Foundation. Ford Foundation. Bank of America Foundation. Chicago Community Trust ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The LiLA Program Lifelong Learning Accounts


1
Lifelong Learning Accounts
CEDEFOP Seminar on Individual Learning
Accounts January 31, 2008
2
Who is CAEL?
  • CAEL is the Council for Adult and Experiential
    Learning
  • A 501(c)3 non-profit, international organization
    with 33 years of experience
  • Headquartered in Chicago, IL with offices in
    Philadelphia, PA Denver, CO New York, NY
  • and Norwalk, CT
  • A national workforce intermediary dedicated
  • to removing barriers to adult learning

3
Skills Gap
  • IDC, a global technology market intelligence
    firm, predicts as much as a 40 percent gap
    between the demand and supply of technical
    networking skills by year 2012 .
  • Source Cisco Addresses Global Networking Skills
    Gap with New Entry-Level Certification and
    Updates to CCNA, June 2007, found at
    www.cisco.com
  • In a 2005 survey, 90 percent of manufacturers
    reported a moderate to severe shortage of skilled
    production workers, including machinists,
    operators, craft workers, distributors, and
    technicians.
  • National Association of Manufacturers (NAM),
    Deloitte. 2005. Manufacturing Institute, Skills
    Gap Report A Survey of the American
    Manufacturing Workforce.

4
Education Gap
  • Estimates suggest that by 2014, the U.S. labor
    force will be short 9 million college educated
    workers, including 3 million Associate Degree
    holders.
  • As cited by Employment and Training
    Administration, Adults in Higher Education
    Barriers to Success and Strategies to Improve
    Results (March 2007)

5
Lack of Funds is a Key Barrier
  • Tuition and fees between 1997 and 2007 increased
    annually
  • 5.6 percent at private four-year colleges and
    universities
  • 7.1 percent public four-year colleges and
    universities
  • 4.2 percent at public two-year colleges

College Board. 2007. Trends in college pricing.
Trends in higher education series.
6
Most Community College Students are Working
Boswell, Katherine and Cynthia D. Wilson. 2004.
Keeping Americas Promise A report on the future
of the community college. Education Commission of
the States and the League for Innovation in the
Community College.
7
Who Pays for Adult Learning?
Informal Analysis by Ford Foundation 2003
8
What are LiLAs?
Lifelong Learning Accounts (LiLAs)
Employer-matched, portable, individual accounts
to finance employee education and training
9
Key Characteristics of LiLAs
  • Sponsored by Employer
  • Employer Matched
  • Optional 3rd Party Matches
  • Portable (Employee Owned)
  • Universal
  • Voluntary Participation
  • Broad Use of Funds
  • Career Education Advising

10
Initial LiLA Demonstration Sites
  • CAEL Demonstration (late 2001 summer 2007)
  • Chicago - restaurant industry 127 employees
  • Northeast Indiana - 79 manufacturing employees
    76 public sector employees
  • San Francisco healthcare 77 employees

11
Overview of Participants Employers
  • 37 employers
  • 4 sectors healthcare, restaurant, manufacturing,
    and public sector
  • Size varies from 3 to 5,500 workers
  • 65 have fewer than 110 employees

12
What Appeals to Employers?
  • Potential increased recruitment and retention of
    employees
  • Affordable addition to existing benefit package
  • Career education advising for frontline staff
  • Setting a cap on monthly and total annual LiLA
    contributions
  • Being part of national initiative to increase
    access to education

13
Overview of Participants Employees
  • 35 earn less than 30,000 per year 70 earn
    less than 40,000 per year
  • 46 lacked any postsecondary credential
  • 43 are over age 40
  • 37 are minorities
  • 55 are female

14
Income
15
Education Attainment
16
Preliminary Outcomes
  • Co-investment strategy works
  • As of September 2006, leveraged 219,404 from
    workers and 200,512 from employers.
  • Employee contribution matched 11 by employers up
    to 500. Project matched total contributions.
  • Average monthly contribution of LiLA participants
    (excluding those who dropped out) 33.82

17
Preliminary Outcomes
  • Participants use LiLAs to advance and/or retool
  • Based on internal review, 70 reported
    educational goals related to
  • current job,
  • promotion with the same employer, or
  • related work with the same employer or industry.
  • More often reported seeing a relationship between
    their studies and a future job as opposed to
    current job.

18
Preliminary Outcomes
  • LiLAs can provide a significant incentive to
    pursue education and training
  • Approximately half (44 to 58, depending on the
    sector) of LiLA participants had not been
    planning to enroll in education or training
    before the start of the LiLA program
  • 84 of participants who made regular or
    significant contributions to their LiLAs used
    their LiLA for at least one class.
  • Across all sites, the average LiLA expenditure
    per participant was 2,003.

19
Preliminary Outcomes
  • Participants valued advising services
  • 97 of participants report that they found their
    CAEL advisor to be helpful
  • 30-40 of participants willing to pay for
    advising out-of-pocket

20
Preliminary Outcomes
  • High level of program satisfaction
  • 88 to 90 of participants were satisfied or
    very satisfied.
  • 87 reported that they would continue
    participation even if the program included only
    employer match funds.
  • 90 of responding employers reported that they
    were very or somewhat satisfied.

21
National LiLA Project Sponsors
  • Annie E. Casey Foundation
  • Ford Foundation
  • Bank of America Foundation
  • Chicago Community Trust
  • City of Fort Wayne
  • Olive B. Cole Foundation
  • Evelyn and Walter Haas, Jr. Fund
  • Walter and Elise Haas Fund
  • Friedman Family Foundation
  • Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund
  • Grand Victoria Foundation
  • Hewlett Foundation
  • Indiana Department of Workforce Development
  • Indiana Michigan Power
  • Indiana Northeast Development
  • Levi Strauss Foundation
  • Lincoln Financial Group Foundation, Inc.
  • Lumina Foundation for Education
  • Noble County Community Foundation, Inc.
  • Northeast Indiana Workforce Investment Board
    (in-kind contributions)
  • Polk Bros. Foundation
  • San Francisco Foundation
  • Steuben County Community Foundation
  • The Atlantic Philanthropies
  • United States Department of Labor (Maine program)
  • Verizon Foundation

22
Taking LiLAs to Scale
  • Administrative Infrastructure
  • Program Marketing
  • Advising Resources
  • Public Policy

23
LiLA Initiatives Moving Forward
  • Federal
  • National Lifelong Learning Accounts Act of 2007
    (S.26)
  • Lifelong Learning Accounts Act of 2007 (H.R.
    2901)
  • State and Regional
  • State-based program (Maine and Washington (new))
  • Mature Worker pilot (San Francisco)
  • Legislative initiatives
  • Illinois
  • Hawaii
  • WIRED US Department of Labor
  • Coastal Maine
  • Kansas City region
  • Planning grant for NYC LiLA demonstration
  • Planning grant for Michigan LiLA initiative

24
Federal LiLA Bills
  • January 4, 2007- S. 26 introduced by Senators
    Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and Olympia Snowe (R-ME)
  • June 28, 2007, H.R. 2901 introduced by Rep.
    Thomas Allen (D-ME)

25
Features of the Federal Bills
  • Amend the IRC to establish a LiLA demonstration
    program for up to 200,000 workers in up to 10
    states
  • Participating states selected in a competitive
    process
  • Tax credit equal to the amount contributed into a
    LiLA up to 500 per tax year (refundable credit
    and additional deduction for individuals in the
    House bill)
  • Distributions excluded from gross income Targets
    tax incentives to lower and middle-income earners
  • Employer option to match workers contributions
    tax credits of up to 500/tax year

26
LiLA Participants say
  • People should never stop learning. The LiLA
    program helps you financially and it wont break
    the bank.

27
Contact Information
Amy Sherman Associate VP for Policy and Strategic
Alliances (312) 499-2635 asherman_at_cael.org www.cae
l.org
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