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Workforce Innovations 2004 Conference

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John Wallace: (510) 663-6372, ext. 230, John.Wallace_at_mdrc.org ... Phone: (510) 663-6372. Central Office. 16 East 34th Street, New York, NY. Phone: (212) 532-3200 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Workforce Innovations 2004 Conference


1
  • Workforce Innovations 2004 Conference
  • San Antonio, Texas
  • WORK ADVANCEMENT
  • SUPPORT CENTERS
  • A Demonstration Project for
  • Low-Income Families

16 East 34th Street, New York, NY Phone (212)
532-3200 475 14th Street, Oakland, CA Phone
(510) 663-6372
July 19, 2004
2
Brief MDRC Overview
  • Non-profit, non-partisan research firm created in
    1974 by six federal agencies and the Ford
    Foundation
  • Mission To learn what works to improve the
    well-being of low-income people.
  • Projects in over 300 communities in most states
  • Combination of public and foundation funding for
    demonstrations

3
Why A Focus on Low Wage Workers? Labor Market
Reality
  • The labor market is projected to produce more
    low-wage jobs in the coming years than high-end
    jobs. In 2002,
    25 percent of the nations workforce earned less
    than 9.00 per hour.
  • Many low-wage workers lose their jobs in the
    first year at notable cost to employers and
    many who retain their jobs do not move up, even
    over time.
  • Many low-wage jobs offer few opportunities for
    advancement, and a majority do not provide
    medical insurance.
  • Many high-growth industries with better-paying
    jobs are unable to fill job openings.

4
Policy Context 1Retention and Advancement
Services
  • Workforce development and welfare policymakers
    and administrators have begun to focus on
    programs for job retention and career
    advancement.
  • Most are in the early stages of development few
    work directly with employers.
  • Enrollment and retention rates are very low.
  • Welfare, not workforce development agencies, are
    often in the lead.
  • Little is known about effective retention and
    advancement strategies.

5
Policy Context 2 Work Supports
  • Since the early 1990s, the federal government and
    some states have created or expanded a range
    of financial and non-financial work supports that
    can fundamentally improve the income calculus of
    low-wage work.
  • Earned Income Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit
  • Subsidized child care
  • Medicaid and Child Health Insurance Program
    (CHIP)
  • Food Stamps
  • Monthly income supplements for working welfare
    recipients

6
How the Full Package of Work Supports Can Make A
Difference (Ohio)
Annual Gross Income of Single Parent with Two
Children
Working Full-time, Full-year at 6.50 per hour in
Ohio
Child Care Subsidy
Welfare
Federal Poverty Level-2003 (15,260)
EITC
Earnings
Food Stamps
35,000
30,000
25,000
20,000
15,000
10,000
5,000
0
Not Working
Working
Working Earnings and EITC
Working
Welfare
Earnings Only
With all Supports
This chart does not include Medicaid or
CHIP. Only one is eligible for the child care
subsidy.
7
Take-Up (Participation) Rates
  • Now, far more people who are eligible for the
    work supports have no relationship to the welfare
    system, yet many supports are still administered
    through welfare agencies.
  • Take-up rates for most work supports among
    low-wage workers are below 50, and, for the full
    package of supports, no more than 30.
  • Recent research shows that income supports can
    have positive impacts
  • Increase rate of job retention and reduce job
    turnover
  • Reduce poverty
  • Reduce domestic abuse
  • Stabilize marriage among two-parent households
  • Improved the behavior and schooling outcomes
    among
    elementary-aged children

8
BOTTOMLINE PROBLEM
  • There is no institution with the mission or
    statutory responsibility for working with
    employers and low-wage workers to ensure that the
    workers have easy access to job retention and
    advancement services particularly into
    high-growth sectors and the full package of
    work supports.

9
Work Advancement Support Centers
  • The Vision Work Advancement and Support
    Centers will be a single location at which
    low-wage workers could have easy, user-friendly
    access to the services and supports they need.
    Each center will offer
  • Retention and advancement services such as
    further schooling or training, including OJT and
    other employer-based strategies, to help workers
    stay employed and advance in the workplace
  • Easy access to the full package of work supports
    and other work-related assistance, such as
    financial counseling and free tax-filing
    assistance

10
Goals of WASC Demonstration (contd.)
  • 1. Labor market
  • To reduce relatively high rate of job turnover
    among low-wage workers, and associated costs to
    employers
  • To raise the skill level of low-wage workers in
    order to be more productive and improve prospects
    for raising their wages
  • 2. Service delivery To develop
    retention/advancement services and simplified
    access to work supports into a single system
  • To develop and operate different models for
    retention and advancement services
  • To simplify work support application and
    recertification processes for low-wage workers

11
Goals of WASC Demonstration (contd.)
  • 3. Social well-being
  • To increase income of low-wage workers and their
    families
  • To reduce poverty and improve child and family
    well-being
  • 4. Institutional To build the capacity of the
    workforce and welfare systems to reflect new
    labor market realities
  • To build the capacity of One-Stops to provide job
    retention and advancement services
    to low-wage workers, including appropriate hours
    of operation
  • To use One-Stops as the access point for work
    supports for workers
  • 5. Knowledge-development to identify what works
    and doesnt work in job retention/advancement.

12
Program Development Retention and Advancement
  • Objective To develop both employer-focused and
    worker-focused incentives for retention and
    advancement
  • Employer-focused development activities
  • Focus groups with medium-sized and small
    employers in each site in-person meetings with
    3-4 large employers in each site
  • Meeting with Workforce Investment Board and
    affirmative vote in each site
  • Investigating the potential for
  • identifying low-wage workers by working with
    employers who hire a large number of entry-level
    workers
  • developing OJT-based model for advancement

13
Program DevelopmentRetention and Advancement
(contd.)
  • Worker-focused activities
  • Focus groups with low-wage workers at each site
  • Investigating potential for portable or
    vouchered OJTs
  • Also investigating potential for advancement
    activities through community colleges and other
    skills training providers
  • Note Plowing new ground in all development work

14
Program Development Work Supports
  • Objective To simplify to the maximum degree
    possible the eligibility, application,
    documentation, and recertification processes
  • Specifics
  • Interest of U.S. Department of Agriculture (Food
    Stamp QC waiver) and U.S. Department of Health
    and Human Services
  • Tough to do in states that have not moved far in
    this direction
  • access not just a function of simplification,
    but also of staff attitudes and error
    rate-related pressure
  • Necessary involvement of States in the process
    not only local decision

15
Site Selection
  • Site selection criteria
  • Strong local capacity and leadership
  • Strong actual or potential partnership between
    workforce development and welfare agencies
  • Commitment among local policymakers at the site
    to
  • serve low-wage workers and adjust hours of
    operations
  • dedicate WIA and TANF staff to the WASC unit
  • provide resources for retention and advancement
    services (State and site)
  • work with MDRC to simplify work supports (State
    and site)
  • provide guaranteed access to child care (for
    experimental group)
  • adjust WIA performance standards (State, site,
    and DOL)

16
Site Selection (contd.)
  • Sufficient numbers of low-wage workers (for
    sample size requirements)
  • Local or regional foundation interest
  • Site selection process five to eight sites
  • Learning sites (Fall 2003)
  • Dayton Job Center (One-Stop), Montgomery County,
    Ohio
  • Chula Vista One-Stop, San Diego County,
    California
  • Second group of sites (Fall 2004)
  • Current candidates in Connecticut, Illinois,
    Minnesota, Texas, Washington

17
Time Frame for Planning and Implementation
  • Dayton and San Diego
  • Oct. 2003 August 2004 program development
  • Sept. 2004 Dec. 2004 pilot program operations
  • Jan. 2005 June 2006 random assignment of
    1,600 low-wage workers
  • July 2006 June 2008 follow-up
  • Second Group of Sites
  • Same schedule except lags by six to eight months

18
Current Funders
  • U.S. Departments of Labor
  • U.S. Department of Agriculture
  • Ford Foundation
  • Rockefeller Foundation
  • Annie E. Casey Foundation
  • James Irvine Foundation
  • David and Lucile Packard Foundation

19
  • For more information, see MDRCs website at
  • www.mdrc.org
  • or contact
  • John Wallace (510) 663-6372, ext. 230,
    John.Wallace_at_mdrc.org
  • Frieda Molina (510) 663-6372, ext. 228,
    Frieda.Molina_at_mdrc.org
  • Craig Howard (510) 663-6372, ext. 238,
    Craig.Howard_at_mdrc.org

Central Office 16 East 34th Street, New York,
NY Phone (212) 532-3200
Regional Office 475 14th Street, Oakland,
CA Phone (510) 663-6372
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