On June 21, the Department of Labor (DOL) in collaboration with the Families and Workers Fund held a summit focused on improving job quality and access to good jobs. Speakers represented federal agencies, Congress, state and local government and the workforce.
To start off the Summit, Deputy Secretary of Labor Julie Su introduced the DOL and Department of Commerce’s Good Jobs initiative, which aims to improve job quality by engaging employers, strengthening workforce pathways and creating partnerships. As a part of this initiative, the DOL identified eight principles of a good job related to the following topics:
- Recruitment and hiring
- Benefits
- Diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility
- Empowerment and representation
- Job security and working conditions
- Organizational culture
- Pay
- Skills and career advancement
Following Deputy Secretary Su, Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh highlighted the importance of workforce pathways; Deputy Secretary of Transportation Polly Trottenberg explained how transit employers are using federal grants to provide high-quality workforce training; and Deputy Secretary of Energy David Turk shared how the Department of Energy is prioritizing funding for employers that provide evidence of how they’ll create good jobs.
On the local and regional levels, Kathleen Culhane of Nontraditional Employment for Women, a New York City organization that prepares women for skilled trades careers, discussed how her organization partnered with the North America’s Building Trades Unions to offer child care services for women in apprenticeships. Speakers from Portland, Oregon, highlighted the Regional Workforce Equity Agreement, which jurisdictions can sign to hold contractors accountable for creating an equitable and safe work environment for people of color and women. So far, eight jurisdictions have signed on.
Representative Bobby Scott (D-VA) served as another keynote speaker at the Summit and discussed the importance of the COMPETES Act, specifically how its passage could create one million additional registered apprenticeships and expand Pell Grants to cover short-term job training. ACTE supports expanding Pell grant access to high-quality short-term education programs as they can help Americans earn credentials and enter the workforce in high-wage, in-demand industries like manufacturing, health care and transportation.
You can view the recording of the summit here and view the Summit’s agenda here.
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