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1 Federal Budget and Policy Update An Example
of State Organizing and Advocacy from
California Bay Area Workforce Development Board
Meeting Green Bay, WI October 19, 2006
2Mission
The Workforce Alliance (TWA) is a diverse
national coalition of local leaders advocating
for federal policies that invest in the skills of
Americas workers including those who are
low-income, unemployed, or seeking advancement
so they can better support their families, and
help American businesses better compete in
todays economy.
3TWA Stakeholders
- Community Colleges
- Community-Based Organizations
- Labor Unions / Labor-Management Partnerships
- Employers and Business Associations
- State / Local Officials and Public Agencies
- Research / Technical Assistance Organizations
4Fiscal Year 2007Federal Workforce
FundingBudget Appropriations
5Why is This Critical to WI?
- Federal Dollars to WI
- for Employment Training
- TANF 314 Million
- WIA (PY 2005)
- Adult, DW Youth (combined) 44.8 Million
- Employment Service (Wagner-Peyser) 13.8
Million - Pell Grant 164.6
Million - Perkins State Basic Grants 22.9 Million
- Adult Education 7.6
Million
6The Presidents 2007 Budget Request
7Block-Granting Through the Budget
- WIA Adult, Dislocated Worker, Youth, Employment
Service state grants, One-Stop Career
Centers/LMI, and WOTC administration 3.4
billion Career Advancement Account (CAA) block
grant. - 13 overall cut for included WIA / ES programs
- 15 cut to state funding (vs. held by DOL)
8Career Advancement Accounts (CAA)
9Career Advancement Accounts (CAA)
- Eligible Training Providers determined by state
- Implied to be broader
- Community Career Centers as new eligibility
assessment / distribution network - States determine if does / does not include
One-Stops - no wrong door?
- WIBS Unclear future role
10Senate Budget Resolution
- Senate passed their Budget Resolution in March
with a vote of 51-49, adding 16 billion to the
budgets proposed 873 billion discretionary
spending cap - Specter-Harkin Amendment added 7B in budget
authority for programming under the Labor, HHS
and Ed Appropriations Subcommittee. This
amendment passed overwhelmingly, with support
from all Ds and 27 Rs.
11House Budget Resolution
- House passed a Budget Resolution in May with a
vote of 218-210 (12 Rs joined all Ds in
opposition) - Included language recognizing need for 7.16B
above presidents funding request for Labor, HHS
and Ed, but only provided 4.14B in additional
funding.
12Budget Resolution Compromise Between Chambers
- The budgetary breakdown of the House and Senate
resolutions were so different that rather than
agreeing to a single version, the two Chambers
decided instead to agree to an identical
discretionary spending cap of 872.78 Billion. - In agreeing to this spending cap, the Senate
basically reversed itself on the Specter-Harkin
amendment.
13FY07 Labor-HHS-Ed Appropriations Subcommittee
Bills
14The Continuation of a TrendJTPA / WIA - 33
Cut Since Mid 80s
The Workforce Alliance, Skilling the American
Workforce On the Cheap, September 2003
15Next Steps
16WIA Reauthorization
17WIA Reauthorization Where are we?
18House WIA Bill
- H.R. 27 Job Training Improvement Act. Passed
March 2005. - Similar to USDOL proposal (with some exceptions)
19House WIA Bill
- Funding Streams Block-grant combining Adult,
Dislocated Worker, and Employment Service - vs. DOL Did not add in Youth consolidation,
et.al. - vs. DOL Did not adopt DOL WIA Plus option
- Training Adopts DOLs re-wording of sequence
of services - Unable to attain / retain suitable employment
as condition to qualify for intensive, training
services
20House WIA Bill
- Infrastructure DOL proposal allowing states to
mandate partner agency contributions - Option to negotiate MOU contributions at local
level - Faith-Based Providers
- Eliminates WIAs prohibition against
religious-based hiring by providers receiving WIA
funding
21Senate WIA Bill
- S. 1021, Workforce Investment Act Amendments,
Marked-up May 2005. Passed unexpectedly by
unanimous consent in June 2006. - Bi-Partisan bill, drafted in consultation with
range of stakeholders
22Senate WIA Bill
- Funding Streams Does not block-grant WIA and
Employment Service programs - Raises Adult / Dislocated Worker transfer ceiling
to 45 - Training More significant re-wording of
sequence of services, but does not eliminate it - Unable to attain comparable or higher wages or
self-sufficiency as trigger for next level of
service - Encourages more training in state / local plans,
incentive grants
23Senate WIA Bill
- Infrastructure Partner agency contributions,
but within specific limits - Up to 3 of WIA programs up to 1.5 of others
- Faith-Based Providers
- Does not eliminate WIAs prohibition against
religious-based hiring by providers receiving WIA
funding
24 Doing More Than Circling the Wagons Building a
Coalition and Crafting a State Workforce
Education Agenda for 2006 and Beyond
25CAs EDGE Campaign Origins
- In March, the CA Workforce Association, the CA
Labor Fed WED, the CA Budget Project, and TWA
convened a group of diverse stakeholders to plan
a campaign to create a public debate within the
2006 election cycle about the need for new
investments in, a policy attention to, workforce
development. - The election cycle offers a ready-made statewide
forum in which policy issues of central
importance to a states future are lifted up, and
sometimes championed, by candidates
26CAs EDGE Campaign Tactics and Goals
- The Campaign will use a number of tactics
- Develop a consensus policy agenda
- Stakeholder organizing
- Non-partisan candidate/policymaker education
- Media outreach
- The ultimate goal The governor and state
legislature prioritize workforce development
issues a broad-based coalition pushes a unified
policy agenda to hold them accountable.
27CAs EDGE Campaign Making the Case
- The Challenge Facing Business Many of the
businesses that drive the states economy and
provide good jobs are threatened by a skilled
worker shortage. - In a 2006 survey of members of the California
Manufacturing and Technology Association,
respondents reported that the single most
important business challenge they were facing in
California was sustaining and/or acquiring a
skilled workforce, more so than workers
compensation costs, energy costs, or taxes.
28CAs EDGE Campaign Making the Case
- The Challenge Facing Workers Much of the
incumbent and emerging workforce is unprepared
for skilled jobs, undercutting their ability to
attain / retain family-supporting employment. - Too many young people arent graduating from high
school - Too few high school graduates are going on to
college - Working adults have limited opportunities for
lifelong education and career advancement
29CAs EDGE Campaign Making the Case
- The Challenge Posed by Major Demographic Shifts
The highly skilled baby boom generation will be
retiring, and many projections indicate that
Californias replacement workforce will have
insufficient levels of educational attainment if
current trends continue. - California will need to replace 1.4 million
workers with higher education who will be
retiring or otherwise leaving their occupations.
The need to replace these workers is almost equal
to the need created by the growth of expanding
industries.
30CAs EDGE Campaign Making the Case
- CAs Strengths Pioneering technologies a good
education and training infrastructure major
academic research centers a young and diverse
workforce. - Whats missing?
- California Economic Strategies Panel California
lacks an economic and workforce investment
strategy that focuses on regional strengths and
opportunities, and connects state and local
efforts for maximum impact.
31CAs EDGE Campaign The Policy Agenda
- Invest in regional workforce and economic
development strategies to build prosperous
communities and competitive industries. - Provide all Californians access to high quality
postsecondary education and skills training. - Provide working adults with opportunities to move
up the skill ladder.
32CAs EDGE Campaign The Policy Agenda
- Link workforce programs and institutions to
create pathways to high wage jobs. - Align program goals and measures to achieve a
shared vision of Californias future and to
ensure accountability.
33CAs EDGE Campaign Endorsers
- Some lead sponsors of the Campaign
- California Budget Project
- California Manufacturers and Technology
Association - California Workforce Association
- Community College League of California
- California Labor Federation, AFL-CIO
- State Building and Construction Trades Council of
California - Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce
- San Francisco Chamber of Commerce
- The Boeing Company
- The Workforce Alliance
- For a full list of endorsers, go to
- http//www.californiaedgecampaign.org
34 Jason Walsh State Policy Director (608)
310-9508 jasonw_at_workforcealliance.org The
Workforce Alliance 1701 K Street, N.W., Suite
750 Washington, DC 20006 (202)
223-8991 www.workforcealliance.org