Title: Pima County Faithbased
1Pima County Faith-Based Community Initiatives
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3Pima County is in the Real West
4PIMA COUNTY Workforce Investment Board
- Faith-Based Community Initiatives
- U.S. Dept of Labor (DOL)
- Grant
- Presenters Marguerite Harmon Linda Leatherman
5Board of Supervisors Resolution 2003-224 dated
9/9/03
- Voted unanimously to support the White House
Faith-Based and Community Initiatives in Pima
County, Arizona
6Pima County Faith Based Community
InitiativesEstablished 9/9/2003
- Unanimous support of bipartisan Pima County Board
of Supervisors, Resolution 2003-224 - Followed President Bushs Executive Orders 13198
and 13199, January 29, 2001. - 32 state governors established Faith-Based
Community Offices - Encouraged WIB to create Faith-based Subcommittee
January 2004
7Pima Countys Broad Mandate
- Elected officials participate in FBCO events and
activities that encourage community social
service - Government departments seek opportunities to work
with Faith-Based Community Organizations
(FBCOs) - Pima County convenes meetings of diverse groups
- Small budget made available to support FBCO
social service activities
8Neighborhood and Community Collaboration are KEY
- Convened meetings to bring diverse groups
together - In early 2003 began working with established
partners both in the faith-based community and in
community-based organizations - Catholic Community Services
- Tucson Urban League
- Grace Temple Missionary Baptist Church
- St Johns
- Rising Star
- Gospel Rescue Mission
- And 23 other groups in the initial community
meetings
9Active FBCOs Responded2004-2005
- HOPE FEST established event for homeless
working poor needed larger and cheaper venue - METH FREE Alliance encouraged groups to help
with needs of addicted populations - Feeding sites
- Providers of childrens services
- Shelters, senior programs, events and activities
- Created working environment of Trust Respect
10Trust, Collaboration, Respect
- Pima County faith-based
community responded -
- Wanted collaboration
- Appreciated opportunity
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12Charitable Choice
- Levels playing field for faith-based providers of
Social Services - Encourages religious groups to contract with the
government - Retain authority over their mission
- Right to maintain religious atmosphere
- Right to hire using religious criteria (but not
discriminate on race, age, gender, disability)
13Charitable Choice clarifies and defines
separation of Church and State to protect
rights of FB groups
- Federal monies to faith-based organizations can
NOT be used to proselytize religion - Religious activities and social service
activities must be separated in time or by
location - People being served can NOT be required to
participate in religious activities - Everyone must be served per federal
anti-discrimination guidelines - Permitted to staff on a religious basis per Title
VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - are for social services NOT religious
purposes - (NOT a problem in Pima County, Arizona)
14Religious groups may deliver federally-funded
social services
- Removes anti-faith barriers by not requiring 100
secularism
15Pima County WIB awarded DOL grant 7/1/05
- Structure of DOL Grant
- Small FBCOs serving Target Populations (6 ees
or gt350 k) - Collaborate with ONE STOP
- Clients Eligible for WIA funding
- Defined Target Area
- Meet Measurable Outcomes of Grant
16Map of Tucson Arizona
- Area 1 Greatest area of need and focus of
program - Empowerment Zone
- Youth Opportunity Zone
- Formerly Model Cities
17Implementation of Grant
- Pima County WIB is volunteer Board which uses
County staff to accomplish mission - County staff agreed to manage grant
- Pima County Faith-based Community Initiatives
Coordinator (created in 9/9/03) used community
connections to encourage applications - County staff created RFP and released
- 67 RFPs were picked up 14 were completed and
submitted - WIB RFP committee evaluated proposals and
recommended funding
189 TARGET Populations
- Ex-offenders
- People with limited English proficiency
- People moving from Welfare to Work
- Older Workers
- Homeless people
- Youth aging out of foster care
- High school Dropouts
- Pregnant or parenting teens
- People with disability including drug or alcohol
addiction
19Measurable Grant Outcomes
- 225 individuals receive services
- 180 individuals placed in employment in Target
Industries - 135 employed will be retained for 6 months or
longer
20Pima County WIB Awarded13 Sub-grants
- 10 to FBCOs to mentor and coach Target groups
into employment 225,000 - 3 Intermediaries to help with grants writing,
infrastructure, outreach, volunteer recruitment
training 40,000
21BENEFITS
- Creates new pool of workforce participants
- Helps community to Collaborate, Advocate,
- Innovate Sum is greater than the parts
- Moves populations out of generational poverty
- Reduces cost
- WIA avg. cost per adult placement 4000
- FBCO avg. cost per adult placement 700
22Program Design
- ORIGINAL
- Staff
- 1) Program Manager
- 2) Admin. Assistant
- 3) PT finance support
- BUDGET
- 355,000 contractual
- MODIFIED
- Staff
- 1) Program Manager
- 2) 3 FT Case Workers
- 3) PT finance support
- BUDGET
- 265,000 contractual
23ONE STOP Logical Basis for building FBCO
partnership
- Many employment programs already in place
- Established employer relationships
- Established network of employment/resource
providers - Trained staff
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25One Stops are aboutCOLLABORATION
- to develop policies and partnerships necessary
for a comprehensive workforce system - Partners
- Identifying service providers and vendors
- Resource sharing
- Reducing duplication
The One Stop Service Philosophy
Universal services Emphasis on job
placement Customer choice Prioritize costs
26Scope of WORK
- JOBS (30 days or more)
- 22
- 16
- 10
- 35
- 57
- 30
- 13
- 46
- 30 _______________
- Total 259 jobs contracted
- Sub-Contractor
- Emmanuel Grace Men
- Grace Temple
- Hope of Glory
- New Life
- Giving Tree
- Living Water
- Rising Star
- SOBER Project
- Heaven Bound
27CHALLENGESMelding of 2 cultures
- Government
- 1. Language/legal or formal
- 2. Detail/paper oriented
- 3. World view
- a) Watch dog
- b) Short term
- 4. Impartial/Dispassionate
- 5. Uncharted territory how best work together
- Faith-based Comm. Org.
- 1. Language/Bible or street
- 2. Result/people oriented
- 3. World view
- a) Caretaker
- b) Long term
- Passionate
- Uncharted territory how best work together
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29Additional Challenges
- Outreach
- Needed Public Relations development
- Targeted specific skill development mentoring
(employment) - Required interactive relationship
- Time Limits
- ID papers take time
- Not enough time for career training
- Glitches a beyond everyones control
- 1) Pima County changed finance program
- 2) DOL delayed start 7 months
- Changing Job Market
- Construction slowing
- Health care restricting
- Lack of sophisticated accounting/tracking systems
of small FBCOs - Too many FBCOs on contract (10)
30Comparative Outcomes
- REQUIRED
- 225 served
- 180 placed in employment
- 135 retained 6 months
- ACCOMPLISHED
- 1062 served
- 297 placed
- 166 retained
31ACTUAL production
- 210 unduplicated, small
- employers participated
- 64 of contracted stayed on job 6 months or more
- 2,000,000 earned dollars
- Many unanticipated Social Service Economic
Benefits to Community
- Jobs 297 placed
- 3 Contractors exceeded contract
- 3 met contract
- 2 did not meet contract
- 1 had to subcontract
- 1 dropped out
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34LOCAL Replication
- Encourage elected officials to support
- Limit number of FBCOs
- Allocate trained ONE STOP WIA staff to implement
- Identify small pot of money to encourage
participation - Release monies through RFP process
- Train, Train, Train FBCO staff
35Any WIB Can Replicate
- Encourage elected officials to support social
service programs of FBCOs - Establish outreach through FBCOs
- Assist FBCOs to integrate programs with ONE STOP
36Benefits of Collaboration
- Faith-based Community Organizations provide
space and utilities for implementing social
service programs - Volunteers
- Constituencies
- Defined leadership groups
- Longevity of the institution
- Respectful of education and organization
- Resources (skills, energy, money, caring)
37Why work with FBCOs ??WHY REPLICATE ??
- New source of employees
- Expanded resources
- Broadens community impact
- Dollars for government programs are shrinking
38Federal Job Training Funding History
Overall change 1984-2005 -2,172,602,000 Real
change w/ inflation _at_ 2 per year
-3,512,557,000
Appropriation (in 000s)
Year
39Pima Countys One Stop System
Employers
Faith-based and Community-based organizations
Mandated One Stop Partners
Contracted Service Providers
Satellite Centers Jackson Employment Center, Las
Artes, Kino Teen Center, Pima Vocational High
School, Fort Lowell DES
Two Locations Kino Rio Nuevo
Training vendors
40The One Stop Customer
- JOB SEEKER
- Unemployed
- Underemployed
- Incumbent workers
- Laid-off workers
- Persons entering the workforce
- EMPLOYER
- Bringing/creating jobs
- Changing jobs
- Retaining jobs
- Reductions in force
41Three Service Levels
3
- Training Services
- Customer choice Individual Training Accounts
- Exceptions
- On-the-job training
- Customized training
2
- Intensive Services
- Specialized
- Staff-intensive
- Long-term
- Eligibility criteria apply when funds are limited
-
1
- Core Services
- Available to anyone
- Walk-in
- Short-term
- Self-service or
- Non-staff-intensive
4212 Others Link to the One Stop
- WIA 166 Native American Program
- Migrant Seasonal Farm Worker Program
- Veterans Employment Programs
- Job Corps
- Wagner-Peyser Act Job Service
- Title V Older Americans
- Trade Adjustment Asst.
- Unemployment Insurance
- Vocational Rehabilitation
- HUD Employment and Training
- Community Services Block Grant
- Adult Ed. and Literacy
- Carl Perkins Post- Secondary Voc. Ed.
43Strengths of FBCO Initiativeor What Pima County
did Right!
- County as Intermediary/Trainer/Support
- Fee for Service Contract
- 1. Reduces paperwork
- 2. Frees use of earned monies
- Assigned trained One Stop staff to coach train
FBCOs - On-going, regular meetings for training
- and networking convened by County
44Many Community BenefitsNew, unexpected, no cost
to government!!
- Instant FBCO Network for WIB
- Expanded Referral network for Pima County
programs and with WIB - Expanded community focus on job search as a skill
and employment as economic development - More social services
45Personal Success Stories
- SOBER Project
- The Giving Tree
- Hope of Glory
- Living Waters
- Grace Temple
46Recognition of Success
- Pima County Metropolitan Alliance-Common Ground
Award - Economic Development Through Partnership and
Collaboration - Government, Private Business and the Faith
Community
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48Workforce Partners
- Government
- Business
- Faith Groups
- The Power of the ENTIRE Community
49LINKING of Diverse GroupsDeveloped Strong Sense
of Community Support
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51SOBER Project
- and visibility grew SOBER Project
- 2005 1 (AA type) 12 step program
-
- 2007 19 12 step SOBER
Projects - (16 in FBCOs, 3 in agencies
- across 3 statesAZ, MT, CA)
- Recognition at White House Conference
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53The Giving Tree
- 3 additional residences
- Plans for 28,000 sq ft center
- Improved facilities
- 1. Added bathrooms
- 2. Improved commercial kitchen
- 3. Opened thrift store
- Expanded Summer School Feeding
- Received 60,000 DOL grant
- Recognized at White House Conference
54Other community assets
- TIARC received 60,000 DOL grant
- TIARC joined Partners Network
- 2 new 501c3s doing employment/social services
- Expanded ministries/programs
- in health HIV Aids childrens support
services hot meals mentoring and long term
support of housing, anti-addiction, ex-offender
programs, Emergency Preparedness thru Office of
Emergency Management
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