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Washington State’s Perspective: Strategies for Economic Stabilization and Renewed Economic Growth

Washington State’s Perspective: Strategies for Economic Stabilization and Renewed Economic Growth. René Ewing Governor’s Special Assistant for Management and Quality Improvement December 6, 2001. Overview. Our economy, our challenges How we’re using training resources to respond

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Washington State’s Perspective: Strategies for Economic Stabilization and Renewed Economic Growth

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  1. Washington State’s Perspective: Strategies for Economic Stabilization and Renewed Economic Growth René Ewing Governor’s Special Assistant for Management and Quality Improvement December 6, 2001

  2. Overview • Our economy, our challenges • How we’re using training resources to respond • How we’re sustaining public-private partnerships • How we’re maintaining progress in difficult times

  3. Software and Jets drive Washington’s economy(2000 Annual Average) 4.7% 16.1% Source: Employment Security Department, LMEA

  4. The state’s rate of nonagricultural employment growth has slowed September to September change - Seasonally Adjusted 10-year Average Source: Employment Security Department, LMEA

  5. 2001 unemployment rate rose atyear’s end, projected to remain high Seasonally Adjusted 2002 Forecast Source: Employment Security Department, LMEA

  6. Our challenges • Respond to structural changes in economy, i.e., aluminum and pulp and paper industries, Boeing, dot.com bust • Respond to cyclical nature of economic downturn

  7. How are we responding? Washington has a better safety net than many other states: • Red Flag report and rapid response teams • Worker Retraining Program • Training Benefits Program • Short-term customized training • WorkSource one-stop system on the web: www.go2worksource.com

  8. Red Flag report, rapid response Red Flag report • Provides status of projected and actual dislocations • Sent twice monthly to workforce investment councils, key state agencies Rapid response • Teams active in all areas of the state • Takes services to employers before layoffs

  9. Worker Retraining Program • Annually budgeted for 5,400 FTEs at two-year colleges, 550 FTEs at private career schools • Results: • Increasing enrollment in high-wage programs • High post-program wage recovery, employment • Program represents 13 percent of colleges’ workforce training FTEs

  10. Training Benefits Program • For dislocated workers enrolled in full-time training • Up to 52 weeks of unemployment insurance benefits • Dislocated aerospace, timber and fin fishing workers eligible for 74 weeks of UI benefits

  11. Short-term customized training • Pilot program • Short-term, employer-based training • Designed to avert dislocation • $1.3 million to workforce development councils this program year

  12. WorkSource one-stop system • www.go2worksource.com – past six months • Number of resume postings, job searches, job applications increasing • Number of jobs posted, resume searches declining • Most ever number of user sessions in October – 106,399 • Significant community partnerships including state’s two-year colleges

  13. Our strategy in current situation:Use resources effectively • May be additional federal money in economic recovery package • Governor and state’s community and technical college system are working to add training capacity at two-year schools • Need for additional training will increase pressure on our two-year college system

  14. After the recession, we’ll still havea skills shortage to address • Labor force growth is slowing • We’ll continue working with business and industry so they we are positioned to meet their needs • How? Supporting key industry clusters

  15. Attending to our future: youth • We want to help young people focus on their future career • Partner with the K-12 system on new program standards for career and technical education • Example of success – Pierce County Careers Consortium

  16. Sustaining public-private partnerships • Continue our industry cluster strategy • Funding eight more skill panels this year • Community and technical colleges responding to business needs • Governor’s Competitiveness Council making recommendations on human capital

  17. Maintaining progress in difficult times • Strengthen partnerships with workforce development councils • Encourage councils to use strategic management tools • Develop good incentive policies

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