1 / 16

Put Illinois to Work Evaluation: An Early Look

2010. Put Illinois to Work Evaluation: An Early Look. Provides dynamic research and analysis on today's most pressing social issues and solutions to help equip policy decision makers in efforts toward a just global society. Social IMPACT Research Center.

maja
Télécharger la présentation

Put Illinois to Work Evaluation: An Early Look

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2010 Put Illinois to Work Evaluation: An Early Look

  2. Provides dynamic research and analysis on today's most pressing social issues and solutions to help equip policy decision makers in efforts toward a just global society Social IMPACT Research Center

  3. When the program began, there were 764,825 unemployed workers in Illinois and an unemployment rate of 11.5%. • The poverty rate was at 13.3% and household incomes were declining. • Illinois had a meager 1,400 net job increase over the time period of PITW program operation PITW (from April to November 2010) Program Impetus: The Recession

  4. 3 sources of data for this report: • The PITW central database • Heartland Human Care Services payroll records • Surveys of employers and trainee-workers carried out by IMPACT • Program and participant data reflect a cutoff date of 9/11/10, and survey data reflect only those received by9/30/10. • All data are subject to change.Subsequent reports will incorporate full data and report final analyses. Important Data Notes

  5. PITW has… • put 27,393 low-income people to work, • through 4,280 employers, • paid nearly $107 million in wages, • generated nearly $13.6 million in federal income Medicare and Social Security taxes. Impressive Scale

  6. On average: • Each trainee-worker has been employed 5.7 pay periods (almost 11.5 weeks). • Each trainee-worker has worked 384 hours, the equivalent of 48 eight-hour work days. On average, in each two-week pay period: • Nearly $9 million in wages are paid out. • In the peak months of July and August, over $15 million in wages were paid out. • Over $1.1 million are generated in federal income, Medicare, and Social Security taxes. • Over $226,000 are generated in state income tax. Breaking it Down

  7. Picture of Employers Majority for-profit or nonprofit Majority very small

  8. Over 1 in 4 employers (28%) report that their businesses were financially unhealthy or very unhealthy before PITW. • Around 1 in 6 PITW employers reported experiencing no negative impacts of the recession on their business. • Over two thirds (69%) experienced cash flow problems, over half experienced reductions in sales (53%), and 44% had an increase in customers paying late or not at all. • PITW employers implemented a variety of measures in an attempt to weather the recession, including: • 39% of employers report reducing employee hours, 37% report freezing hiring, and 32% report laying off employees. • 38% operated with a deficit. Recession’s Business Impact

  9. 60% are female. • 62% are under the age of 30: • average age of a trainee-worker in the young adult group is 20. • average age of a trainee-worker outside this group is 33. • 53% are responsible for the day-to-day care of their children, and 11% are a non-custodial parent to a child under age 18. • The average number of kids among those with at least 1 child is 2.1. • 81% are African American, 10% Latino, 6% White. • 41% have taken some college courses, but have not earned a higher degree. An additional 33% had just a high school diploma. • Trainee-workers are concentrated in the counties with the highest numbers of unemployed workers. Picture of Workers

  10. 39% did not work in the 2 years prior to enrolling in PITW. • The average length of unemployment for all trainees-workers was 15.4 months. • Of those who did work in the 2 years before PITW: • 46% were unemployed at the time of program entry but had never received Unemployment Insurance benefits. • 9% were unemployed and had exhausted their Unemployment Insurance benefits. • 62% earned less than the PITW wage of $10 an hour. • Only 19% earned $12 an hour or more. • Average monthly household income pre-PITW was $710. 32% report their household had no income in the month prior to entering PITW. Worker Struggles Pre-PITW

  11. The vast majority of trainee-workers (92%) and employers (88%) indicate they would participate in PITWor a similar program if it were offered again. • If the wage subsidy were halved, 40% of employers report they would participate, and 42% might participate. • Over half (52%) of all employers stated that they are more willing now to hire low-income parents and young adults than before PITW. Employer and Worker Satisfaction

  12. 52% of employers would permanently hire half to all of their trainee-workers if they were financially able to do so. • However, considering their financial situation, only 13% reported that they will be able to keep half to all of their trainee-workers. • Of trainee-workers that have discussed staying on permanently with their employer, 95% said they would accept that job if it were offered. Permanent Employment Options

  13. 57% report that the financial health of their business was better or somewhat better following participation in PITW, and 47% attributed at least half of that improvement directly to participation in PITW. • 63% have seen the quality of their work improve as a result of having PITW trainee-workers. • 68% have been able to serve more customers as a result of having PITW trainee-workers. • 59% have seen customer satisfaction improve as a result of having PITW trainee-workers. PITW Benefited Employers

  14. The majority of trainee-workers expressed that the program: • was important in helping them make ends meet (87%). • put more money at their disposal than they had before (78%). • taught them new skills (78%). • saved them from likely unemployment (75%). • introduced them to new professional contacts who might be resourceful in future job searches (72%). • Of those who worked in the 2 years prior to PITW, 76% reported that their PITW jobs had a skill level at or above that of their prior job. PITW Benefited Trainee-Workers

  15. Survey follow-up and analysis • Documentation of the model • Matched comparison group? • State records request and analysis: • Employment and Wage history • Unemployment Insurance history • TANF and SNAP history • Change over time Evaluation Next Steps

  16. For More Information: Amy Rynell arynell@heartlandalliance.org www.heartlandalliance.org/research

More Related