[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 96 (Thursday, June 30, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S4287]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WOMEN WORKING IN NON TRADITIONAL (WIN) JOBS ACT
Ms. MIKULSKI. Mr. President, I strongly support the Women Working in
Non Traditional Jobs Act, introduced by Senators Gillibrand and myself
late last week. This legislation would encourage local and State
workforce systems to think differently about how they train and prepare
women for jobs in which they are not well-represented. Women currently
represent half of our Nation's workforce, but two-thirds of these women
are concentrated in 21 of 500 occupational jobs. Nontraditional jobs,
in which women make up 25 percent or less of employees, pay 20-30
percent more than traditionally female jobs. Because of this
discrepancy, it is important to establish a program that will aid women
in moving away from occupations they have traditionally held, which are
by and large lower paying than occupations where men are concentrated.
I have always been a strong advocate for equal opportunity in the
workforce. This bill would create a new Federal grant program designed
to help women find these high-wage nontraditional jobs.
Currently, there is only one Federal grant program designed to train
women for nontraditional jobs: the Women in Apprenticeship and
Nontraditional Occupations, WANTO, but this program is under-resourced
and overly narrow in scope. WANTO is 17 years old, has been funded at
only $1 million for years, and is specifically designed to increase
women's participation in the construction industry. The Women WIN Jobs
Act would expand the work of WANTO by authorizing up to $100 million
for recruiting, training, placing, and retaining women in
nontraditional occupations that are high-demand, and high-growth.
Women have difficulty entering nontraditional fields because they
lack sufficient information about career opportunities and pathways.
Without sufficient training, preparation, or information, women will
not be able to fully participate in the Nation's workforce and will
continue to be underrepresented in high-earning and in-demand fields.
This bill would address that problem by encouraging workforce systems
to give women the support and preparation they need to compete for
nontraditional jobs. Preparing women for work in nontraditional fields
is crucial to success in the workforce and general economic success for
our country.
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