[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 96 (Monday, July 8, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Page S5528]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
By Mr. FRANKEN (for himself, Mr. Schatz, and Mr. Durbin):
S. 1269. A bill to amend the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 to
support community college and industry partnerships, and for other
purposes; to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
Mr. FRANKEN. Mr. President, I rise to speak about legislation that I
am introducing called the Community College to Career Fund Act. This
legislation is aimed at closing what is called the skills gap--the gap
between the skills that businesses need to fill open positions, and the
skills that workers have. Closing the skills gap will mean more
Americans get jobs and businesses get the workforce they need. It is
key to the future prosperity and economic competitiveness of our
Nation.
When I travel around Minnesota and talk to employers, the single
biggest thing they tell me they need is a workforce capable of handling
the jobs of the 21st century. Finding qualified employees is
particularly a problem for our manufacturers. Recent surveys in
Minnesota show that \1/3\ to \1/2\ of manufacturers have job openings
that they can't fill. They want to hire people, but they can't, because
they can't find employees with the skills they need.
Meanwhile, unemployment continues to be far too high. With so many
Americans still looking for jobs, and employers seeking to fill open
positions, this is a problem that we have to solve.
Minnesota and many other States are working to address this problem
by bringing businesses and community colleges together. There is a lot
we can learn from these efforts, and my legislation supports and builds
on what has been working in Minnesota.
Take, for example, Hennepin Technical College in Minnesota. Local
manufacturers have joined with Hennepin Tech to form the M-Powered
Program, which trains students in manufacturing skills so they can fill
open jobs. When I met with them recently, they told me that 93 percent
of the program's nearly 300 graduates have permanent jobs. That is a
program that's working.
In Alexandria, MN, businesses and community colleges have been
working together for years and offer another powerful example of
success. Douglas County is like the Silicon Valley of packaging
machines, and businesses there work with Alexandria Technical and
Community College, which is ranked one of the best in the country. The
manufacturers have donated machinery to train the students so that they
can gain the skills needed for jobs at those businesses. When they
graduate, students get snapped up by one of the companies. In fact, at
the height of the recession in 2009-2010, Douglas County's unemployment
rate was a good 3 points lower than the rest of the State.
There is the Right Skills Now program, which is a partnership between
the Manufacturing Institute, ACT, the National Institute of
Metalworking Skills and the President's Job council. This program
started as a pilot program in Minnesota, and has since expanded to
Nevada and Michigan. I visited the program at South Central College in
Faribault, MN, and held a roundtable with participating businesses. I
asked each of them how many jobs they were ready to hire for, and
between them, there were 40 or 50 jobs that needed to be filled. There
were only 17 students in the first term that this program was offered,
and the numbers are obviously in those students' favor to find a job.
There are many other examples of this approach working in Minnesota,
as well as across the country. It is happening in Rochester, Brainerd,
and Duluth, Minnesota. The Employment and Workplace Safety Subcommittee
of the HELP Committee held a hearing last year where we heard about
four great examples of these partnerships from all over the country.
This approach is putting Americans back to work and helping businesses
grow nationwide, and we need to support those efforts.
That is exactly what my bill would do. It would create a Community
College to Career Fund, which would offer competitive grants for
partnerships between businesses and community colleges aimed at closing
the skills gap. The partnerships would compete by demonstrating how
they would fill in-demand jobs.
This bill rewards what works, giving flexibility for the partnerships
to determine the strategy that best fits their needs, including
apprenticeships, paid internships, partnerships with high schools, or
updating training equipment. My bill also leverages private
investments, rewarding those partnerships that bring outside resources
to the table.
I hear all the time from businesses that are desperate to hire
people, if only they could find the right talent. This is a tremendous
opportunity to get Americans back to work by helping them get the
skills that they need. The Community College to Career Fund Act would
seize that opportunity, allow our businesses to grow and expand, and
position our workforce, and our country, for prosperity into the
future. I urge my colleagues to support this bill.
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