[Congressional Record Volume 169, Number 171 (Wednesday, October 18, 2023)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5089-S5090]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STATEMENTS ON INTRODUCED BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS
By Mr. REED (for himself and Mr. Young):
[[Page S5090]]
S. 3075. A bill to amend the Adult Education and Family Literacy Act
and the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act to strengthen adult
education; to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
Mr. REED. Madam President, we have a longstanding adult literacy
crisis that affects the quality of life for individuals and families
and holds our economy back. It is time for a major expansion of adult
education. Today, I am proud to introduce bipartisan legislation--the
Adult Education Workforce Opportunity and Reskilling for Knowledge and
Success Act, or the Adult Education WORKS Act--with my colleague
Senator Young.
Adult education provides numeracy, literacy, digital literacy,
English language skills, work readiness, soft skills, high school
equivalency, and numerous wraparound services to millions of adult
learners nationwide. These essential skills can make the difference
between earning a family-sustaining wage and struggling to make ends
meet. A study commissioned by the Barbara Bush Foundation estimated
that getting all U.S. adults to the equivalent of a sixth-grade reading
level would generate an additional $2.2 trillion in annual income for
the country. Without the opportunities provided through adult education
programs, many adults will be left on the sidelines.
Estimates from the Program for the International Assessment of Adult
Competencies, PIACC, indicate that 43 million adults are low-skilled in
literacy and 63 million are low-skilled in numeracy. Building a
sustainable economy that truly works for everyone is going to require
helping these individuals acquire the basic skills they need to
succeed. Unfortunately, we are reaching only a fraction of these
individuals today. PIACC data show that 23 to 30 percent of working-age
adults with low literacy or numeracy skills wanted to participate in
adult education but were unable to do so. The Department of Education
calculates that this means there are up to 16 million adults seeking
education opportunities from programs that currently serve fewer than 1
million individuals.
In my home State of Rhode Island, there are over 61,000 adults who
could benefit from English language instruction and over 64,000
working-age adults without a high school credential. Yet, under current
funding levels, the adult education program serves just over 4,500
individuals.
The Adult Education WORKS Act provides a roadmap for addressing this
crisis. It calls for increased resources, doubling funding for adult
education by 2029. At the same time, it makes significant improvements
to the adult education system. It calls for a new emphasis on digital
and information literacy, which are essential for success in the
workplace and in navigating everyday life. It enhances the role of
adult education providers, with a special focus on public libraries and
community-based organizations throughout the workforce development
system, ensuring coordination and efficient use of resources. It
invests in the professionalization of the adult education field,
strengthening State certification policies, encouraging full-time
staffing models, and expanding professional development opportunities
and career pathways for adult educators. It provides support for
college and career navigators in public libraries and community-based
organizations to support adult learners where they live. Finally, it
invests in innovation and accountability through pilot projects that
test new approaches for measuring program performance and learner
outcomes.
In developing this legislation, Senator Young and I worked closely
with key stakeholders, working on the frontlines in the adult education
community. I am pleased to count the American Library Association, the
Center for Law and Social Policy, the Coalition on Adult Basic
Education, the National Coalition for Literacy, National Skills
Coalition, ProLiteracy, and TESOL among the supporters of this
legislation.
I urge my colleagues to cosponsor this legislation and work with us
to ensure it is part of any legislation to reauthorize the Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act.
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