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The Working for America
Institute examined the structure, activities and funding bases
for the 14 partnerships studied and compiled matrices so these
elements could be compared. The institute also profiled each
of the partnerships in a series of case studies (see Appendix)
that describe the organizations' history, goals and results
achieved. Although the levels and methods of evaluation of
individual programs vary, the findings of this study should
be helpful in expanding and creating innovative approaches
to job creation, job retention and local economic development.
Activities
and Services
As the matrix here
shows, activities and services provided by the 14 partnerships
studied fall into four main categories:
- Setting standards. Nine of the partnerships have
helped set workplace, job and investment standards. Working
Partnerships USA's report on the underside of the Silicon
Valley economy, for example, led to a coalition that won
wage, benefit and environmental standards for public economic
development investments in Santa Clara County.
- Workforce development. All 14 partnerships design
and provide training for workers. Twelve provide placement
and referral services.
- Philadelphia Hospital and Health
Care-District 1199C Training and Upgrading Fund and
the Hospital League in New York
have built two of the most extensive sectoral training programs
in the nation, serving more than 100,000 union members and
workers just entering the health care industry.
- Looking at the training and education components of workforce
development, 13 partnerships provide technical or occupational
training, 12 assist with job or skill upgrading, 11 have
entry-level training, eight offer ESL classes, seven provide
education in basic skills and four offer tuition reimbursement.
In New York City, the nonprofit Consortium
for Worker Education provides basic education, ESL classes,
skill-based training, health care worker certification and
college degrees.
ON
THE HIGH ROAD:

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Companies compete on the basis
of quality goods and services, innovation and
value - not exclusively on the basis of cost.
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Community members have access
to education and training, leading to family-sustaining
jobs and secure career paths.
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Employees have a voice in the
jobs they do, and can help shape products and
service quality, job structure and technology
use, customer service and other crucial operating
components to be most effective.
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Communities have a voice in shaping
local and regional economies, to ensure working
family-family friendly development.
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Economic opportunities are open
to every member of the community.
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- Business services. Nine partnerships have joint
labor-management programs, nine assist employers with modernization
and five provide financial or similar services. The Garment
Industry Development Corporation offers consulting and
direct services to help employers train workers, modernize
plants, develop new markets and create participatory work
systems. Since 1990, southeastern Michigan's
Labor-Management Council for Economic Renewal has offered
more than 120 management training programs on high-performance
leadership, employee involvement, team concepts and more.
The Graphic Arts Institute of Northern
California helps workers and employers navigate rapid
technological change in their industry by training workers
in the newest forms of technology and enabling firms to
test new technologies that can help them modernize.
- People Served. In the process of building good
jobs and career paths while helping employers compete, High
road partnerships, this study found, also promote fairer
access to economic opportunity for women, minority and immigrant
workers. Thirteen of the partnerships serve incumbent workers,
but 11 also assist new workers, nine serve youths and eight
serve displaced workers. Graduates of the ESL classes offered
by the E-Team Machinists Training
Program, for example, are recruited into machinist training
and placed in local manufacturing jobs that guarantee $10
an hour and a career ladder. Of the nearly 30,000 students
served by the Consortium for Worker
Education in 1997-1998, half were women, three-fourths
were people of color and one-fourth had not completed high
school. In its first seven years, the Culinary
Union Training Center, a partnership of HERE Local 226
in Las Vegas and major hotels, trained more than 14,000
new workers for good jobs in hotels and restaurants, including
thousands of immigrants from the Balkans and Asia, workers
re-entering the paid workforce and minority workers.
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