Training LEP Workers for Good Manufacturing
Jobs
Instituto
del Progreso Latino
Chicago, Illinois
Instituto has been providing
social, educational and cultural services to the Latino
community in Chicago for almost 30 years.
It runs a bilingual manufacturing bridge program for LEP
workers. (A bridge program is one that helps participants
gain either the language and/or other prerequisites
for a higher level occupational training program.) This
program, of approximately 440 hours, provides both
a beginning ESL and an intermediate VESL class to prepare
workers to take a bilingual course in advanced manufacturing
offered in partnership with the Westside Technical Institute,
part of the Richard J. Daley Community College.
The goals of the program are
job advancement for incumbent LEP manufacturing workers and placement
of dislocated workers (most of whom have manufacturing experience)
in advanced manufacturing. These goals remain viable even with
the downturn in the manufacturing sector because
of continuing shortages in critical manufacturing skill
areas. At least 90% of the LEP participants are
Spanish speaking.
Funding for the program has
come from a variety of sources including employer fees, public
workforce dollars and foundation grants. In fiscal 2001-2002,
77 workers completed the VESL program. Of
these, 53 completed the bilingual manufacturing course with 73%
placed in manufacturing jobs with an average
wage of $10.15 per hour. Instituto tracks employment retention
at 30, 90 and 180 days. At the 180-day reckoning,
approximately 80% retain their jobs. According to Tom Dubois,
Workforce Programs
Director of Instituto, those who leave their jobs
after placement usually do so because they have found better,
higher-paying jobs.