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WASHINGTON, DC, April 20, 2004 --
The Task Force on Workforce Development, co-sponsored by the Albert
Shanker Institute and New Economy Information Service, has issued
a report that calls for far-reaching changes in the way our country
manages its workforce skills and training efforts. The group argues
that the United States needs to do far more to help those who have
jobs keep them as technological change and global competition buffet
our labor markets.
The report,
Learning
Partnerships: Strengthening American Jobs in the Global Economy,
is the result of a year-long, in-depth study in the U.S. and the
United Kingdom that brings labor, business and policy leaders
together to support a common agenda. The group urges adding $3
billion to the funding of the Workforce Investment Act to enable
incumbent workers to retrain for changing jobs and emerging
industries. Better skilled employees can help employers here in
America in transforming more of our enterprises, big and small, into
innovative and competitive workplaces.
“Labor must now consider its
traditional role in training and credentialing workers as one of the
major missions of the modern labor movement.” said Morton Bahr,
President of the Communication Workers of America and Co-Chair of
the Task Force.
To provide workers with the
improved skills that increased competition requires, the Task Force
proposes establishing “bottom-up partnerships” that bring
together government agencies, educators, labor leaders and employers
for a national campaign on a scale similar to the historic
undertakings that modernized American agriculture and built our
public education system. Partnerships should be established at many
levels to analyze job opportunities and workforce needs, and to
develop appropriate learning services.
The report acknowledges various
proposals that have been made to improve workforce skills, but
argues that "political leadership on all sides has yet to give
adequate attention to this challenge, or what must be done to
address it." It notes that those with very different views on tax,
trade and labor policy can nevertheless agree on the need for better
skills and training -- but adequate strategies for providing this
have not yet been developed.
The report
notes that although the trend towards globalization and
“off-shoring” -sending work to countries where wages are lower -
presents American workers with real challenges, it should also be
recognized that new job opportunities are emerging here at home for
those with certain skills and professional capabilities. These
opportunities may grow as the large labor force cohort from the
"baby boom" generation moves into retirement. Helping workers to
identify new opportunities and to acquire skills that match them not
only benefits individuals, it also strengthens our economy in ways
that will enable us to address our healthcare, education, retirement
and national security needs.
The report
calls for actively engaging workers in efforts to raise their own
workforce skills. In this the Task Force proposal is modeled after
the successful “learning representatives” program now being
implemented in Great Britain. Learning representatives help
employees act for themselves by seeking advice from someone on site
who has their confidence and understands their needs, as well as
those of employers. Often, current programs are not rooted in the
workplace. Workers must travel to training sites, and those who
design and manage programs are disconnected from trainees and their
particular job needs. Programs the
Task Force envisions would bring together all the essential players:
the employer, the educational provider, the employee, employee
advisors and community leaders. These “learning partnerships” would
build programs from the “bottom up” after diagnosing employment
demands and worker needs.
The
report also calls on educators - especially those in community
colleges - to become more closely involved with the learning needs
of the workplace. The Task Force found that adult workers are often
reluctant to admit educational deficiencies, to make long commutes
to training sites, or to enroll in two or four year degree
programs. Government education assistance also overlooks the needs
of adult learners and should be revamped if we are to produce the
skilled workers who can keep our economy on the leading edge.
The report points out that our public workforce
development programs, which are focused on those who have lost jobs
or face special difficulties in the labor market, do little to help
us keep people at work. Because both business and labor unions are
most involved with those currently employed, they therefore have
less incentive to participate and contribute in training and skills
development activities.
“While
Task Force members may disagree on some policy prescriptions, this
study contains a refreshingly centrist and constructive set of
proposals representing a consensus view on potentially divisive
issues,” says Task Force member Susan Traiman of the Business
Roundtable.
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The
Albert Shanker Institute, one sponsor of the Task Force, is named in
honor of the late president of the American Federation of Teachers.
It is a nonprofit organization dedicated to generating ideas,
fostering exchanges, and promoting constructive policy proposals in
three areas—children's education, unions as advocates for quality,
and freedom of association in the public life of democracies. The
New Economy Information Service provides information and encourages
dialogue on the impact that globalization and technological change
has on democracy here and abroad.
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