(Courtesy of the Michigan Chronicle)
by Debbie Stabenow, U.S. Senator from Michigan
For young people, a job is more than just a paycheck, as important as
that is; it’s about hope and an opportunity to learn valuable skills
and gain experience that will help them throughout their lives.
Unfortunately, this opportunity is out of reach for far too many young
adults.
As we address the incredible challenges and obstacles young workers
face in finding good-paying jobs, it’s critical that we make sure the
voices of Detroit’s youth are heard, and that we respond. That’s why
earlier this summer I hosted a roundtable discussion with members of the
community about the state of youth employment at Detroit Fellowship
Chapel. I was joined by my Senate colleague, U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders
of Vermont, who was traveling the country seeking input to address the
problem of youth unemployment.
While there is no single solution to this critical problem, Senator
Sanders and I are leading a legislative effort to create career-building
job opportunities for young people.
Our initiative, which was included as part of the immigration reform
bill, recently passed the Senate. It will create and fund a national
Youth Jobs Fund to provide young people with summer and year-round job
opportunities. It will foster a partnership between the Department of
Labor, states, and local communities in areas of high unemployment
across the country to provide jobs to young people in emerging,
in-demand occupations.
Michigan is number one in new, clean energy patents and Detroit is
now home to the only satellite patent office in the country, the Elijah
McCoy Patent and Trademark Office. However, one of the most common
things I hear from businesses who are creating new innovative jobs is
the challenge they have finding graduates with the right skills to match
the needs of emerging high-tech industries. That means businesses are
left with vacant job openings while youth remain unemployed.
The Youth Jobs Fund will help young people earn credentials or
training certification so they will have a chance to learn the right
skills to match the needs of those emerging high-tech industries.
The Youth Jobs Fund is similar to a successful youth employment
initiative in the Recovery Act that I actively supported in 2009, which
helped 7,000 young people find summer or year-round employment in
Detroit. It spurred a public-private partnership that placed young
people in innovative jobs in healthcare and clean energy. The Youth Jobs
Fund will build on that success so more young Detroit workers have job
opportunities in cutting-edge fields.
This is more important now than ever. With all of the serious
challenges facing the city of Detroit, it is critical that the federal
government do everything possible to help create opportunities and hope
for the future for young people and our families. We must do everything
we can to make sure our young workers are part of our economic comeback.
Establishing a national Youth Jobs Fund is critical to making that
happen. Now it’s up to the U.S. House of Representatives to act as soon
as possible so this important initiative can become law and our children
can get the opportunities they need to be successful.
The Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan, along with Dennis W.
Archer, former Detroit mayor, announced at a news conference that the
Dennis W. Archer Scholarship Fund at the Community Foundation has
distributed $1 million in scholarships.
When Archer completed his service as mayor and elected not to seek
re-election, he used his remaining campaign funds, and funds donated by
many generous businesses and individuals for charitable purposes, to
support causes in Detroit. He subsequently established permanent
endowments at the Community Foundation to support community development
and youth activities and scholarships. To date, more than $1 million has
gone nearly 200 minority students in Detroit and Cassopolis, Michigan,
Archer’s hometown, to help them attend Wayne State University and his
alma mater, Western Michigan University.
“Opportunity and education are the cornerstones for young people,
especially for those born into circumstances where neither are
plentiful, to rise above hardship and challenges,” said Archer. “Through
the Dennis W. Archer Fund at the Community Foundation and our Archer
Scholars program at Western Michigan University and Wayne State
University, we help talented young people from Detroit and Cassopolis
expand their potential for personal achievement and community
enrichment.
Today, we pause to celebrate the $1 million mark in
scholarship awards. More importantly, we say thank you to all the
contributors and congratulations to nearly 200 young people who are now
building better lives for themselves, their families and their
communities.”
In addition, Archer encouraged other civic leaders to join him in
using their financial resources to perpetuate their own special legacies
of service to Detroit through charitable giving.
“At the Community Foundation, we work with donors to make their
charitable visions come true,” said Mariam Noland, president of the
Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan. “We have been honored to
work with Dennis Archer to help improve the quality of life in our
region and to help so many promising young people attend college and
begin their careers.”
More than 1,000 funds have been established by civic-minded
individuals, families and organizations at the Community Foundation
since its inception in 1984. Permanent endowment funds like Archer’s
provide a source of financial support to benefit charitable
organizations in perpetuity.
Reference Link: http://www.michronicleonline.com/index.php/news-briefs-original/14647-youth-jobs-fund-would-create-opportunities-for-young-workers
No comments:
Post a Comment