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Print FormatsNATIONAL COLLABORATIVE ON WORKFORCE AND DISABILITYIssue 8, May 2004 Making the Connections: Growing and Supporting New Organizations: IntermediariesThe Office of Disability Employment Policy (ODEP) of the US Department of Labor (DOL), recognizing the need for more effective linkages between the supply and demand sides of workforce development, is testing a new organizational strategy — intermediary organizations. By aligning and brokering multiple services across institutional and funding sources, intermediary organizations can play an important role in improving employment outcomes for youth with disabilities while at the same time assisting employers in meeting their need for qualified skilled workers. This brief is for policymakers and program managers at the state and community level that are involved in developing intermediaries. The Need for IntermediariesDespite a number of pieces of supportive legislation and identified effective practices, youth with disabilities continue to experience high unemployment as well as insufficient opportunities to obtain competitive employment with the potential of career growth. Too many examples of success exist to attribute this lack of progress to any inherent unemployability of youth with disabilities. Because these successes have generally been achieved without extraordinary fiscal expense, the lack of progress cannot be attributed simply to a lack of money and resources. Rather, critical disconnections exist between and among community institutions. The goal of improving educational and employment outcomes for youth with disabilities would be better served by focusing on the strategic and coordinated use of the resources currently available within a state’s education and workforce development systems. Building and Supporting the Right Type of Organizations: IntermediariesOver the past decade a new type of organization has emerged, building on the most promising practices of connecting job seekers and job providers. The American Assembly at Columbia University , with support from several major foundations, conducted an early 2003 Assembly on the issue of building and growing intermediaries. The Assembly identified three key goals of workforce intermediaries:
The number of such efforts has risen from a handful in the early 1990s to several hundred today. Although they approach their tasks in different ways, successful intermediary organizations bring together key partners and functions to advance careers for all workers (recognizing the special needs of low-skilled, low-wage workers), to increase business productivity, and to improve regional competitiveness (The American Assembly, 2003). A Focus on the Needs of the CustomersThe workforce development system has two key customers: youth and adults seeking employment, and employers seeking capable workers. A substantial body of information documents what each group needs; with careful study and action, this information can direct efforts in the workforce development field toward organizing and facilitating better linkages between these two customer groups. What do Youth Customers Need?Federal investments in research and demonstration initiatives have shown that when given opportunities, knowledgeable staff guidance, and supportive environments, youth with disabilities succeed in the workplace. In fact, in order to attain career success, youth with disabilities need the same things that all youth need, with attention in individual cases to additional and specialized supports. All youth need the following:
Ultimately, youth with disabilities need assistance in navigating multiple, and often confusing, eligibility requirements and referral mechanisms to receive the benefits of programs and services available to help them. Organizations working with youth, with and without disabilities, need a services manager responsible for tracking and advocating to guarantee that the youth needs are addressed through different stages of learning and development.
What do Employer Customers Need?According to the Center on Workforce Preparation of the US Chamber of Commerce, the development of a future workforce is a high priority for our nation’s businesses. In addition to needing workers with specific, industry-related skills, employers are looking for workers who have so-called “soft skills,” such as the ability to work as team members, respond to supervision, follow directions, etc. To find such workers, and to insure a future supply of such workers, employers need an awareness of and easy access to recruitment resources, as well as effective processes for screening applicants. They also need to function in a cost effective manner, that is, to receive a reasonable return on their investment of time and resources in developing and recruiting their workforce. One avenue for employer investment in human resources is involvement in youth work preparation programs. Employers, however, need support to host youth in the workplace. A recent study conducted by the National Collaborative on Workforce and Disability for Youth (NCWD/Youth) surveyed employers who have hosted youth with disabilities in their workplaces about their experience. The study revealed that most employers prefer to follow their internal human resource procedures when bringing youth with disabilities into the workplace, but are willing and able to make accommodations and adaptations to these procedures when they have competent help from trained professionals. Employers’ willingness to offer opportunities is ultimately influenced by two factors: 1) awareness of these programs (i.e. how well such programs are marketed to them), and 2) availability of competent intermediary entities, such as transition or workforce development programs and professionals, to provide access to young job seekers. In youth transition and workforce development programs, a host of organizations already exists to link youth and employers, including school transition programs, disability employment programs, workforce development youth programs, and community rehabilitation programs. With so many entities vying for employer attention, both within and outside the disability employment arena, employers are likely to remain uninterested or confused, forced to make sense on their own of multiple and disjointed initiatives. Micro vs Macro Intermediary FunctionsWith their dual customer focus, intermediary organizations offer one possible solution for addressing these and other types of issues necessary to ensure that youth receive the workbased experiences which research has shown they need to succeed. Thus, although there is increasing recognition that intermediary functions are critical to youth success and to employer operations, a key difference remains between intermediaries that connect individual youths to individual employers (the micro level) and those that link various programs and services to each other or to the larger employer community (the macro level). While the establishment of local One-Stop Centers across the nation is an important step toward coordinating and integrating the many services available to address the career-attainment needs of youth and adults, continued and more strategic alignment of services and service delivery from the macro level is necessary. Currently, only a limited number of individual youth programs and workforce professionals are consciously and strategically related to or integrated with macro level community-wide efforts to meet employer needs. States should consider how to develop and support such intermediaries. These macro intermediaries can then build the capacity of existing organizations providing direct services — the micro intermediaries. Utilizing this macro-micro approach to meeting employer needs can 1) strengthen the ability of micro intermediaries to gain the trust of employers and be helpful in meeting the employers’ human resource and operational needs, and 2) establish a distinct and cogent link between “grassroots” youth services organizations and the systems and supports that meet community and employer needs. Establishing new ways of doing business takes time, and none of this work can be successful without active participation of state and local workforce policy boards established by the Workforce Investment Act (1998). While they are not the sole source of financing and human capital, their involvement in the strategic planning process is necessary from the beginning, and those responsible for developing intermediaries need a solid understanding of both state and local workforce boards. ReferencesThe American Assembly. (2003). Keeping America in Business. New York : Columbia University Press. Luecking, R., (Ed.). (2003). Voices from the Field: Employer Perspectives on Youth with Disabilities in the Workplace. Unpublished manuscript. Washington , DC : National Collaborative on Workforce and Disability for Youth. Center for Workforce Preparation. (n.d.). Workforce Issues: A Top Priority for Chamber Members. Washington , DC : US Chamber of Commerce. |
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