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Ad Hoc CommitteeMeeting
June 17, 2014
Meeting Topics
• State WIB Examples• Brookings Update• WIA Reauthorization
State WIB Examples
• Workforce Arizona Council–Members: 31; 30% large employers,
25% small employers– Staff: Reside at the Arizona Commerce
Authority– Role: Improving communication
between state agencies– Vision: Shared goals and benchmarks,
create culture of collaboration
State WIB Examples
• Kentucky Workforce Investment Board– Members: 42 total, 25 voting; business makes
up slight majority, organized by industry; includes Governor
– Staff: Attached to Kentucky Education and Workforce Development Cabinet
– Structure: 5 committees: Executive, Alignment, Accountability, Awareness, and Access
– Goals: Alignment of WFD with education and economic development, simplification of service delivery, improved customer-centered services
State WIB Examples
• Oregon Workforce Investment Board– Members: 32; business makes up slight
majority; legislative members are non-voting– Staff: Reside at Oregon Employment
Department; staff work to implement policies approved by Gov.
– Role: Set system outcomes and monitor results; advise Governor and act as primary advisory committee to Employment Department
– Goals: industry sector strategies, work-ready communities, system innovation
State WIB Examples• Washington Workforce Training and Education
Coordinating Board– Members: 9 voting (3 business, 3 labor, 3 state
agencies); 3 non-voting (chair, local elected official, representative of underserved populations)
– Staff: 25; WTECB is its own state agency– Role: planning, coordination, program evaluation,
performance management, policy analysis and advice to Governor and legislature; administers some programs and implements recommendations
– Goals: youth training/education, adult services and lifelong learning, meet employer skill needs; top strategies are career pathways and accountability/efficiency
State WIB Examples
• Colorado Workforce Development Council– Members: 52; business majority; includes
Governor; Commissioners are non-voting members
– Staff: 5 staff reside at the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment
– Role: continuous improvement, planning, neutral forum, focus on business needs and alignment
– Goals: Establish integrated system of outcomes and measures; champion user-friendly information sources; strengthen partnerships and leverage resources
State WIB Examples
• Massachusetts Workforce Investment Board– Members: 65; business majority; Governor is
co-chair– Staff: staff reside in the Executive Office of
Labor and Workforce Development – Role: reviews LMI regularly to develop
regional plans– Structure: 3 sub-committees: ABE/ESL, Links
to Education, Sector Priorities (new jobs, growing industries)
Brookings Update
• Commissioner Clark-Sieben
WIA ReauthorizationPassage of WIOA likely in coming weeks. Key changes include:•Focus on streamlining, reporting, administration, but maintains existing WIA structure•Flexibility of funds at local level between Adult and Dislocated Worker programs is increased•Requires integrating basic education and occupational skills training, and the use of career pathways•Prioritizes competitive integrated employment for individuals with disabilities•New provisions to support professional development among WFD staff•Repeals 15 programs, including WIA Incentive Grants and the Workforce Innovation Fund
Key changes regarding state WIBs:
WIA: language removed WIOA: new language added
Membership • 4 legislative members • 2 legislative members• 20% must represent the workforce (labor,
CBOs, youth)• No “two-fers”• Number of required members reduced
WIA Reauthorization
WIA: language removed WIOA: new language added
Functions • Development of Incentive Grant Proposals
• Develop strategies to align technology and data systems across one-stop partners
• Develop statewide workforce and labor market information system
• ID and share best practices• Develop career pathways strategies,
sector partnerships
Unified State Plan
• Required every 5 years
• Required every 4 years, state board to review every 2 years
• Two main areas: strategy and operations• Inclusive of all core programs, including
ABE, Wagner-Peyser, Vocational Rehabilitation
Key changes regarding state WIBs, cont’d:
WIA Reauthorization
WIA: language removed WIOA: new language added
Local Workforce Service Areas
• Youth Councils eliminated
• Greater focus on regions; requires states to ID regions in consultation with local boards; requires local boards to engage in regional planning
• LWIBs required to establish standing committees on one-stop operations
• New requirements regarding employer engagement, leveraging of non-federal resources, leading career pathways efforts, sector partnerships, other best practices
Key changes regarding state WIBs, cont’d:
Discussion and Next Steps
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