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Guest column: Michigan Works agencies fill job slots

By Christine Quinn and Charlotte "Charlie" Mahoney/Michigan Works Association

When reading the recent article in Bridge about both perceptions and realities regarding our state’s workforce development efforts, we remembered advice the 19th century abolitionist Henry Ward Beecher once offered his colleagues, “hold yourself responsible for a higher standard than anyone else expects of you. Never excuse yourself.”

On behalf of the member agencies of the Michigan Works Association working in communities acrossMichigan, we make no excuses.Michigan’s economy is in transition. Our Michigan Works system must transition as well -- and is doing so, with a pledge to hold our work to the highest standard for the people looking to hire, the people looking for work and the people paying the bills.

In recent years, the local member agencies of the Michigan Works Association have set out to significantly and substantially refocus our model. As comments in the Bridge article show, today, Michigan Works is focusing on meeting the needs of Michigan job makers, not simply on the job applicant. It is an approach that Gov. Rick Snyder calls a “demand-driven employment strategy"; one that trains and places workers in growing and important sectors like manufacturing, energy, health care, information technology and agriculture. Our dramatic change of course in recent years is what the governor recognized when he cited the strength and importance of Michigan Works last month during his major policy address on work-force development.

We are proactively training, educating and preparing job hunters for the jobs of tomorrow -- the type of jobs that are in demand here in Michigan.

And, we are seeing successes across the state. As part of the national Workforce Investment Act, Michigan Works is working every day to retrain displaced workers and connect them with those in-demand jobs. Our agencies

successfully place 94.9 percent of those workers in a new job, by far the highest rate in the nation and dramatically outpacing the national average of 74.8 percent. Similarly, we scored a top-of-the-class 95 percent satisfaction rating from employers -- job makers -- using Michigan Works to identify and hire new workers under the program.

We are leaner, more efficient and more effective than ever. Despite impressions left by the Bridge article, Michigan Works is -- and always has been -- subject to intense state monitoring and fiscal oversight three times each year, in addition to strict annual federal monitoring under the Workforce Investment Act.  The Michigan Works System also actively monitors the programs and fiscal responsibilities of all subcontractors to ensure they are in compliance with federal and state regulations.

The transformation is far from complete, but we’ve started to see results in the form of filled high-skill job openings and changed lives. Over the last year, local agencies worked with high-tech manufacturers, hospitals and care centers from Grand Rapids to Saginaw, Escanaba to St. Joseph and everywhere in between to fill vacant, high-skill engineer, high-skill nurse, nurse’s aide, pharmacist, lab technician and prosthetic technician positions, among others. 

The Michigan Works mission was to fill the need of a job maker with a high-skill opening by identifying potential employees, training them, equipping them and partnering with them throughout the education process before placing them in their new career.

As Michiganand Michigan Works continue to transition economically, we will be the last to offer excuses. We will also be the first to acknowledge our work is an important tool for job makers and job seekers and that our work isn’t done.

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