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Cunningham Measure To Increase Funding For Unemployed And Displaced Workers Training Programs Signed Into Law

Senator Sandra Cunningham listens to testimony during the Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee hearing.

TRENTON – Legislation sponsored by Senator Sandra Bolden Cunningham that allows the New Jersey Community College Consortium for Workforce and Economic Development to request additional funding from the state to provide basic skills training to help displaced and disadvantaged workers learn the skills they need to successfully return to the workforce was signed into law today.

“Many of New Jersey’s displaced workers and unemployed are unable to find work because they do not possess the skills needed in the changing global workforce that relies more heavily on computers, technology and math skills,” said Senator Cunningham, D-Hudson. “The New Jersey Community College Consortium for Workforce and Economic Development, through our state’s county colleges, provides programs to fill training gaps for many of these unemployed and displaced workers. I am pleased that we are able to provide additional funding for these programs so that they can continue to expand this successful model.”

Currently the Consortium receives 13 percent of all funds appropriated annually to the Supplemental Workforce Fund for Basic Skills (SWFBS) to provide basic skills programs to New Jersey’s displaced or disadvantaged workers and unemployed. The law, S-873, allows the Consortium to request additional funds from the SWFBS up to 25 percent of the total fund which is allocated for basic skills training grants.

Additionally, the law allows employers to apply for a waiver removing them from the burden of paying their employees while receiving basic skills training at the Consortium. Due to feedback from small businesses that financially could not release their employees during business hours to attend basic skills training or afford to pay employees’ hourly wage during weekend and evenings trainings, the state Department of Labor recently made a regulatory change allowing for this waiver at non-Consortium training centers.

The NJ Workforce Consortium is a collaboration between New Jersey’s 19 county colleges to provide coordinated one-stop workforce training and education services for businesses and unemployed and displaced workers. The Consortium offers workforce skills programs such as time management, computer skills, remedial math, English as a second language and job safety courses.

The legislation was unanimously approved by both houses in the Legislature.

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