A California Chamber of Commerce-supported workforce development bill will be considered by the Senate fiscal committee when legislators return from their summer break.
AB 1111 (E. Garcia; D-Coachella) increases California’s skilled workforce by authorizing a competitive grant program to assist individuals who face multiple barriers to employment and provide them with remedial education and work readiness skills to prepare them for training, educational, apprenticeship or employment opportunities.
The bill establishes the Breaking Barriers to Employment Initiative within the Labor and Workforce Development Agency and calls for the formation of partnerships between community-based organizations and workforce development boards to successfully deliver assistance to one or more targeted populations, including unskilled or under-skilled, low-earning workers; workers displaced by the movement of an employer; long-term unemployed individuals; women seeking training or education to move into nontraditional fields of employment; as well as other individuals who face barriers to employment.
The Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC) has projected that the state will produce 1.5 million fewer workers with some postsecondary education than the workforce will need by 2025. Not only is this skills gap a concern for employers, it also has serious implications for individuals hoping to find middle-class jobs that can support their families.
AB 1111 will help California reduce this skills gap and address the needs of employers by ensuring that those individuals who need the most assistance and face the greatest barriers to employment receive the remedial education and work readiness skills they need to prepare them to participate in training, educational, apprenticeship, or employment opportunities.
Action Needed
AB 1111 will be heard in the Senate Appropriations Committee on August 21. The CalChamber is asking members to contact their senators and urge them to support AB 1111.
Staff Contact: Karen Sarkissian