Albuquerque Journal

PROGRAM LIFTS UP WORKERS

SoloWorks gives training, helps job acquisitio­n

- BY ELLEN MARKS JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Shawna Austin would have to work at least two minimum-wage jobs, with little time for her 7-year-old daughter, to match what she’s earning now at her home-based job.

Decent-paying work is scarce in Milan, the Grants-area town where the 31-year-old single mother lives.

Austin is a grateful graduate of the new SoloWorks program, which trained her, encouraged her, helped her find a job and then made sure she succeeded at it.

In fact, she got her job with Teletech working on an Intuit tax software product the same day she graduated from SoloWorks last December. She’s making $10.25 an hour in what has become a full-time job and hopes to earn more as she gets more experience.

SoloWorks, which debuted in Grants in early November, is a different kind of economic developmen­t effort that’s aimed at finding outof-s tate jobs for solo workers in rural areas.

The out-of-state component is important because it means creating “economic base” jobs that bring new money into the state and help boost the economy, said Mark Lautman, founding director of the Community Economics Lab, an Albuquerqu­e think tank on economic developmen­t.

And the solo part is important because large new employers, such as those sought by Albuquerqu­e Economic Developmen­t and the state, aren’t necessaril­y interested in setting up shop in a small and economical­ly struggling area like Grants.

“Most of the rural areas in the state … they’re not in the game,” said Lautman, who also is lead consultant for the state’s Jobs Council. “They have no industrial parks.”

Enter SoloWorks, which is about to wrap up its fourth class. Eighteen people have gone through or are still in the job creation program, seven of whom are now employed. Four others are in the job-search phase of the program, and the remainder are still taking training classes, said Paul Hamrick, managing associate at CELab.

The program, sponsored by a consortium, is housed at New Mexico State University’s Grants branch, which donates the space, work stations, computers and IT service.

A key SoloWorks partner is Digital Works, an

Ohio-based nonprofit that works with 65 companies across the country to match people with solo jobs. Part of its approach is to set up a “back channel” with each employer to iron out any problems that might come up with the worker.

SoloWorks training is followed by a supervised job search, which is followed by a “nesting period” after a hiring. That post-job aspect is aimed at “figuring out what (they) need to hold onto the job,” Lautman said. That could be anything from day care to improvemen­ts to a home computer, he said.

The program’s cost, he says, is $3,000 to $5,000 per job created. That compares to as much as $35,000 per job when moretradit­ional economic base jobs are created, according to an informatio­n sheet.

SoloWorks has been funded by $95,000 in grants, and organizers are looking for other sources of funding to keep the program going.

Hamrick said SoloWorks has been going through refinement­s so that other small communitie­s can involved.

“We’re just offering the tool box,” Hamrick said. “We’re just hoping everyone can see the long-range benefits.” Austin, for one, is sold. “I’m trying to get back on my feet,” she said. “I’m so grateful for the program. I really hope it can succeed.”

 ?? COURTESY OF SOLOWORKS ?? Shawna Austin of Milan works in the SoloWorks office on the campus of New Mexico State University’s Grants branch. The program aims help people get solo jobs in rural areas of the state.
COURTESY OF SOLOWORKS Shawna Austin of Milan works in the SoloWorks office on the campus of New Mexico State University’s Grants branch. The program aims help people get solo jobs in rural areas of the state.

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