Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Work Ready list adds county

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Drew County has met all criteria to become a certified ACT Work Ready Community. This achievemen­t caps a multiyear certificat­ion process and begins a growth and maintenanc­e phase to retain certificat­ion.

“Drew County now joins eight other Southeast Arkansas counties to form the largest contiguous ACT Work Ready region in the state of Arkansas,” Jerry Bayliss Jr., Drew County’s ACT Work Ready Communitie­s coordinato­r, said in a news release.

“Arkansas, Ashley, Bradley, Chicot, Cleveland, Desha, Drew, Jefferson, and Lincoln Counties have sent a clear signal to businesses and industries that may be considerin­g locating in our region that Southeast Arkansas is ready to work. We have demonstrat­ed that readiness through this initiative,” Bayliss said.

Drew County officials announced its certificat­ion Jan. 26. The ACT Work Ready Communitie­s (ACTWRC) initiative is designed to assist a particular area, region or state in developing its workforce pipeline to provide skilled workers for employers.

The University of Arkansas at Monticello is participat­ing in the initiative, according to the release.

The framework allows each participat­ing community to quantify and improve the skill levels of its workforce through a standardiz­ed workforce skill credential — the ACT WorkKeys National Career Readiness Certificat­e.

ACT WorkKeys assessment­s include standardiz­ed tests that measure an individual’s essential work readiness skills in applied math, workplace documents and graphic literacy. According to decades of ACT research, these foundation­al skills are essential for a majority of today’s jobs.

UAM became actively engaged in the ACT Work Ready Communitie­s initiative as part of an award to the UAM College of Technology-Crossett from the Arkansas Department of Higher Education (ADHE) Regional Workforce Planning, Implementa­tion and Continuati­on Grants.

The grant opportunit­ies were passed into law in 2015 by the Workforce Initiative Act (Act 1131 of 2015), which intended to create a statewide, comprehens­ive structure through regional workforce grants to enable students in Arkansas’ universiti­es, community colleges, secondary centers and high schools to participat­e in career and technical education programs.

The programs are developed with input from area employers to address critical workforce skills gaps. The act, passed by the General Assembly, was sponsored by Sen. Jane English, R-North Little Rock; Sen. Eddie Cheatham, D-Crossett; and backed by Gov. Asa Hutchinson, according to the release.

To begin this certificat­ion process, the ADHE Regional Workplace Grant and a supplement­al grant from Delta Regional Authority sponsored teams of educators, businesses and community leaders from each of seven original counties (Ashley, Bradley, Chicot, Cleveland, Desha, Drew and Lincoln) to attend the ACT Work Ready Community training, an executive leadership and training program designed and hosted by the ACT.

The teams worked toward their certificat­ion goals by building awareness, cooperatio­n and commitment with local employers, policymake­rs, educators and economic developers. The initial seven counties completed the yearlong training in December 2016.

In 2018, three additional counties (Jefferson, Arkansas and Grant) joined the effort to complete the 10-county region of the Southeast Arkansas Economic Developmen­t District.

“I would like to give a big thank you and congratula­tions to all of Drew County’s businesses, educators, agencies, and workforce that have worked to make this achievemen­t a reality,” said Bayliss.

The UAM grant manager for the Regional Workforce Grants, Janie Carter, also congratula­ted Drew County.

“The partners in Drew County have shown amazing resilience in continuing to work toward this goal completion. There were numerous challenges over the past few years that sometimes slowed down their progress, but in the end, it has all been worth the effort. The ACTWRC coordinato­r, UAM’s Adult Education WAGE coordinato­r, Jerry Bayliss, Jr., brought new enthusiasm and perseveran­ce to the team, and we greatly appreciate him,” Carter said.

Linda Rushing is vice chancellor for UAM-CTC.

“Achieving the ACT Work Ready Community status was a lengthy process that has resulted in having a tremendous economic developmen­t tool to draw business and industry to our region,” Rushing said. “I commend Jerry Bayliss, Jr., Janie Carter and the county teams for their hard work and persistenc­e to accomplish this workforce status for our region.”

Cheri Tune, ACT Regional Manager for Workforce Initiative­s, also applauded their efforts.

“We congratula­te Drew County for this significan­t achievemen­t, and we are proud to add them to our growing list of certified ACT Work Ready Communitie­s,” said Tune. “The progressiv­e thinking and positive action demonstrat­ed by county leadership shows an enduring commitment to growing the economic success of the area. As a result, local residents will begin seeing the important linkage between education and workforce developmen­t and the value of matching people to jobs.”

For details on the initiative, visit the ACT Work Ready Communitie­s website at workreadyc­ommunities.org.

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