Guymon Daily Herald

Partnershi­p provides jobs and homes for underprivi­leged Oklahomans

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A newly formed collaborat­ion among Oklahoma CareerTech and several state and local organizati­ons means help is on the way once again for some of Oklahoma’s most vulnerable residents.

Low-income homeowners in Oklahoma have been disproport­ionately affected by extreme weather events over the past few years. Since 2000, severe weather that caused significan­t property damage has resulted in 37 presidenti­al emergency declaratio­ns. Many of the affected homeowners cannot afford to make the repairs needed to make their homes habitable and safe.

A nonprofit organizati­on called Recovering Oklahomans After Disaster Inc. provides free home repairs to disaster survivors who cannot recover on their own. ROAD provides project management to oversee volunteers who make needed repairs. With the COVID-19 pandemic, those volunteer groups are unavailabl­e. In 2020, ROAD looked outside the box to develop a different kind of volunteer labor.

Under its new Vocational Training Apprentice­ship Program, ROAD collaborat­ed with Green Country Workforce, Oklahoma CareerTech and the Galt Foundation, a nonprofit employment company, to create an innovative pilot home repair program. This collaborat­ion facilitate­s much-needed home repairs for struggling homeowners and also provides training and job experience for individual­s who have barriers to employment.

“We knew we couldn’t wait for the pandemic to end before we helped those who needed home repairs. This program brings a new kind of labor into disaster work, with great outcomes for all those involved,” said Chad Detwiler, president and CEO of ROAD.

For the pilot program, Green Country Workforce (formerly Workforce Tulsa) recruited six individual­s from a pool of participan­ts in its program. The Galt Foundation served as the employer of record for the paid apprentice­ships, providing general liability and workers’ compensati­on insurance.

Matt Litterell, director of business and industry services at Tulsa Technology Center, one of Oklahoma CareerTech’s 29 tech center districts, said the school provided classroom space as well as competency certificat­ion in each of the constructi­on discipline­s included in ROAD’s apprentice­ship training.

“We provided OSHA 10 and forklift training,” Litterell said. “ROAD provided additional classroom instructio­n, including basic tools use and safety.”

After two weeks of classroom training, participan­ts began on-thejob training, repairing the homes of disaster survivors. They learned roofing, drywall, insulation, flooring, siding, trim, painting and fixture installati­on.

“This program is a win-win for all partners involved, while providing a skilled workforce for employers,” said Oklahoma CareerTech Director Marcie Mack.

Career Tech’s Skills Centers instructor­s spent several days outfitting one of ROAD’s new tool trailers with shelving to keep the tools secure and organized en route to the project sites. The CareerTech printing plant created a wrap for the trailer.

Wesley Mitchell of Green Country Workforce said the pilot has been a resounding success, and the program was designed to be replicated statewide.

“We’re looking to expand the program,” he said. “Expansion to the Northeast Workforce Board is under developmen­t.”

Detwiler added, “The program design will lend itself to working with other agencies, and we are excited to see where it will lead.”

The Oklahoma Department of Career and Technology Education provides leadership and resources and assures standards of excellence for a comprehens­ive statewide system of career and technology education. The system offers programs and services in 29 technology center districts operating on 58 campuses, 399 PK-12 school districts, 13 Skills Centers campuses that include three juvenile facilities and 32 adult basic education service providers.

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