Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Colo. businesses turning to older workers, immigrants

- By Judith Kohler

The stubborn problem of labor shortages has Colorado businesses looking at older workers who retired or lost their jobs during the pandemic and want back in the workforce, as well as at changes in immigratio­n policies that could help fill positions.

Large numbers of people voluntaril­y leaving their jobs as the pandemic wore on last year spurred national discussion­s of the so-called Great Resignatio­n. It’s also been called the Great Renegotiat­ion or Great Reshufflin­g as people quit jobs for higher wages and better working conditions.

“The labor shortage issue is still persistent and real,” said Brian Lewandowsk­i, executive director of the Business Research Division in the Leeds School of Business at the University of ColoradoBo­ulder.

For every unemployed person, there are nearly two job openings nationwide. At the end of April, the number of open jobs fell slightly to 11.4 million from 11.5 million, which was the highest rate since the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics started tracking the number in 2000.

The number of people who voluntaril­y left their jobs in April stayed about the same at 4.4 million nationwide for a “quit” rate of 2.9%.

The latest data available shows 3.5% of workers in Colorado quit their jobs in March while 3.0% did nationally.

“Workforce shortages, talent shortages were a pretty big issue before COVID-19, so the issue of talent shortages is a crisis now,” said Debbie Brown, president of the Colorado Business Roundtable.

The roundtable, which represents CEOs and executives of Colorado businesses, had a recent panel discussion focusing on changes in immigratio­n policy as one avenue for filling job openings.

Janine Vanderburg sees the tight labor market as a potential boost for her work on dealing with ageism and advancing opportunit­ies for older Americans. Ms. Vanderburg, director of Colorado-based Changing the Narrative, said many older workers didn’t just decide to retire when the pandemic hit, but were laid off or encouraged to quit when companies scaled back during the recession.

“There’s this myth going around that there’s been this Great Retirement and all of us who are boomers’ age decided to quit and we’re off on cruises, living off 401(k)s,” Ms. Vanderburg said.

A large portion of the retirement­s since March 2020 happened after periods of unemployme­nt, indicating people didn’t voluntaril­y retire, according to a report by the Schwartz Center for Economic Policy Analysis at The New School.

Employers have asked Ms. Vanderburg to talk at workshops about finding older workers. “I really feel like we’ve got this incredible opportunit­y to change the way employers view older workers,” she said.

Business people who advocate commonsens­e changes to the country’s immigratio­n policies hope the need for workers will prompt movement on the divisive issue that gets a lot of back and forth but little action.

Millions of openings

Lloyd Lewis, president and CEO of Arc Thrift Stores said he’ll leave the details of the policy changes to others. His position is simple, he said.

“We have 11 million open jobs and millions of people who want to work for us. It seems like we could come up with a reasonable way to make that happen,” Mr. Lewis said.

ARC Thrift Stores, in business since 1968, employs more than 1,600 people, has 31 stores across Colorado and plans to add more. Like other places, the stores have job openings.

“We’re not exactly having the Great Resignatio­n, but it’s just been tougher,” Lewis said.

ARC prides itself on the diversity of its workforce, he added. Its net funding supports 15 advocacy programs that help people with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es. The business employs about 400 people with disabiliti­es as well as immigrants and refugees from Afghanista­n and other countries.

He said about 10% of the employees are older than 65.

“If you don’t come up with reasonable immigratio­n reform and reasonable policies, you’re denying the talent pool that can help your company and help your community,” Mr. Lewis said.

Need workers? Look in your inbox

Lisa Jensen has a ready response when employers say they have openings they can’t fill.

“What I tell them is that the workers they are looking for are in their inbox. The workers are knocking on their doors,” said Ms. Jensen, program manager at the Workforce Boulder County center.

One of the hurdles older job-seekers face is the screening processes companies use that Ms. Jensen said key into certain phrases and words.

“If the words don’t match, the resume basically goes into the trash can. Older workers are not really tuned into this,” Ms. Jensen said. “We think the employer wants to know everything about our work history and all the different kinds of work we’ve done.”

Ms. Jensen works with people on writing and resumes and with employers on writing job notices that don’t inadverten­tly screen out older workers. She collaborat­ed with Ms. Vanderburg of Changing the Narrative on a recent workshop for older job-seekers. More than 200 people signed up.

Ms. Jensen knows a little about the travails of being an older person trying to find a job. She worked for several years at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora. She was working on a pilot program that helped people in the community find jobs at Anschutz when Covid-19 hit and she was laid off.

“I became one of those older workers trying to navigate the new world of job seeking,” she said.

It took a year and two months and more than 70 applicatio­ns to land her current position.

After years in human resources, Cindy Hamilton opened her own firm, Denver Staffing Services, to help small businesses recruit workers with a focus on constructi­on and the trades. Lately, she has been getting requests for older job applicants.

“And the reason for that is dependabil­ity and life experience,” Ms. Hamilton said.

Ms. Hamilton sees flexibilit­y in hours and other requiremen­ts as key to attracting older workers who lost their jobs during the pandemic.

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