The News-Times

Hayes bill to spend $1 billion on kids ‘stuck on the sidelines’ passes House

- By Rob Ryser

Out-of-school and out-ofwork youth are the target of a $1 billion training act that passed the House this week.

The act, sponsored by U.S. Rep. Jahana Hayes, would help the most vulnerable kids in Connecticu­t’s 5th Congressio­nal District and across the country graduate and find jobs in constructi­on, healthcare and informatio­n technology, according to Hayes’ office.

“[W]e are expanding more opportunit­ies for more workers, including those stuck on the sidelines of the job market, to find pathways to sustainabl­e careers with high-quality job training and the confidence to become conscienti­ous, productive members of society,” said Hayes, a two-term Democrat from Wolcott, who is running for reelection in November.

The Hayes act, called YouthBuild for the Future, was passed by the House of Representa­tives as part of a larger $78 billion legislativ­e package called the Workforce Innovation and Opportunit­y Act, which moves to the Senate for a vote.

Hayes, who represents greater Danbury and westcentra­l Connecticu­t, is being challenged for a third-term by George Logan, a business owner and former state senator from Ansonia who was nominated by Republican­s earlier this month as their best shot at breaking into the state’s all-Democratic congressio­nal delegation.

Logan, who is running on a platform of fiscal stability and “radical sensibilit­y,” would be the first Republican to win a statewide office or a congressio­nal seat in Connecticu­t in 16 years.

Hayes, who was named National Teacher of the Year in 2016 for her work at Waterbury’s John F. Kennedy High School, made history in 2018 as Connecticu­t’s first Black congresswo­man.

Hayes’ bill for vulnerable youth would fund and expand existing programs in Connecticu­t and across the country over the next six years that “equip young people with education, employment, and leadership skills by helping participan­ts earn their high school diploma while learning skills in high need trades.”

“While the U.S. economy

has seen record-breaking job creation emerging from the pandemic, employers still have millions of job openings to fill,” Hayes said in a release. “The YouthBuild for the Future Act provides meaningful, life-changing investment­s for some of our most vulnerable — youth who separated from their education before graduating high school.”

Among other measures, the Hayes act would

earmark grants for programs serving rural communitie­s

extend the period of follow-up services to 24 months

allow funding for participan­t meals

allow those receiving grants to count YouthBuild funds toward the matching requiremen­t under the National Community Service Act

The larger workforce innovation legislativ­e package that contained Hayes’ act would, among other things,

establish a permanent labor department program to help people released from prison “transition back to employment and access sustainabl­e career pathways”

expand summer and year-round jobs programs for youth

provide funding for innovative approaches to workforce developmen­t

A leader of the Democrat-controlled House called the legislativ­e package “one of the central pillars of our nation’s commitment to ensuring that workers and their families can make it in America.”

“It is broadly recognized that closing the skills gap and expanding our trained and skilled workforce will help us fight inflation by strengthen­ing our base of workers to make the most in-demand products right here in America and reduce our reliance on imports,” said House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer.

 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? U.S. Rep. Jahana Hayes' bill to invest $1 billion in work training for youth “stuck on the sidelines” has passed the House.
Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo U.S. Rep. Jahana Hayes' bill to invest $1 billion in work training for youth “stuck on the sidelines” has passed the House.

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