The Union Democrat

Job fair highlights difficulti­es of current climate

- By GUY MCCARTHY The Union Democrat

Tuolumne County employers shared some of the challenges they are facing in the current labor market while seeking potential recruits at a job fair hosted Friday afternoon at the Mother Lode Fairground­s in Sonora.

There were 29 employers seeking to fill as many 150 jobs, and more than 95 job seekers attended the event, according to Dave Thoeny, executive director with Mother Lode Job Training and the Central Sierra Economic Developmen­t District, which helped promote and run the event.

The event was sponsored by the nonprofit Mariposa Amador Calaveras Tuolumne (MACT) Health Board and Blue Mountain Minerals.

John Dunlap, a facilities manager with the nonprofit MACT Health Board was among representa­tives at the event for several hiring nonprofits, agencies and businesses who said the current labor market in Tuolumne County is challengin­g.

“We took at least eight applicatio­ns from prospectiv­e hires today,” Dunlap said outside the fairground­s’ Manzanita Building, where the job fair was staged.

The MACT Health Board has opened one new clinic in Ione in the past year, and the nonprofit is building another one now in Mariposa, Dunlap said, so MACT has job openings.

Asked whether MACT has struggled to retain employees and fill job openings over the past year-and-a-half of the COVID-19 pandemic, Dunlap’s response was, “Oh God, yes.”

“Between the relief checks and increased unemployme­nt benefits and the COVID vaccinatio­n mandates, we actually lost quite a few people,” he said. “Between five and 10 at least, because they didn’t want to get vaccinated.”

Betsy Coe, of the Tuolumne County Behavioral Health Department, was also among prospectiv­e employers Friday and said the agency had jobs ranging from entry

level positions to jobs with master’s degreeleve­l education requiremen­ts.

Openings the agency had online Monday included behavioral health worker, for which an associate’s degree in psychology, social work, or counseling could count as two years of experience; behavioral health clinician jobs that could pay $40,000 to $70,000 a year; and behavioral health program supervisor, which can pay $53,000 to $93,000 a year.

“It’s been a real challenge to recruit and retain staff,” Coe said. “Job descriptio­ns have changed, and with the increase in remote work, it’s been a combinatio­n of things. It’s been hard to find folks because they’re worried about their health and entering the job force.”

Megan Ochoa and Steve Kieffer came to recruit applicants for the Greater Valley Conservati­on Corps and San Joaquin County Office of Education. Ochoa and Kieffer said they talked with about 20 individual­s Friday at the Mother Lode job fair.

The Greater Valley Conservati­on Corps has openings for 18- to 26-year-olds working in forestry, Kieffer said.

“About 20 people here today seemed like a good fit for either our apprentice­ship program or hiring to the Conservati­on Corps,” said Ochoa, an apprentice­ship specialist based in Sonora. “The apprentice­ship program starts in February.”

Jolynn Miller and Vera M. Bullard with the University of California Cooperativ­e Extension’s Department of Agricultur­e and Natural Resources were seeking applicants Friday for jobs that include 4-H community education specialist­s in Tuolumne and Calaveras counties, with a pay range from $17.82 an hour to $25.48 an hour.

Lindsay Macon, James Hanson, Kelly Smith, Jennifer Morrson and Connie Perreira, with Mother Lode Job Training, helped introduce prospectiv­e job seekers with prospectiv­e employers at the fair.

At least one job seeker got hired at the job fair Friday, though he declined to be interviewe­d.

Job seeker Shane Stickney, 24, a resident of the Twain Harte area, said he is currently between jobs and, though he was not hired Friday, he was pleased to meet at least seven prospectiv­e employers at the job fair.

Stickney said he moved to Tuolumne County about three years ago to stay with a friend out of necessity. He initially found a job within six weeks, working the front desk at Black Oak Casino. His most recent job was working at Twain Harte Pharmacy.

“I talked to people representi­ng probably 15 different businesses and entities and agencies today,” he said. “I was pleasantly surprised at how many opportunit­ies are here for people with limited education. I will probably do at least seven applicatio­ns.”

Thoeny said he had no official data from employers yet when asked how many of the nearly 100 job seekers were hired, but Mother Lode Job Training’s track record at previous events so far this year showed about 60% in attendance typically got an offer.

“Employers were excited at the opportunit­y to reach out to other agencies and to reach interested job-seekers,” Thoeny said. “Job seekers at the event were excited about the multitude of available positions and the ability to apply at the applicatio­n stations as well as the ability to deliver resumes to employers.”

Transporta­tion, child care and housing were three key barriers in a rural employment market that Thoeny cited when he was asked about the biggest challenges currently facing job seekers.

“These barriers are combined with the lingering effects of COVID that include fear of infection for the job-seeker and family members, and obligation­s of job-seekers to care for infected family members,” he said.

Thoeny said one of the biggest challenges facing employers in the area now is finding skilled workers in their respective industries, as well as a shortage of available workers in general and wage inflation.

The next Mother Lode Job Training job fair has not been fixed on calendars yet, but it will likely be in summer 2022, Thoeny said.

Thoeny urged jobseekers to follow Mother Lode Job Training on social media platforms including Facebook, and he urged business owners to reach out to Mother Lode Job Training to learn more about business services and to be placed on the agency’s job fair interest list.

For more informatio­n about assistance available for workers and employers in Tuolumne County, visit Mother Lode Job Training online at www.mljt.org.

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