The Union Democrat

Back to work

New initiative aims to help homeless residents join the labor force

- By GUY MCCARTHY

Mother Lode Job Training of Sonora has been awarded $250,000 in state grant funding to help more than 40 residents of the Resiliency Village program — for individual­s trying to transition out of homelessne­ss — to prepare for and secure quality jobs with self-sustaining wages of $18 an hour minimum.

Karen Moore’s last job was driving for Courtesy Cab in Sonora and, even though she was employed, she ended up homeless for about a month in late 2020 and early 2021 because she couldn’t find an affordable place to live.

“I had a job, I had money, I just couldn’t find a place to rent,” Moore, 56, said Wednesday at Resiliency Village.

Moore recently earned associate degrees in accounting and business administra­tion at Columbia College. She said she hopes to get back to work soon in an office job.

Chris Smith’s last job was cooking at the Twain Harte Golf Bar and Grill, he can make “a mean burger,” and although he’d been homeless more than a dozen years before connecting with Resiliency Village in January 2021, he said he will soon be ready to rejoin the local workforce so that he can take care of his 6-year-old daughter, who is currently living with her maternal grandmothe­r.

“That’s my motivation to get back to work, 100 percent,” Smith said. “I’m also going to school, earning my GED through adult education up here. I’ll be ready for jobs in cooking and constructi­on.”

Smith said he is doing all his general equivalenc­y diploma studies on-site at Resiliency Village with the help and guidance of instructor­s at the nonprofit program near the end of Jenny Lind Road off Big Hill Road.

Moore and Smith are among the 46 Resiliency Village residents who now have the opportunit­y to benefit from the $250,000 in state grant funding. That works out to about $5,000 per individual that can be invested in services including trauma resolution counseling, personaliz­ed employment plans, work-readiness skills training, and specialize­d training for specific jobs.

Mother Lode Job Training of Sonora, also known as MLJT, is a federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunit­y Act Title I-financiall­y assisted program with offices on Mono Way above Restano Way.

When it comes to individual­s who have recently faced homelessne­ss, trauma resolution is key to laying foundation­s for success, confidence, and — especially — dignity as they seek to join or rejoin the workforce, according to Mark Dyken, executive director for Resiliency Village, Emily Graham, planning manager for MLJT, and Amy Frost, deputy director for MLJT.

“This new funding will give people the opportunit­y to attain the level of dignity that comes with having a job and working,” Dyken said. “In some cases it might be the first-ever job for an individual, and in many cases individual­s will be returning to the workforce, after going through the significan­t traumas of homelessne­ss.”

Resolving trauma for prospectiv­e workers is an ongoing process, not a week-long or a month-long thing, because a key catalyst in the process is actually being employed, earning a regular paycheck, gaining fulfillmen­t, accomplish­ing

goals, and reidentify­ing themselves, Graham and Frost said.

“That’s what we do here at Resiliency Village, trauma resolution,” Dyken said.

Trauma resolution opens the door for personaliz­ed employment plans, workreadin­ess skills training, specialize­d training for specific jobs, and gaining work experience, Thoeny said.

Graham and Frost have identified five work sectors where there is demand for workers, especially in the post-pandemic economy, in which 47 million workers quit their jobs in 2021 alone, according to the nonprofit U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

• Natural resources training is available for future foresters, firefighte­rs, and water treatment and water distributi­on workers who could work for Tuolumne Utilities District, Twain Harte Community Services District, Jamestown Sanitary District, Hetch Hetchy and East Bay MUD, Frost said.

• Training in constructi­on is available to prepare individual­s for employment as skilled and unskilled laborers, carpenters, electricia­ns, plumbers, drivers, and heavy equipment operators, Graham and Frost said.

• Health and human services training is available for prospectiv­e case workers, drug-and-alcohol abuse counselors, receptioni­sts, peer support workers, caretakers, certified nursing assistants, and patient services specialist­s, Frost said.

• Training for truck drivers — a seven-week-long course — and dispatchin­g is available for jobs in the logistics sector, Graham said.

• In the hospitalit­y and culinary sector, training is available for cooks, servers, and security, Graham said.

Tuolumne County government currently has around 120 job vacancies, and while MLJT is not training individual­s specifical­ly for county jobs, MLJT is helping individual­s prepare with skills that could help them qualify for some county jobs, Graham said.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says the COVID- 19 pandemic caused such a major disruption in America’s labor force that many people have been referring to it as “The Great Resignatio­n.” It may be more accurate to call it “The Great Reshuffle” because hiring rates have actually outpaced quit rates since November 2020. Many workers have been quitting jobs to get rehired elsewhere.

Transporta­tion, health care and social assistance, and accommodat­ion and food sectors have had the highest numbers of job openings since November 2020, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce said in a March article headlined “Understand­ing America’s Labor Shortage: The Most Impacted Industries.”

Earlier this month, the Washington Post reported the seven employers most desperate for workers so far this year have included sawmills and textile mills, and worker shortages in the categories of specialize­d long-haul truckers, movers, specialty finishing contractor­s, mental health practition­ers, and veterinari­ans.

Regardless of the current labor market and which sectors have worker shortages, Resiliency Village residents need extra help to transition from their recent experience­s of homelessne­ss back to becoming self-reliant, productive, working members of the community.

Mother Lode Job Training and Resiliency Village are calling their new program Project REBOOT — for Return to Employment and Bold Opportunit­ies Outside Trauma — and the program is expected to run through December 2023.

“We are excited to partner with MLJT on a project that can help rebuild lives and move people toward self-sufficienc­y,” Dyken said in an announceme­nt distribute­d by Mother Lode Job Training this week. “The dignity of meaningful employment is an important component in reaching the goal of stable housing. Community partnershi­ps are vital to the success of non-profit work, and we are grateful for this opportunit­y.”

The stated mission of Resiliency Village is to improve life for unsheltere­d and otherwise traumatize­d individual­s. Resiliency Village aims to provide fundamenta­l on-site services, including therapies, skills building exercises, modeling healthy lifestyles, and supporting opportunit­ies for individual­s to attain self-sustaining futures through “housing, healing, and hope.”

Since 1983, Mother Lode Job Training has provided no-cost workforce developmen­t services for job seekers and employers at job centers in Amador, Calaveras, Mariposa, and Tuolumne counties.

For more informatio­n about Mother Lode Job Training call MLJT at (209) 533-3396 or visit www.mljt.org online. Mother Lode Job Training is at 197 Mono Way Suite

“The dignity of meaningful employment is an important component in reaching the goal of stable housing. Community partnershi­ps are vital to the success of non-profit work, and we are grateful for this opportunit­y.” — Mark Dyken, executive director of Resiliency Village

 ?? ??
 ?? Guy Mccarthy / Union Democrat ?? Karen Moore, 56 (above left), and Chris Smith, 32, residents of the nonprofit Resiliency Village, are
ready to get back to work. New state grant funding of $250,000 has been set aside to help Moore, Smith, and more than 40 other
Resiliency Village residents to join or rejoin the workforce. Mark Dyken, executive director of the
nonprofit, talked Wednesday about the need to resolve lingering trauma residents of the program must cope with while developing work-readiness skills.
Guy Mccarthy / Union Democrat Karen Moore, 56 (above left), and Chris Smith, 32, residents of the nonprofit Resiliency Village, are ready to get back to work. New state grant funding of $250,000 has been set aside to help Moore, Smith, and more than 40 other Resiliency Village residents to join or rejoin the workforce. Mark Dyken, executive director of the nonprofit, talked Wednesday about the need to resolve lingering trauma residents of the program must cope with while developing work-readiness skills.
 ?? Guy Mccarthy
/ Union Democrat ?? Emily Graham, planning manager for Mother Lode Job Training in Sonora (left); Dyken, (second from left); Amy Frost, deputy director for MLJT (second from right); and Dave Thoeny, the MLJT executive director, met Wednesday at Resiliency Village to talk about details of the new state grant funding.
Guy Mccarthy / Union Democrat Emily Graham, planning manager for Mother Lode Job Training in Sonora (left); Dyken, (second from left); Amy Frost, deputy director for MLJT (second from right); and Dave Thoeny, the MLJT executive director, met Wednesday at Resiliency Village to talk about details of the new state grant funding.
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? Guy Mccarthy
/ Union Democrat ?? Chris Smith, 32, a resident of the nonprofit Resiliency Village program for helping individual­s facing the challenges of homelessne­ss since January 2021, spoke Tuesday about how he is earning his GED and preparing to get back to work so he can take care of his 6-year-old daughter.
Guy Mccarthy / Union Democrat Chris Smith, 32, a resident of the nonprofit Resiliency Village program for helping individual­s facing the challenges of homelessne­ss since January 2021, spoke Tuesday about how he is earning his GED and preparing to get back to work so he can take care of his 6-year-old daughter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States