The Washington Legislature has not taken up the issue of discrimination against the long-term unemployed in the job search and recruitment process.
State long-term jobless: Statewide, the Employment Security Department notes that there are 64,500 long-term unemployed workers, representing 30 percent of all unemployed workers. That number is based on a 12-month average ending July 2014.
The state does not report long-term unemployed by county. But between January 2010 and July 2014, there were 10,322 Clark County workers who had exhausted all unemployment benefits, according to the Employment Security Department. As of the end of July, 7,166 recipients of unemployment benefits in Clark County had exhausted all benefits and still had no employment in Washington, Employment Security reported. Of those, 37 percent were older than 55.
Assistance programs: Since May, the Southwest Washington Workforce Development Council has received two grants to help the long-term unemployed. Programs using that grant funding are about to be launched.
One grant of $325,000 is Southwest Washington's share of a federal "rapid response" grant that will be used to provide training and other services to at least 75 people who have been unemployed for 27 weeks or more. Workers will receive training to work in a number of industries including manufacturing, high-tech, or information technology, said Tim Foley, director of employment and training for the workforce council. The program will soon be ready to launch, and the funding grant expires in March 2016, Foley said.
The Department of Labor has provided some $500,000 to the workforce council through what is called a Job Driven National Emergency Grant. That program for long-term unemployed workers will serve a minimum of 82 people and retrain them to work in the health care field. It will be open to people who have been unemployed for 27 weeks or more since the start of the recession in December 2008.
The workforce council is part of a Portland metro area application for $8.5 million in Department of Labor funding for another program designed to prepare long-term unemployed workers for a return to employment. If the grant is awarded, Southwest Washington would receive about $1.8 million, Foley said.
People interested in learning more about the programs for serving the long-term unemployed may contact Darcy Hoffman at WorkSource Vancouver, 360-735-5038 or <a href="mailto:dhoffman@esd.wa.go">dhoffman@esd.wa.go</a>.
-- Gordon Oliver