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Vulnerable Youth: Employment and Job Training Programs

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Vulnerable Youth: Employment and Job Training Programs

September 16, 2015January 23, 2017 (R40929)
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Contents

Summary

Introduction

In an increasingly competitiveglobal economy, and with retirement startingunderway for the Baby Boomer generation, Congress has indicated a strong interest in ensuring that today's young people have the educational attainment and employment experience necessaryneeded to become highly skilled workers, contributing taxpayers, and successful participants in civic life. Challenges in the economy and among vulnerablecertain youth populations, however, have heightened concern among policymakers that manysome young people may not be prepared to fill these roles.

The employment levels for youth under age 25 have generally declined since 2000, though attachment to the workforce has improved for this population in the wake of the recession that extended from December 2007 through June 2009. Certain young people in particular—including those from low-income families, high school dropouts,declined markedly in recent years, including in the wake of the 2007-2009 recession. Certain young people—such as high school dropouts, current and former foster youth, and other at-risk populations—face barriers tochallenges in completing school and entering the workforce. Since the 1960s1930s, federal job training and employment programs and policies have sought to connect thesevulnerable youth to education and employment pathways. Contemporary federal employment programs with this same purpose include the Youth Workforce Investment Activities (Youth) program; Job Corps; YouthBuild; and the Reintegration of Ex-Offenders program, which includes a youth component. These programs provide a range of services and supports to youth. Some of the programs concentrate on specific job trades and/or serve targeted at-risk populations. Based on funding, Job Corps is the largest program. The programs were authorized through FY2003 under the Workforce Investment Act (WIA) of 1998 (P.L. 105-220). Congress continued to appropriate funding for the programs in subsequent years. On July 22, 2014, President Obama signed into law the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA, P.L. 113-128). WIOA superseded WIA and makes significant amendments to the youth programs, including new services that are to be provided under the Youth program and new accountability provisions for the Job Corps program. Changes made by WIOA generally went into effect on July 1, 2015.1

This report provides an overview of federal employment programs for vulnerable young people. It begins with a discussion of the current challenges in preparing all youth today for the workforce. The report then provides a chronology of job training and employment programs for at-risk youth that began in the 1930s and were expanded or modified from the 1960s through the 1990s. It goes on to discuss the four youth programs authorized under WIOA, and draws comparisons between these programs. Following this section is a detailed discussion of each of the programs.

Context

During economic downturns, youth are particularly vulnerable to job loss. From 2000 through 2012, the employment-to-population (E/P) ratio2 among teens ages 16 to 19 steadily declined, from 36.8% to 26.1%, and increased slightly to 26.6% in 2013 and 27.3% in 2014. Over the summer, when teens are most likely to have jobs, the E/P ratio decreased steadily in the past several years. In July 2000, about four out of ten (44.1%) teens were employed, falling to a low of 25.2% in July 2011. The July 2015 E/P ratio was 28.1%.3 According to the research literature, possible consequences of reduced work among teens are reduced employment earnings, labor productivity in the future, and output in the economy.4 Similarly, the E/P ratio of young adults ages 20 through 24 have declined steadily. In 2014, the average E/P ratio for 20- through 24-year-olds was 62.9%, which represents about a 15% decrease from 2000.5

Even in periods of relative economic stability, some youth do not complete school and/or make the transition to the workforce. While the majority of young people graduate from (public) high school by age 18 or shortly thereafter,6 just over 7% of youth ages 16 through 24 have dropped out and have not earned a high school diploma or its equivalent.7 This figure is higher among black and Hispanic youth.8 Further, recent estimates of youth who are not working or in school (i.e., "disconnected") for at least a year are at least 2.0 million.9 Certain youth face barriers to remaining in school or securing employment, including poverty, their parents' level of education, and whether the youth are pregnant or parenting, among other factors. For example, youth ages 16 through 24 who are parenting are far more likely to be disconnected than their counterparts who are not.10 Youth in or aging out of foster care, runaway and homeless youth, and youth offenders, among other groups of youth, are particularly vulnerable to not completing high school, going on to college, or securing employment.11work and school. Generally, these young people have been defined as being at-risk because they are economically disadvantaged and have a barrier to employment. During the Great Depression, the focus was on employing young men who were idle through public works and other projects. The employment programs from this era included an educational component to encourage youth to obtain their high school diplomas. Beginning in the 1960s, the federal government started funding programs for low-income youth that address their multiple needs through job training, educational services, and supportive services.

Currently, there are four major federal youth employment and job training programs, all of which are administered by the Department of Labor's (DOL's) Employment and Training Administration (ETA). Although these programs have varying eligibility requirements and are carried out under different funding arrangements, they generally have a common purpose—to provide vulnerable youth with educational and employment opportunities and access to leadership development and community service activities. The Youth Activities program offers job training and other services through what are known as local workforce development boards, whose members are appointed by the chief local elected official(s). The program was funded at $873.4 million in FY2016. The Job Corps program provides career and technical training in a number of trades at 125 residential centers throughout the country. The program received FY2016 appropriations of $1.7 billion. Another program, YouthBuild, engages youth in educational services and job training that focus on the construction trades. YouthBuild received FY2016 appropriations of $84.5 million. Separately, the Reentry Employment Opportunities program, formerly known as the Reintegration of Ex-Offenders program, includes job training and other services for juvenile and adult offenders. The youth component of the program was funded at $39.5 million in FY2016.

The four programs were authorized under the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 (WIA, P.L. 105-220) through FY2003, and Congress continued to appropriate funding for the programs in subsequent years. On July 22, 2014, President Obama signed into law the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA, P.L. 113-128). WIOA amended these programs, particularly the Youth Activities program and Job Corps. Like WIA, WIOA does not explicitly authorize the Reentry Employment Opportunities program; however, Congress appropriated funding for the program in FY2016 (P.L. 114-113) under the authority of Section 169 of WIOA and the Second Chance Act. Section 169 authorizes evaluations and research. The amendments made by WIOA generally went into effect on July 1, 2015.

Vulnerable Youth: Employment and Job Training Programs

Introduction

In an increasingly competitive economy, and with retirement underway for the Baby Boomer generation, Congress has indicated a strong interest in ensuring that today's young people have the educational attainment and employment experience necessary to become highly skilled workers, contributing taxpayers, and successful participants in civic life. Challenges in the economy and among vulnerable youth populations, however, have heightened concern among policymakers that many young people may not be prepared to fill these roles.

The employment levels for youth under age 25 have generally declined since 2000, though attachment to the workforce has improved for this population in the wake of the recession that extended from December 2007 through June 2009.1 Certain young people in particular—including those from low-income families, high school dropouts, foster youth, and other at-risk populations—face barriers to completing school and entering the workforce. Since the 1960s, federal job training programs and policies have sought to connect these youth to education and employment pathways. Contemporary federal employment programs with this same purpose include the Youth Activities program; Job Corps; YouthBuild; and the Reentry Employment Opportunities (REO) program, which includes a youth component. These programs provide a range of services and supports to youth. Some of the programs concentrate on specific job trades and/or serve targeted at-risk populations. The programs were previously authorized under the Workforce Investment Act (WIA) of 1998 (P.L. 105-220). On July 22, 2014, President Obama signed into law the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA, P.L. 113-128). WIOA superseded WIA and made significant amendments to the youth programs.2 Changes made by WIOA generally went into effect on July 1, 2015.3

This report provides an overview of federal employment programs for vulnerable young people. It begins with a discussion of the current challenges in preparing all youth today for the workforce. The report then provides a chronology of job training and employment programs for at-risk youth that began in the 1930s and were expanded or modified from the 1960s through the 1990s. It goes on to discuss the four youth programs authorized under WIOA, and draws comparisons between these programs. Following this section is a detailed discussion of each of the programs.

Context

As they leave high school, either through graduation or by dropping out, young people can pursue various options. Youth with a high school diploma may attend a two- or four-year college, enlist in the armed services, or secure part-time or full-time employment (sometimes paired with attending school). Youth without a high school diploma can do some of these same things, but their opportunities are more limited. They cannot enroll in a four-year college or, in most cases, enlist in the military. These youth will likely have difficulty supporting themselves if they do work.4

In fact, individuals who drop out are less likely to secure employment and are likely to have lesshave lower earning power. As the level of education rises, the unemployment rate decreases and median weekly earnings increase for those who work.125 In 20142015, among workers with less than a high school degree, the unemployment rate was 98.0% and earnings averaged $488493 per week. This is compared to an unemployment rate of 6.05.4% and $668678 in weekly earnings for workers with a high school degree. Workers with a bachelor's degree had an unemployment rate of 3.52.8% and median weekly earnings of $1,101137. With the shift to a knowledge-based economy, many new jobs will require some college education or better. According to DOL's Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the fastest growing occupations between 20122014 and 20222024 will require some postsecondary education.13 Further, in all career clusters, a bachelor's degree or better offers accessibility to the most high-paying jobs.14 Still, BLS predicts that the occupations with the largest numeric increases will not require workers to have postsecondary education.15

6 The costs of dropping out extend beyond the individual's foregone job opportunities and lower wages. According to the research literature, costs can be incurred by society overall. These costs include possible lost payroll tax revenue and increased transfers for welfare payments, imprisonment, and programs to re-enroll dropouts in school.167

Federal youth employment and job training programs have long targeted services to young people who leave school before graduating or are in school and may be vulnerable to dropping out. The purpose of these programs, as they currently exist, is to provide job training, employment, educational services, and social services that can help youth become economically self-sufficient and achieve their career and academic goals. These contemporary programs also emphasize leadership development and community service. Note that while youth employment and job training programs are also enhanced with state workforce and other dollars, the extent to which this support is provided is unclear.

History of Federal Youth Employment and Job Training Programs17

8

For more than 7090 years, the federal government has played a role in helping young people secure employment and achieve academic success. Generally, these young people have been defined as being vulnerable in some way—either because they are economically disadvantaged and/or have a barrier to securing employment or completing their education. During the Great Depression, the focus was on employing idle young men in public works and other projects. The employment programs from this era included an educational component to encourage youth to obtain their high school diplomas. Beginning in the 1960s, the federal government started funding programs for low-income youth, such as Job Corps, that address their multiple needs, including job training, educational services, housing, and supportive services. During the 1970s and 1980s, Job Corps was expanded and the federal government funded additional programs for both in-school and out-of-school youth. Funding was also appropriated to test the efficacy of some of these programs. The Workforce Investment Act of 1998 extended earlier programs and created new ones, with the intention of providing more seamless job training and education services for youth year-round. The Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act maintained these programs and changed some of their requirements. Generally, these programs are targeted to teenagers and young adults, usually not beyondto age 24, who are at risk of dropping out or have already done so.

Depression Era

Prior to the 1930s, the federal government's involvement in youth employment was primarily limited to regulating child labor.189 The Great Depression served as a catalyst for the creation of federal programs to employ and educate young people who were out of work or at risk of dropping out of school due to financial difficulties. The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) began in 1933 as an employment program for unemployed males ages 18 to 25 (and veterans, Indians, and residents of territories of any age) to participate in projects planned by the Departments of the Interior and Agriculture. These projects focused on creating and improving infrastructure, transportation, and recreational services, among other categories. The young men lived in camps and were provided with an allowance, food, and medical care. The CCC also included an educational component, which taught nearly 35,000 participants to read and write and assisted a smaller number with attaining their high school and college degrees. Until the program ended in 1945, it served nearly 3 million men, of whom approximately 10% were veterans.

Other Depression era programs—the Student Aid program, Works Project program, and Guidance and Placement program—were administered by the National Youth Administration, which was created as part of the now-defunct Works Progress Administration by an executive order in 1935. The programs provided funds for part-time employment of needy high school, college, and graduate students to assist them in completing school, as well as funds for part-time employment for unemployed out-of-school youth. These young people, all of whom were ages 16 through 25, were employed in a number of broad areas, including construction, clerical work, and research. These programs served hundreds of thousands of youth before they were discontinued in the early 1940s.

War on Poverty Programs

The 1960s marked a period of federal efforts to assist poor and disadvantaged children, adolescents, and their families through job training and other programs. In response to concerns about high unemployment, the Manpower Development and Training Act of 1962 (P.L. 87-415) and subsequent amendments to it authorized funding for employment training. Specifically, amendments to the act in 1963 (P.L. 88-214) encouraged the Department of Labor to provide assistance to youth so that they might be able to successfully enter the labor force, and expanded the share of job training funds that could be used to train youth under age 22 from 5% to 25%. Further, federal funding was first authorized through the 1963 amendments to provide employment opportunities to youth from low-income families.

President Lyndon B. Johnson's subsequent War on Poverty established new youth-targeted programs in job training and educational assistance under an initiative known as the Neighborhood Youth Corps (NYC). The NYC was made up of work training programs, the Work Study program, and Job Corps. The work training programs provided work experience, job training, and supportive services to low-income unemployed youth ages 16 through 21 who were in school or out of school, including dropouts. The Work Study program was modeled on the Depression-era Student Aid program and provided money to high school and college students from low-income families who needed earnings to stay in school. The program continues today for college students. Job Corps, which also continues today, was established under the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964 (P.L. 88-452) to provide educational and job training opportunities to disadvantaged youth at residential and non-residential centers. (See "Job Corps," below, for further information.)

Expanding Youth Programs

The 1973 Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA, P.L. 93-203) was the first of four laws enacted during the 1970s and 1980s that focused greater federal attention on youth employment and training. The second law, the Youth Employment and Demonstrations Project Act (YEDPA, P.L. 95-93) was enacted in 1977 and established a variety of employment, training, and demonstration programs for youth. The 1982 Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA, P.L. 97-300) repealed CETA. JTPA was subsequently repealed by WIA. Separately, the School-to-Work Opportunities Act of 1994 (STWOA, P.L. 103-239) supported the development of programs that encouraged students to pursue learning opportunities and experiences that incorporated occupational skills. Activities authorized under these acts were administered by DOL. STWOA was additionally carried out by the Department of Education (ED).

Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA) and Youth Employment and Demonstrations Project Act (YEDPA)

As amended through 1978, CETA authorized a range of employment and training programs for adults and youth. Job Corps and the Summer Program for Economically Disadvantaged Youth (SPEDY) were the primary youth programs authorized under CETA. SPEDY provided funding to employers to hire low-income youth ages 14 through 21 during the summer months. Youth served as assistants in hospitals, libraries, community service organizations, and schools, among other settings.

The Youth Employment and Demonstrations Project Act (YEDPA), signed into law in 1977, amended CETA.1910 YEDPA increased authorization of appropriations for Job Corps and SPEDY and authorized three additional programs targeted to "economically disadvantaged" (defined under the act) youth ages 14 through 21: Youth Employment and Training Programs (YETP), Youth Community Conservation and Improvement Projects (YCCIP), and Youth Incentive Entitlement Pilot Projects (YIEPP).2011 YEDPA was passed in response to high levels of unemployment among youth relative to adults, even during periods of economic expansion, and growing gaps in youth unemployment among whites and blacks, males and females, and in-school and out-of-school youth. The programs were carried out during the Carter Administration, from 1977 through 1981. Over this period, YEDPA served 6.1 million youth.

YETP and YCCIP were intended to meet the immediate employment needs of youth, and funding for the programs was allocated primarily on a formula basis. YETP activities include work experience, pre-employment skills, and an emphasis on the transition from school to work. YCCIP was intended to assist unemployed, out-of-school youth obtain a high school degree, conditional on satisfactory performance in work and school. Further, it was aimed at improving coordination between the job training and educational systems as a means of addressing the dropout problem.2112 Finally, YIEPP funded evaluations to test the efficacy of demonstration programs; the other two programs included funding for demonstration programs. During the YEDPA years, more than 60 major demonstrations were funded in about 300 sites, operated by DOL in cooperation with six other federal agencies and private nonprofit intermediaries.

Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA)22

CETA was repealed in 1982 by the Job Training Partnership Act.13 JTPA was distinct from its predecessor because it emphasized that states and localities, rather than the federal government, had the primary responsibility for administering job training and employment programs. Funding was appropriated under JTPA through FY1999. JTPA programs focused on the training needs of "economically disadvantaged" (defined under the act) youth and adults facing significant barriers to employment. These programs were frequently referred to as "second chance" programs because most of them were intended to train individuals who had not sufficiently benefitted from traditional secondary and post-secondary education. TheyJTPA programs included the Summer Youth Employment and Training program, the Youth Training Program, and Job Corps (discussed in the next section).

The Summer Youth Employment and Training program provided employment and training activities during the summer months for low-income youth ages 14 through 21 to strengthen basic educational skills, encourage school completion, provide work exposure, and enhance citizenship skills. In the summer of 1997, an estimated 500,000 youth participated. The Youth Training Program was established by the Job Training Reform Amendments of 1992 (P.L. 102-367), which amended JTPA to address concerns that school dropouts were not being reached by the then-existing combined program for disadvantaged adults and youth, and that the program primarily served youth who were the easiest to place in jobs and required the fewest services.2314 The program was year-round and provided direct services, such as on-the-job training, tutoring and study skills training, and school-to-work transition services. It also provided training-related and supportive services, including job search assistance, drug and alcohol abuse counseling, and cash incentives based on attendance and performance in a program. Economically disadvantaged in-school and out-of-school youth ages 16 through 21 were eligible, but 50% of participants in service delivery areas (SDAs), comprised of the state or one or more units of local government, had to be out of school. Further, at least 65% of youth had to be hard to serve, meaning they were school dropouts (if out of school), pregnant or parenting, or offenders, among other qualifications. In program year 1997, an estimated 107,000 youth participated. As discussed below, JTPA was repealed by WIA, the current law that authorizes youth job training and employment programs.

JTPA was replaced by WIA.

School to Work Opportunity Act (STWOA)

The School to Work Opportunity Act of 1994 authorized the School-to-Work (STW) program administered jointly by DOL and the Department of Education through the National School-to-Work Office. 15 The program was funded from FY1994 through FY2000.24 The law supported the development of programs with three main elements: work-based learning to provide participating students with work experience and on-the-job training; school-based learning, involving upgrading and integrating the occupational skills participating students learn in school and the workplace; and program coordination to aid the planning, implementation, and operation of the program. STWOA grants were competitively awarded to states, local partnerships, programs for Indian youth, and U.S. territories to implement school-to-work systems. In addition, STWOA authorized national activities, such as research and demonstrations. Some school-to-work programs that received seed money from the federal program continue to operate today.

Workforce Investment Act (WIA)

The Workforce Investment Act of 1998 replaced JTPA. WIA includes titles that authorize programs for job training and related services (Title I), adult education and literacy (Title II), employment services (Title III), and vocational rehabilitation (Title IV). Title I of WIA authorized job training programs for youth, adults, and dislocated workers.2516 Funding was authorized for the program through FY2003, and Congress continued to appropriate funding for the programs in subsequent years.

Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA)

Congress took steps toward reauthorizing WIA from the 108th to the 113th Congresses. For example, during the 111th Congress, the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee held a series of listening sessions in April 2009 to address the positive aspects of WIA and to increase understanding of the issues that can be addressed as part of any reauthorization legislation. The Senate HELP Subcommittee on Employment and Workplace Safety subsequently conducted a hearing in July 2009 to discuss how WIA could be updated to help workers and employers meet the demands of a changing economy.26 In October 2009, the House Education and Workforce Committee held a hearing on declining youth employment.27 During the 112th Congress, the House Education and Workforce Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Training held hearings on removing inefficiencies in job training programs and modernizing WIA on May 11, 2011, and October 4, 2011, respectively. The full committee held a hearing on a reauthorization bill, the Workforce Investment Improvement Act of 2012 (H.R. 4297), on April 17, 2012. The committee marked up and favorably reported the bill on June 7, 2012. Also during the 112th Congress, the Senate HELP Committee released discussion drafts in June 2011 of legislation to amend and reauthorize WIA, but they did not receive further action in that Congress.

In the 113th Congress, the House Committee on Education and the Workforce ordered reported H.R. 803—the Supporting Knowledge and Investing in Lifelong Skills Act (SKILLS Act). This bill was introduced on February 25, 2013, by Representative Virginia Foxx, the chair of the Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Training. A hearing on H.R. 803 was held before the full Committee on Education and the Workforce on February 26, 2013. The committee ordered the bill reported by a vote of 23 to 0 on March 6, 2013. The House passed the bill on March 15, 2013, by a vote of 215 to 202. In the Senate, Senators Patty Murray, Lamar Alexander, Tom Harkin, and Johnny Isakson introduced the Workforce Investment Act of 2013 (S. 1356) on July 24, 2013. The Senate HELP Committee held a markup of S. 1356 on July 31, 2013, and ordered the bill reported by a vote of 18 to 3. On May 21, 2014, House and Senate leaders announced an agreement that represented a compromise between H.R. 803 and S. 1356.28 On June 25, 2014, the legislation was subsequently taken up, and passed, by the Senate as H.R. 803.

On July 22, 2014, President Obama signed into law the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA, P.L. 113-128), ultimately passing the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) on July 9, 2014. President Obama signed the bill into law (P.L. 113-128) on July 22, 2014. As of July 1, 2015, the law superseded WIA. Like WIA, WIOA includes titles that authorize programs for job training and related services (Title I), adult education and literacy (Title II), employment services (Title III), and vocational rehabilitation (Title IV). The major job training programs for youth and other workers are authorized in Title I.29

Overview of Youth Programs Authorized Under Title I of WIOA

WIOA authorizes, and Congress has funded, three job training and employment services for youth:

  • Youth Workforce Investment Activities Program (hereinafter, Youth Activities Program), a formula grant program for state and local workforce investment boardsdevelopment boards (WDBs) that includes employment and other services that are provided year-round;
  • Job Corps, a program that provides job training and related services primarily at residential centers maintained by contractor organizations; and
  • YouthBuild, a competitive grant program that emphasizes job training and education in the construction trades.

As mentioned, Job Corps was enacted as part of the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964 (P.L. 88-452), and was later incorporated into CETA, JTPA, and WIA. YouthBuild was originally authorized under the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act of 1992 (P.L. 102-550). The program was administered by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) until it was transferred to DOL in 2007 under the YouthBuild Transfer Act (P.L. 109-281) and incorporated into WIA. Under WIA's pilot and demonstration authority, DOL established the Reintegration of Ex-Offenders (ReXO) program, a program for juvenile and adult offenders that provides job training and other services. WIOA does not explicitly authorize the program, now known as the Reentry Employment Opportunities (REO) program; however, Congress appropriated funding in FY2015FY2016 (P.L. 113-235114-113) under the authority of Section 169 of WIOA and the Second Chance Act. Section 169 authorizes evaluations and research.

The four programs are carried out by DOL's Employment and Training Administration (ETA) administers the four programs. All of the programs offer employment, job training, and educational services. For example, local workforce development areas must provide specific elements, including mentoring and follow-up, to youth who receive services under the Youth Activities program. YouthBuild program participants engage in employment and other activities primarily related to housing and other types of construction work. Job Corps is the only one of the programs that provides residential services; youth can live onsite and receive health care services, child care, and other supports. Further, the programs generally serve vulnerable youth, but some have more targeted eligibility criteria. Participants in the Youth program, YouthBuild, and Job Corps must be low-income and have specific employment barriers, though youth in the Youth program who are not in . Participants in YouthBuild and Job Corps must be low-income and have specified barriers to employment. The same is true in the Youth Activities program, except those who are out-of-school do not have to be low-income under WIOA. The youth component of the Reintegration of Ex-OffendersReentry Employment Opportunities program serves youth who have become involved in the juvenile justice or criminal justice system or youth at risk of becoming involved. The programs are funded somewhat differently. DOL allocates funding for the Youth Activities program to statesstate WDBs based on a formula, while Job Corps enters into agreementscontracts with nonprofit and for-profit organizations and into an interagency agreementsagreement with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Forest Service. The other programs competitively award grants to nonprofit and other organizations and local communities. Table 1 summarizes the programs' major features and how they changed under WIOA.30 These changes generally went into effect on July 1, 2015.

.

Table 1. Features of Youth Programs As Authorized Under Both WIA and (as of July 1, 2015) WIOA

At least 40% of the time, youth must participate in certain work and skill development activities. At least an additional 50% of the time, participants must be engaged in education and related services and activities designed to meet their educational needs. These activities include training and supports in the construction trades and (if approved by the Secretary) in additional in-demand industry sectors or occupations.

112,567a (FY2014)

37,792 (total from FY2007-FY2015)

Key
Feature

Youth Activities Program

Job Corps

YouthBuild

Youth Offenders (Reintegration of Ex- Offenders)

Component of the Reentry Employment Opportunities Program

Purpose

Per WIA,WIOA does not specify purpose areas for the program. However, the law generally seeks to provide eligible youth with assistance in achieving academic and employment success through activities that improve educational and skill competencies and foster effective connections to employers; ensure ongoing adult mentoring opportunities for eligible youth; provide opportunities for training, continued supportive services, and participation in activities related to leadership, citizenship, and community service; and offer incentives for recognition and achievement to eligible youth.

WIOA does not specify purpose areas for the program, known as the Youth Workforce Investment Activities program. However, the purpose areas under WIA are generally consistent with the provisions of the program under WIOA.

.

Per WIA, toTo maintain a national Job Corps program—carried out in partnership with states and communities—to assist eligible youth who need and can benefit from an intensive program, operated in a group setting in residential and nonresidential centers to become more responsible, employable, and productive citizens. The other purpose areas focus on program operations.

WIOA maintains the language about the partnership with states and communities but specifies that the purpose is to assist eligible youth to connect to the labor force by providing them with intensive social, academic, career and technical education, and service learning opportunities, in primarily residential centers throughout the country, to (1) obtain secondary school diplomas or recognized postsecondary credentials leading to successful careers, in in-demand industry sectors or occupations or the Armed Forces or (2) enroll in postsecondary education, including apprenticeship programs; and (3) to provide responsible citizenship. The other purpose areas focus on program operations.

Per WIA, toTo (1) enable disadvantaged youth to obtain the education and employment skills necessary to achieve self-sufficiency; foster leadership skills; provide work and service opportunities; and expand the supply of permanent affordable housing for the homeless.

WIOA added another purpose area—to in occupations in demand and postsecondary education and training opportunities; (2) provide disadvantaged youth with opportunities for meaningful work and to serve their communities; (3) foster employment and leadership skills and commitment to community development among youth in low-income communities; (4) expand the supply of permanent affordable housing for the homeless by utilizing the energies and talents of disadvantaged youth; and (5) improve the quality and energy efficiency of community and other nonprofit and public facilities, including those facilities that are used to serve homeless and low-income youth.

families.

Per WIA's pilot and demonstrationWIOA's evaluation and research authority, to support related initiatives that seek to assist youth offenders and youth at risk of dropping out; to reduce violence within persistently dangerous schools; and provide supports for youth at risk of involvement with the justice system.

(Congress appropriated funding for the Reintegration of Ex-Offenders program in FY2015 (P.L. 113-235Reentry Employment Opportunities program in FY2016 (P.L. 114-113) under the authority of Section 169 of WIOA and the Second Chance Act. Section 169 authorizes evaluations and research.

)

Target Population

Under WIA, youth ages 14 through 21 who are low-income and are one or more of the following: (1) deficient in basic literacy skills; (2) a school dropout; (3) homeless, a runaway, or a foster child; (4) pregnant or parenting; (5) an offender; or (6) require additional assistance to complete an educational program or to secure and hold employment. At least 30% of funds are to be used for out-of-school youth.

Under WIOA, "in"In-school youth" ages 14 to 21 and "out-of-school youth" ages 16 to 24 are eligible. "In-school youth" includes those who are attending school, low-income, and meet the criteria specified above (except that one such barrier includesspecified criteria, such as being deficient in basic skills, pregnant or parenting, individuals who are English language learners, or homeless or currently or formerly in foster care or aged out of foster care, and does not include being a school dropout). "Out-of-school" youth includes those who meet certain criteria such as being a high school dropout or being low-income. For purposes of eligibility, "low-income" also means youth who are living in a high-poverty area. No less than 75% of funds (for statewide funding and funding for local areas) must be used for out-of-school youth.

Under WIA,Includes youth ages 16 through 24 who are low-income and meet one or more of the following criteria: (1) basic skills deficient; (2) homeless, a runaway, or a foster child; (3) a parent; or (4) an individual who requires additional education, vocational training, or intensive counseling and related assistance in order to participate in regular schoolwork or to secure and maintain employment.

WIOA maintains the eligibility criteria but makes changes to two of the categories. It specifies individual youth who aged out of foster care under the category for homeless, runaway, and foster youth. It also changed the last category to include individuals who require additional education, career and technical education ora school dropout; (3) homeless, a runaway, or an individual in foster care or who aged out of foster care (4) a parent; (5) a victim of a severe form of trafficking in persons (as defined by the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, or TVPA); or (6) an individual who requires additional education, career and technical training, or workforce preparation skills to be able to obtain and retain employment that leads to economic self-sufficiency. Another law (P.L. 114-22) added that a victim of a severe form of trafficking in persons is eligible for the program.

Under WIA, to participate in regular schoolwork or to secure and maintain employment. A veteran is eligible if he or she meets the eligibility criteria; however, the income requirement does not apply if the veteran's income earned in the military (within the six-month period prior to applying for the program) exceeds the income limit. Includes youth ages 16 through 24 who are (1) members of low-income families, in foster care, offenders, disabled, the children of incarcerated parents, or migrants; and (2) are school dropouts.

WIOA maintains the eligibility criteria and adds that it includes individuals who aged out of foster care or who were school dropouts and subsequently reenrolled.

Per WIA's pilot and demonstration authority, youth offenders, young adult offenders, and students in high-risk schools.

The program continues to serve the same population under WIOA.

WIOA's evaluation and research authority, the target population has included youth offenders and young adult offenders.

Funding Mechanism

Under WIA, funds wereFunds are allocated by formula to state workforce investmentdevelopment boards (WIBsWDBs), based on a formula that accountedaccounts for a state's relative share of unemployment and economically disadvantaged youth. In turn, state boards reallocatedreallocate, by formula, funding to local WIBs using certain factors. Local WIBs competitively contractedWDBs on the same basis that funds are allocated to states. Local WDBs generally contract with local entities, such as nonprofit organizations and community colleges, to provide services.

Under WIOA, the allocation of funds is generally the same. WIOA changed the language to refer to state workforce development boards and local workforce development boards.

As with WIA, DOL enters into an agreement under WIOA with a federal, state, or local agency; an area vocationalcareer and technical education school or residential vocationalcareer and technical education school; or a private organization to operate Job Corps centers.

WIOA changes the reference from vocational school to career and technical education school.

As with WIA, grants are competitively awarded under WIOA In addition, DOL enters into an interagency agreement with the U.S. Forest Service, under the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), which operate Civilian Conservation Center. Grants are competitively awarded to community-based organizations, faith-based organizations, entities carrying out activities under Title I of WIOA (such as a local workforce development board), community action agencies, state or local housing development agencies, an Indian tribe or other agency primarily serving Indians, state or local youth service or conservation corps, and other organizations that provide education or employment training under a federal program other than YouthBuild.

Per WIA's pilot and demonstrationWIOA's evaluation and research authority, grants wereare competitively awarded to a variety of entities, including community-based organizations, school districts, and state departments of corrections.

The program continues to award funds under WIOA in the same way.

Types of Activities for Youth

Under WIA, each local WIB had toEach local WDB must provide 10 elements that include academic activities, summer employment opportunities, supportive services, follow-up services, and other activities.

Under WIOA, each local board must provide 14 elements that overlap or expand on those elements under current law, and add new elements that pertain to financial literacy, entrepreneurial skills training, and preparation for the transition to postsecondary education and training.

Per WIA and WIOA, youth generally live at the Job Corps centers, which provide youth with a program of education, career and technical training, work experience, recreational activities, physical rehabilitation and development, and counseling.

Under WIA, grantees could carry out a number of activities, including education and employment activities, supervision in rehabilitating or constructing housing and facilities; adult mentoring; provision of wages or other benefits; and follow-up services.

WIOA maintained this language and added that grantees may provide training and supports in additional in-demand industries, if approved by the DOL Secretary.

14 elements that include tutoring, study skills training, and other academic activities; alternative secondary school services or dropout recovery services; paid and unpaid work experiences (which may include summer employment opportunities, pre-apprenticeship programs, internships and job shadowing, and on-the-job training opportunities); supportive services; adult mentoring; follow-up services, and other activities.

Youth generally live at the Job Corps centers, where youth receive intensive social and academic supports and career and technical education; and participate in service-learning opportunities.

Per WIA's pilot and demonstration authority, grantees provided a variety of activities, depending on the type of grant awarded. Such activities included pre-release, mentoring, housing, case management, employment services, and violence prevention strategies.

The program continues to support the same types of activities under WIOA.

Youth Served in the Program (July 1, 2013-June 30, 2014)

197,045

109,627a

7,604

117,248 (FY2015)

6,884

729 (FY2015)

Authorized Funding

Under WIA, such sums as necessary for FY1999-FY2003.

Under WIOA, specifiedSpecified funding levels that increase over FY2015-FY2020 from $820 million to $964 million annually.

Under WIA, such sums as necessary for FY1999-FY2003.

Under WIOA, specified Specified funding levels that increase over FY2015-FY2020 from $1.69 billion to $1.98 billion annually.

Under WIA, such sums as necessary for FY2008-FY2012.b

Under WIOA, specifiedSpecified funding levels that increase over FY2015-FY2020 from $76 million to $91 million annually.

Under WIA pilot and demonstration authority, such sums as necessary
for FY1999-FY2003.

Under WIOA, fundingFunding authority for Section 169 (evaluations and research) increases over FY2015-FY2020 from $91 million to $106.9 million annually.

FY2015FY2016 Funding (dollars in thousands)

$831,842

873,416

$1,688,155

656,824

$79,689

84,534

$44,053

39,520

Sources: Congressional Research Service (CRS), based on correspondence with DOL, ETA, March 2015 and September 2015November and December 2016; Workforce Investment Act (P.L. 105-220), as amended; Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA; P.L. 113-128); DOL, ETA, "Workforce Investment Act; Final Rules," 65 Federal Register, August 11, 2000; DOL, ETA, Workforce System Results for the Quarter Ending June 30, 2014, http2015, https://www.doleta.gov/performance/results/#etaqrpdf/DOL_Workforce_Rprt_Sep_2015.pdf, and Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 20152016 (P.L. 113-235114-113).

Notes: Like WIA, WIOA requires that funds appropriated for a program or activity carried out under Title I of the act are available for obligation only on the basis of a program year (PY). The program year begins on July 1 in the fiscal year for which the appropriation is made and ends June 30 of the following year. Generally, the appropriations for a given fiscal year (e.g., FY2015) are used to fund the program in the same program year (e.g., PY2015).

a. This number includes students who arewere enrolled in the program during this period,, active on the start date (October 1, 2014); graduates who separated prior to July 1, 2013October 1, 2014, and were receiving placement services; and former enrollees who separated prior to July 1, 2013October 1, 2014, and were receiving placement services. , and were receiving placement services.

b. The YouthBuild Transfer Act (P.L. 109-281) was enacted in 2006. It codified the authorizing statute for the YouthBuild program under WIA and transferred the program from the Department of Housing and Urban Development to the Department of Labor. The program was reauthorized under WIA from FY2008 through FY2012. P.L. 109-281 retained the core parts of the program; however, it made several notable changes. For a detailed discussion of these changes, see U.S. Department of Labor, "YouthBuild Transfer Act: Synopsis and Section-by-Section Analysis" and "YouthBuild Transfer Act: Side-by-Side Comparison," http://www.doleta.gov/reports/youthbuild_program.cfm.

Coordination

The WIOA Youth program and other youth programs make up a network of job training and workforce systememployment opportunities for youth. In some communities, this may be formalized while in others, coordination between the programs may be less structured. WIOA includes provisions that encourage or require the programs to coordinate with one another. The state workforce board may include representatives of organizations that have demonstrated experience and expertise in addressing the employment, training, or education needs of eligible youth, including representatives of organizations that serve out-of-school youth.3117 These boards are responsible for carrying out WIOA programs at the state level and allocating funds to local workforce development boardsWDBs.

Further, under the state workforce plan ("unified state plan"), states are required to submit a description of the state's strategic vision and goals for preparing an educated and skilled workforce—including preparing youth and individuals with barriers to employment—and for meeting the skilled workforce needs of employers, among other requirements.3218 In addition, local workforce development boardsWDBs, which receive funds to carry out the Youth program (and the Adult and Dislocated Worker programs) are now Activities program are required, as part of their local plans, to describe and assess the type and availability of youth workforce investment activities in the local area, including activities for youth who are individuals with disabilities. The plan must identify successful models of such youth workforce investment activities.33 Unlike WIA, WIOA does not require local workforce boards to have youth councils; however, they19 Local workforce boards may choose to establish a standing committee to provide information and assist with planning to provide services to youth.3420 Further, the Youth Activities program, Job Corps, and YouthBuild are required partners at one-stop centers. One-stop centers are operated by local WDBs and include federal programs that coordinate employment and other services in a community for all youth and adults.35

Funding

Funding authorization for the youth programs under WIA expired in FY2003; however, funding was authorized through FY2012 for YouthBuild under the YouthBuild Transfer Act (P.L. 109-281), which amended WIA. Although funding authorization expired, Congress continued to appropriate funds for most programs authorized under the law. WIOA generally provides funding authorization from FY2015 through FY2019.

Like WIA, WIOA requires that funds21 Funding WIOA provides funding authorization from FY2015 through FY2019 for youth employment and job training programs. Funds appropriated for a program or activity carried out under Title I of the act are available for obligation only on the basis of a program year.3622 The program year begins on July 1 in the fiscal year for which the appropriation is made and ends June 30 of the following year. Funds for the Youth Activities program may first become available for a new program year in the preceding April. In addition, Congress has tended to specify that funds appropriated for YouthBuild and the youth component of the Reintegration of Ex-OffendersReentry Employment Opportunities program are available for obligation beginning in the April preceding a given program year. Congress has generally required that obligated funds for Job Corps are made available for one program year, although funding for certain purposes can be obligated through later dates.

Funds obligated for any program year for a program or activity carried out under Title I of WIOAthe Youth Activities may be expended by each state receiving such funds during that program year and the two succeeding program years. Local areas may expend funds received from the state during the program year and the succeeding program year.3723

Funding for FY2000-FY2015

FY2016

Table 2 includes the level of funds appropriated to each of the youth job training and employment programs for FY2000 through FY2015FY2016. Appropriations for these years correspond to the same program year, and are reported as such in the table (i.e., PY2000 through PY2015PY2016). Congress appropriated a total of $2.424 billion to $2.818 billion annually for these programs in most years over this period. Table A-1 in the Appendix presents Youth program funding allocated to the states and outlying areas for PY2009 through PY2015 (the most recent data available), including under the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act (ARRA, P.L. 111-5), the law that provided additional funding to create and preserve jobs, among other purposes.

Job Corps has generally received the largest appropriation each year, followed by the Youth program, YouthBuild, and the youth component of the Reintegration of Ex-Offenders (although in two years, YouthBuild received less funding than the ReXO youth component).

FY2015 Funding

After passing a continuing resolution for FY2015 (PY2015), Congress enactedPY2016.

Job Corps has generally received the largest appropriation each year, followed by the Youth program, YouthBuild, and the youth component of the Reintegration of Ex-Offenders (although in two years, YouthBuild received less funding than the ReXO youth component).

FY2016 Funding

Following three continuing resolutions (P.L. 114-53, P.L. 114-96, and P.L. 114-100), Congress passed, and President Obama enacted, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 (P.L. 114-113) to fund the Department of Labor and other agencies. FY2016 funding for the four youth job training and employment programs totaled $2.7 billion. Funding increased from FY2015 by nearly $42 million for the Youth program and nearly $5 million for the YouthBuild program. The funding for the youth component of the Reentry Employment Opportunities program decreased by $4.5 million and for Job Corps by $3.1 million.

FY2015 Funding Following two continuing resolutions (P.L. 113-164 and P.L. 113-202), Congress passed, and President Obama enacted, the Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2015 (P.L. 113-235) to fund DOL programs through FY2015. Funding for the youth programs totaled $2.6 billion. Funding increased from FY2014 by over $11 million for the Youth program; over $7 million for the YouthBuild program; and nearly $2 million for the youth component of the Reintegration of the Ex-OffendersReentry Employment Opportunities program; Job Corps funding remained level.

FY2014 Funding

FY2014 (PY2014) appropriations were not enacted prior to the beginning of the fiscal year (October 1), resulting in a 16-day shutdown of the federal government. On October 16, 2013, the Senate and House agreed to a bill (H.R. 2775) to provide temporary government-wide FY2014 funding through January 15, 2014 (or until full-year funding was appropriated). This bill was signed by the President on October 17, 2013 (P.L. 113-46). A second short-term continuing resolution (P.L. 113-73) extended appropriations through January 18, 2014. On January 17, 2014, the President signed into law the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014 (P.L. 113-76) to fund appropriations through September 30, 2014. In total, $2.6 billion was appropriated for youth job training and employment programs.

Table 2. Appropriations for DOL Youth Job Training and Employment Programs, PY2000-PY2015PY2016 and Under the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act (ARRA, P.L. 111-5)

Dollars in thousands; the fiscal year generally corresponds to the program year for each program

Program Year

Youth Program

Job Corps

YouthBuilda

Youth Offenders (Reintegration of Ex-
Offenders)b

Component of the Reentry Employment Opportunities Program

Total Funding, All Programs

2000

$1,000,965

$1,357,776

$43,000

$13,907

$2,415,648

2001

1,127,965

1,399,148

60,000

55,000

2,642,113

2002

1,127,965

1,458,732

65,000

55,000

2,706,697

2003

994,459

1,509,094

59,610

54,643

2,617,806

2004

995,059

1,541,151

65,000

49,705

2,650,915

2005

986,288

1,551,861

62,000

69,440

2,669,589

2006

940,500

1,564,180

62,000

49,104

2,615,784

2007

940,500

1,566,178

49,500

49,104

2,605,282

2008

924,069

1,610,506

58,952

55,000

2,648,527

2009

924,069

1,683,938

70,000

88,500

2,766,507

ARRA

1,200,000

250,000

50,000

0

1,500,000

2010

924,069

1,708,205

102,500

73,493

2,808,267

2011c

a

825,914

1,706,171d

a

79,840

50,000

2,661,925

2012e

b

824,353

1,702,947

79,689

60,000

2,666,989

2013f

c

781,375

1,613,872

75,534

43,910

2,514,691

2014

820,430

1,688,155

77,534

42,500

2,628,619

2015

831,842

1,688,155

79,689

44,054

2,643,740

2016

$873,416

1,656,825

84,534

39,520

2,654,295

Source: Compiled by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) from correspondence with DOL, December 2016; DOL budget justifications; Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) budget justifications; DOL Employment and Training Administration budget information at http://www.doleta.gov/budget; correspondence with DOL; DOL, All Purpose Table FY2011 Full-Year Continuing Resolution, http://www.dol.gov/dol/budget/2012/PDF/2011OperatingPlanTable.pdf; U.S. Congress, Conference Report to Accompany H.R. 2055, Military Construction and Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2012 Division F, 112th Cong., 1st sess., December 15, 2011, H.Rept. 112-331; DOL, FY2013 Operating Plan, http://www.dol.gov/dol/budget/2014/PDF/2013OperatingPlanTable.pdf; U.S. Congress, House Committee on Rules, 113th Cong., 2nd sess., Committee Print 113-32 to the Senate Amendment to the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014 (H.R. 3547), which was enacted as P.L. 113-76; and the Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2015 (P.L. 113-235).

a. YouthBuild was transferred from HUD to DOL in 2007 pursuant to the YouthBuild Transfer Act (P.L. 109-281).

b. Prior to FY2008, the Reintegration of Youthful Offenders program was a stand-alone program. It is now part of the Reintegration of Ex-Offenders program, which includes funding for juvenile and adult activities. Funding for the program was authorized under Section 171 (Demonstration and pilot projects) of WIA and Section 112 (Responsible reintegration of offenders) of the Second Chance Act (P.L. 110-199). WIOA does not explicitly authorize the Reintegration of Ex-Offenders program; however, Congress appropriated funding for the program in FY2015 (P.L. 113-235) under the authority of Section 169 of WIOA and the Second Chance Act. Section 169 authorizes evaluations and research.

cthe Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2015 (P.L. 113-235); and Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 (P.L. 114-113). a. The Department of Defense and Full-Year Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011 (P.L. 112-10) includes a 0.2% across-the-board rescission.

d. Job Corps includes three accounts—administration, operations, and construction. The FY2011 appropriations law was based on funding for FY2010, and included an across-the-board rescission of 0.2% for all programs and an additional rescission of $75.0 million. The 0.2% across-the-board rescission applied only to current year, and not advance, appropriations. Advance appropriations are those funds enacted in one fiscal year but not available for obligation until a subsequent fiscal year or years. Two of Job Corps' three accounts, operations and construction, include advance funds. Therefore, the across-the-board reduction only applied to current year funding (or $983.0 million for operations and $5.0 million for construction). According to the Department of Labor, $75.0 million was subtracted from existing balances, and therefore the FY2011 funding was not affected by this decrease. Congressional Research Service correspondence with the U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, May 2010.

eb. FY2012 funding information was included in the conference report (H.Rept. 112-331) for the Consolidated Appropriations Act, FY2012 (P.L. 112-74). This law was the final in a series of continuing resolutions to provide funding for the Department of Labor and select other departments. The figures presented in this table incorporate an across-the-board rescission of 0.189%.

fc. Funding for FY2013 was provided through a series of continuing resolutions. The final continuing resolution was the Consolidated and Continuing Appropriations Act, 2013 (P.L. 113-6). The FY2013 funding levels provided were based on the operating plan provided by DOL to Congress. This funding included a 0.2% rescission, per P.L. 113-6, and a sequestered amount of 5.0%, per the Budget Control Act of 2011 (P.L. 112-25), as amended by the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (P.L. 112-240).

Job Corps Transfer Authority38

Congress appropriates funding for Job Corps under three accounts—administration; operations; and construction, rehabilitation, and acquisition (CRA).39 The final FY2013 appropriations law (P.L. 113-6) authorized DOL to transfer up to $30 million of unobligated funds—from previous appropriations laws or P.L. 113-6, as of March 26, 2013 (the date of the law's enactment)—to the operations account from other Employment and Administration (ETA) accounts.40 Notably, these funds could be used to fund operations in program year (PY) 2012 (which ended June 30, 2013) and possibly PY2013 (which ended June 30, 2014). Ultimately, $10 million was transferred from the ETA Training and Employment Services (TES) account to the Job Corps operations account.

The FY2013 transfer authority was in response to a shortfall in the operations account for PY2012, which had been preceded by a shortfall for PY2011. In May 2013, the DOL Office of Inspector General (OIG) released a performance audit report that discussed the cause of the PY2011 shortfall and addressed whether DOL management had implemented internal controls over Job Corps funds and expenditures during the first five months of PY2012. The report found that the PY2011 shortfall was due to (1) untimely communication about projected costs that exceeded appropriations for the program; (2) initial planning for costs that did not account for increased expenditures for three new centers; (3) inaccurately accounting for costs in cost projection models; and (4) lack of consistent monitoring of costs throughout the program year. The OIG audit also documented concerns with internal controls to manage Job Corps funding during the first five months of PY2012. Such concerns included deficiencies in the areas of budget execution, data that supported spending projections, and monitoring of projected to actual costs; and lack of policies concerning communication of financial and program risks and certain Job Corps activities pertaining to monitoring contracts.41

The next section of the report provides further discussion about the youth programs authorized under Title I of WIOA, and where applicable, WIA.

WIOA Youth Program42

The next section of the report provides further discussion about the youth programs authorized under Title I of WIOA. WIOA Youth Activities Program24

Overview and Purpose

The Youth Activities program is one of three formula grant programs that waswere initially authorized by WIA, and is now authorized under WIOA as the Youth Workforce Investment Activities program. The other two WIA/WIOA programs target adults (Adult Activities) and dislocated workers (Dislocated Worker Activities), although youth ages 18 or older are eligible for services provided through the Adult Activities program. These programs provide core funding for a coordinated system of employment and training services overseen by a state workforce development board and the governor, and composed of representatives of businesses and other partners.

WIA specified several purpose areas for the Youth program: to provide assistance in achieving academic and employment success through activities that improve educational and skill competencies and foster effective connections to employers; to ensure ongoing adult mentoring opportunities for eligible youth; to provide opportunities for training, continued supportive services, and participation in activities related to leadership, citizenship, and community service; and to offer incentives for recognition and achievement to youth.43 WIOA does not include purpose areas for the Youth program; however, it retains many of the same elements specified under WIA, such as providingWIOA does not include purpose areas for the Youth Activities program; however, it generally seeks to provide assistance to youth in achieving academic and employment success.

Program Structure

With assistance from the state workforce development board, the governor develops a plan (known as the unified state plan) that is submitted to DOL. The plan is to address several items related to employment and training needs, performance accountability, and employment and training activities. Under WIA, the plan ("state plan") was submitted every five years and pertained generally to the statewide workforce investment system. It had to address items specific to youth, including a description of the factors used to distribute Youth funds to local areas; the state's strategy for providing comprehensive services to eligible youth, particularly those who have significant barriers to employment; the criteria used by local workforce boards in awarding and assessing providers for youth services; and a description of how the state would coordinate the Youth program with services provided by Job Corps, where applicable. Under WIOA, the plan ("unified state plan")The plan is to be submitted every four years for the three programs (Youth, AdultYouth Activities, Adult Activities, and Dislocated).44 The Activities programs.25 Further, the unified state plan is to address youth primarily in two places. It must outline the state's strategic vision and goals for preparing an educated and skilled workforce, include preparing youth with barriers to employment. It must also outline the criteria to be used by local boards in awarding contracts for youth services and describing how local boardsWDBs will take into consideration the ability of providers to meet performance measures that are based on primary indicators of performance for the Youth Activities program (these indicators are discussed in a subsequent section).

As specified under WIOA, a local workforce area is overseen by the local workforce board (under WIA, this was called the local workforce investment board).development board. The local board is made up of partners that collaborate to provide coordinated employment and training services in the community.26 Membership of the local board includesis to include representatives of businesses, local education entities, labor organizations, community-based organizations, and economic development agencies, among others.45 Local boards competitively award funds to local organizations and other entities to provide employment and job training services to youth. The local board develops a local plan that discusses items similar to those in the state plan, except that the plan describes the local area's one-stop delivery system. The local board is made up of partners that collaborate to provide coordinated employment and training services in the community.46 Further, one-stop systems may have specialized centers to address special needs. WIOA specifies that this may include the needs of youth. The Youth program is a required partner in the one-stop system under WIOA. The proposed WIOA regulations issued in April 2015 specify that local boards must either collocate youth program staff at one-stop centers and/or ensure one-stop centers and staff are equipped to advise youth in order to increase youth access to services and connect youth to the program that best aligns with their needs.47

Youth Councils

WIA required each local workforce board to establish a local youth council.48 Together, the workforce investment board and the youth council were responsible for overseeing a local program funded by the Youth program. The purpose of the youth council was to provide expertise in youth policy and to assist the local board in developing portions of the local plan relating to eligible youth. As specified in the law, the councils were required to coordinate youth activities in a local area, develop portions of the local plan related to eligible youth, recommend eligible providers of youth activities to be competitively awarded grants or contracts, oversee the activities of the providers, and carry out other duties specified by the local board.49

WIOA does not direct local workforce boards to have youth councils; however, local boards may include representatives of organizations that have demonstrated experience and expertise in addressing the employment, training, or education needs of eligible youth, including representatives of organizations that serve out-of-school youth.5027 The boards may include representatives of organizations that have demonstrated experience and expertise in addressing the employment, training, or education needs of eligible youth, including representatives of organizations that serve out-of-school youth.28

Local boards are to competitively award funds to local organizations and other entities to provide employment and job training services to youth.29 Grants or contracts awarded are to be based on criteria in the state plan, and by taking into consideration the ability of the providers to meet performance accountability measures that are based on primary indicators of performance for the Youth Activities program. Further, a local board may award funding on a sole-source basis if the board determines there is an insufficient number of eligible providers of youth workforce investment activities in the local area to participate on a competitive basis. Local boards may terminate "for cause" the eligibility of these providers.30

The local board develops a local plan that discusses items similar to those in the state plan, except that the plan describes the local area's one-stop delivery system. A one-stop system is intended to provide central access to employment and training services in a community. The Youth Activities program is a required partner in the one-stop system under WIOA. The WIOA regulations specify that local boards must either collocate youth program staff at one-stop centers and/or ensure one-stop centers and staff are equipped to advise youth in order to increase youth access to services and connect youth to the program that best aligns with their needs.31 Further, one-stop systems may have specialized centers to address special needs. WIOA specifies that this may include the needs of youth.

The local board must ensure that parents and other stakeholders are involved in designing and implementing the Youth Activities program.32 In addition, the local board may establish a standing committee to provide information and to assist with planning, operational, and other issues relating to providing services to youth, including community-based organizations with a demonstrated record of success in serving eligible youth.51 As with WIA, the local board must ensure that parents and other stakeholders are involved in designing and implementing the Youth program.52 The April 2015 proposed rule for WIOA discusses33 If a local board establishes a standing youth committee, it may assign it the responsibility of selecting youth providers. The WIOA regulations discuss the potential role of a standing youth councilcommittee, including to recommend policy direction to the local board for the design and development of programs to benefit all youth; the design of a comprehensive community workforce development system to ensure a full range of services and responsibilities for all youth, including disconnected youth; and ways to leverage resources and coordinate services among schools, public programs, and community-based organizations serving youth, among other possible responsibilities.5334

Allocations

Funding for the Youth Activities program is allocated from DOL to states, including Puerto Rico and Washington, DC, and the outlying areas.54 As with WIA, 35 WIOA requires that not more than 0.25% is reserved for outlying areas and not more than 1.5% is reserved for youth activities in theprograms to serve Native American programs.55youth.36 WIOA specifies that the allotments for the outlying areas are based on a competitive grant process.56

37

The remainder of the funds are allocated to states by a formula based. The formula is based (1) one-third on the relative number of unemployed individuals residing in areas of substantial unemployment (an average unemployment rate of at least 6.5% for the most recent 12 months),; (2) one-third on the relative "excess" number of unemployed individuals (an unemployment rate of at least 4.5%),; and (3) one-third on the relative number of disadvantaged youth (individuals 16 through 21 who receive an income that, in relation to family size, does not exceed the higher of the poverty line or 70% of the lower living standard income level).57 Like WIA, 38 WIOA specifies that states are to receive, at minimum, the higher of 90% of their relative share of the prior year's funding or, at maximum, 130% of their relative share of the prior year's funding.58

Under WIA and WIOA, of39 Of the funds allocated to states for the Youth Activities program (as well as for the Adult and Dislocated Worker programs), not more than 15% can be reserved for statewide activities (only 5% of reserved funds may be used for administrative activities, per WIOA).5940 States must use these funds for certain specified activities, and may use the funds for other specified activities. The two laws have an overlapping, but not identical, set of specified activities. For example, WIOA now requires states to use the statewide funds to carry out monitoring and oversight activities of the Youth Activities program (and Adult and Dislocated Worker programs), which may include a review comparing the services provided to male and female youth.60 WIOA also allows new discretionary activities, such as supporting financial literacy.

41

The balance of funding that goes to states is allocated to local workforce development areas on the same basis that Youth Activities funds are allocated to states, to take into account the relative numbers of unemployed individuals and low-income youth in the area compared to other local areas of the state. In addition, the law includes provisions for minimum (90% of the average allocation for the preceding two years) and maximum (130% of the average allocation for the preceding two years) funding that goes to local areas.6142 Local areas may reserve no more than 10% of funds allotted under the program for administrative costs. Elements of Local Programs Job training and employment programs that are funded under WIOA and carried out by local WDBs Local areas may reserve no more than 10% of funds allotted under the program for administrative costs. WIA and WIOA specify different processes for local boards to competitively award funds. Under WIA, the local boards competitively awarded grants or contracts to youth providers based on the recommendations of the youth council and criteria specified in the state plan. Under WIOA, local boards are to award grants or contracts on a competitive basis to youth providers based on criteria in the state plan, and by taking into consideration the ability of the providers to meet performance accountability measures that are based on primary indicators of performance for the Youth program. Further, a local board may award funding on a sole-source basis if the board determines there is an insufficient number of eligible providers of youth workforce investment activities in the local area to participate on a competitive basis. Local boards may terminate "for cause" the eligibility of these providers.62 The proposed regulation on WIOA issued by DOL in April 2015, specifies that if a local board establishes a standing youth committee, it may assign it the responsibility of selecting youth providers.63

Elements of Local Programs

Youth programs carried out locally by local workforce boards are responsible for providing direct services to youth participants. The programs must be designed to include an objective assessment of the youth's skills, and they must develop service strategies for these youth that are linked to employment goals.6443 These service strategies must be directly linked to one or more of the indicators of performance for the program and they must identify career pathways that both include both education and employment goals. Each local Youth programprogram for youth must also provide specific services, or elements. Table 3 shows the 10 elements that were required under WIA and the 14 elements required under WIOA. Some of these elements are the same14 elements required under WIOA. WIOA amended some of these elements and added some new ones. The table is organized based on whether the elements are targeted for educational achievement, employment services, linkages between educational achievement and employment services, employment services, leadership development activities, additional support for youth services, and other activities.65

Local boards must provide to each youth with information on the full array of applicable or appropriate services available through the local board, other eligible providers, or one-stop partners, and they must also refer youth to appropriate training and educational programs, among other activities.6644 In addition, at least 20% of the funds allocated to the local area must be used to provide youth (whether in-school or out-of-schoolthey are in school or not) with paid and unpaid work experiences that have academic and occupational education as a component.45 Although local boards have

In guidance on WIA, DOL said that although local boards had to make all program elements available to youth, each individual youth diddoes not need to participate in all elements. Further, a local programs that received Youth funding wereprogram that receives Youth Activities funding is not required to provide all program elements with WIOA funds; however, these other activities would have to be provided by a partner organization, and the other activities must be closely coordinated with the local programs. The not required to provide all program elements if certain services were already accessible for all eligible youth in the area; however, these other services had to be closely coordinated with the local programs.67 WIOA states much of the same, noting that each of the elements need not be offered by each provider of youth services. In the April 2015 proposed rule for WIOA, DOL notes that the local program must have an agreement in place if it partners with another organization to ensure that a program element will be offered by that organization. In practice, this means that youth program case managers must contact and monitor the other provider to ensure the activity is of high quality and beneficial to the youth participant.68

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Table 3. Elements of Youth Programs as Specified Under WIA and WIOA

Leadership development

WIA

WIOA

Educational achievement

  • Tutoring, study skills training, and instruction leading to completion of secondary school, including dropout prevention strategies.
  • Tutoring, study skills training, instruction, and evidence-based dropout prevention strategies that lead to completion of the requirements for a secondary school diploma or its recognized equivalent (including a recognized certificate of attendance) or for a recognized postsecondary credential.
  • Alternative secondary school services, as appropriate.
  • Alternative secondary school services or dropout recovery services, as appropriate.
  • Not applicable.
  • Activities that help youth prepare for and transition to postsecondary education and training.

Employment services

  • As appropriate, paid and unpaid work experiences, including internships and job shadowing.
  • Paid and unpaid work experiences that have as a component academic and occupational education, which may include (1) summer employment opportunities and other employment opportunities throughout the school year; (2) pre-apprenticeship programs;0 (3) internships and job shadowing; and (4) on the -the-job skills training.
  • Summer employment opportunities that are directly linked to academic and occupational learning.
 
  • Occupational skill training, as appropriate.
  • Occupational skills training, which may include priority consideration for training programs that lead to recognized postsecondary credentials that are aligned with in-demand industry sectors or occupations in the local area involved, if the local board determines that the programs meet the quality criteria for eligible youth providers.
  • Not applicable.
  • Services that provide labor market and employment information about in-demand industry sectors or occupations available in the local area, such as career awareness, career counseling, and career exploration services.

Linkages between educational achievement and employment services

  • Not applicable.
  • Education offered concurrently within and in the same context as workforce preparation activities and training for a specific occupation or occupational cluster.
  • Leadership development activities
  • Leadership development opportunities, which may include, but are not limited to, community service and peer-centered activities encouraging responsibility and other positive social behaviors during non-school hours, as appropriate; community and service learning projects; organizational and teamwork training, including team leadership training; and citizenship training, including life skills training such as parenting, work behavior training, and budgeting of resources, among other activities.
  • Leadership development opportunities, which may include community service and peer-centered activities concerning responsibility and other positive social and civic behaviors, as appropriate.

Additional support for youth services

  • Supportive services.
  • Same.
  • Adult mentoring for the period of participation and a subsequent period, for a total of not less than 12 months.
  • Same.
  • Comprehensive guidance and counseling, which may include drug and alcohol abuse counseling and referral, as appropriate.
  • Same.

Other

  • Follow-up services for not less than 12 months after the completion of participation, as appropriate; follow-up services for youth include regular contact with a youth participant's employer, including assistance in addressing work-related problems that arise; assistance in securing better jobs, career development, and further education; work-related peer groups; adult mentoring; and tracking the progress of youth in employment after training.
  • Follow-up services for not less than 12 months after the completion of participation, as appropriate.
  • Not applicable.
  • appropriate. Financial literacy education.
  • Not applicable.
  • Entrepreneurial skills training.

Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS), based on Section 129(c)(2) of the Workforce Investment Act (WIA; P.L. 105-220) and the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA; P.L. 113-128) and Department of Labor, WIASRD Data Book, Appendix B.

Notes: The proposed rule issued by the Department of Labor on April 16, 2015, defines the following termsInnovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA; P.L. 113-128). Notes: The following terms are defined in regulation: "pre apprenticeship program," "adult mentoring," "financial literacy education," "comprehensive guidance and counseling," "leadership development opportunities," "positive civic and social behaviors," and "occupational skills training." DOL, ETA, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act; Notice of Proposed Rulemaking; Proposed Rules," 80 Federal Register 20732, April 16, 2015 (proposedSee 20 C.F.R. §681.480 through 20 C.F.R. §681.540).

Participants

WIA and WIOA have different eligibility requirements for youth participants. Some of these distinctions are described in Table 4. Notably, WIA enabled local areas to serve youth up to the age of 21, compared to age 24 for out-of-school youth under WIOA. In addition, WIOA requires local areas (and states) to use no less than 75% of funds for serving out-of-school youth. This is compared to no less than 30% of funds for this population under WIA. Also under WIOA, not more than 5% of the in-school youth in a local area may be eligible because they are an offender. Both laws address whether a state (and local area for WIOA) may adjust the share of out-of-school youth served (down to 50% under WIOA; percentage not specified under WIA). Participants As shown in Table 4, WIOA specifies that youth are eligible for the Activities program if they are ages 14 through 24. In addition, local workforce development areas (and states) must use no less than 75% of funds for serving out-of-school youth. Up to 5% of the in-school youth in a local area may be eligible because they require additional assistance to complete an educational program or to secure or hold employment. A local workforce development area (or state) may adjust the share of out-of-school youth to 50% if the state determines it will be unable to use a certain share of funding to serve these youth.69 WIA required all youth to be low-income, except that up to 5% of participants in a local area did not have to meet the income criteria if they meet certain other criteria such as being a high school dropout. 47 WIOA requires in-school youth generally and two groups of out-of-school youth to be low-income, and enables up to 5% of these youth to not meet the income criteria.70 Under WIA, youth48 Youth ages 18 through 21 couldmay enroll in the Youth Activities formula grant program or Adult Activities program, or may co-enroll in both programs.71 The same is true under WIOA for youth ages 18 through 24.7249

Table 4. Youth Program Eligibility Under WIA and WIOA

WIA

WIOA

Age

A youth is eligible for the Youth Activities program if he or she is age 14 through 21.

A youth is eligible for the Youth Workforce program if he or she is age 14 through 24. Eligibility by age varies depending on whether the youth is in school or out-of-school.

Other criteria

The youth must be low-income and one or more of the following:

  • deficient in basic literacy skills;
  • a school dropout;
  • homeless, a runaway, or a foster child;
  • pregnant or parenting;
  • an offender; or
  • an individual who requires additional assistance to complete an educational program or to secure and hold employment.

Of these youth, an "out-of-school youth" is an eligible youth who is a school dropout or an eligible youth who has received a secondary school diploma but is basic skills deficient, unemployed, or underemployed.

"In school youth" is a youth attending school (as defined by state law) who is age 14 through 21 (or older age if the individual has a disability and is attending school per state law); low-income; and one or more of the following:

  • basic skills deficienta;
  • a homeless individual, a homeless child or youth, a runaway, in foster care or has aged out of the foster care system, a current or former foster child eligible for independent living servicesservices or in an out-of-home placement;
  • pregnant or parenting;
  • an offender;
  • an English language learner;
  • an individual with a disability; or
  • who requires additional assistance to enter or complete an educational program or to secure or hold employment.

"Out-of-school youth" is a youth not attending any school (as defined by state law), age 16 through 24, and one or more of the following:

  • a school dropout;
  • within the age of compulsory school attendance, but has not attended school for at least the most recent completed school year calendar quarter;
  • a homeless individual, a homeless child or youth, a runaway, in foster care or has aged out of the foster care system, a current or former foster child eligible for independent living services or in an out-of-home placement;
  • pregnant or parenting;
  • an individual who is subject to the juvenile or adult justice system;
  • an individual with a disability;
  • a low-income recipient of a secondary school diploma or its recognized equivalent, and who is basic skills deficient or an English language learner; or
  • a low-income individual who requires additional assistance to enter or complete an educational program or to secure or hold employment.

Exceptions based on income

income

Up to 5% of participants in a local area can participate if they are not low-income but meet one of the following criteria:

  • deficient in basic literacy skills;
  • a school dropout;
  • homeless or a runaway;
  • an offender;
  • one or more grade levels below the grade level appropriate to the individual's age;
  • pregnant or parenting;
  • possesses one or more disabilities, including learning disabilities; or
  • faces serious barriers to employment as identified by the local board.
  • As noted above, most of the eligibility categories do not specify a certain level of income.
  • Up to 5% of in-school youth can participate if they are not low-income. In addition, up to 5% of out-of-school youth participants can participate if they are not low-income and qualify under one of these two categories: (1) recipients of a secondary school diploma or its recognized equivalent and who are basic skills deficient, or English language learners, or (2) individuals who require additional assistance to enter or complete an educational program or to secure or hold employment.

Restrictions on share of funds

No less than 3075% of the Youth program funds for statewide activities and local activitieslocal areas must be used to provide youth workforce investment activities tofor out-of-school youth.

Up to 5% of the in-school youth in a local area may be eligible because they require additional assistance to complete an educational program or to secure or hold employment.

Source: out-of-school youth.

No less than 75% of the Youth program funds for statewide activities and local activities must be used to provide youth workforce investment activities for out-of-school youth.

Source: Section 101(13), Section 101(33), and Section 129(c)(4) of WIA and Section 129(a) of WIOA.

Notes: For purposes of eligibility, "low-income" means youth living in a high-poverty area or the youth receives or is eligible to receive a free or reduced price lunch under the Richard R. Russell National School Lunch Act (Section 3(36) of WIOA). Eligibility for an individual with a disability is based on his or her own income rather than his or her family's income, so long as the personal income meets the definition of low-income (Section 3(36)(A)(vi) of WIOA). The proposed rule issued by the Department of Labor in April 2015 specifies that aA high-poverty area is a Census tract, set of contiguous Census tracts, Indian reservation, tribal land, or Native Alaskan Village or county that has a poverty rate of at least 30% as set every five years in the American Community Survey 5-Year data. DOL, ETA, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act; Notice of Proposed Rulemaking; Proposed Rules," 80 Federal Register 20732, April 16, 2015 (proposed (20 C.F.R. §681.260).

a. "Basic skills deficient" means the individual (1) has English reading, writing, or computing skills at or below the 8th grade level on a generally accepted standardized test or (2) is unable to compute or solve problems, or read, write, or speak English at a level necessary to function on the job, in the individual's family, or in society (Section 3(5) of WIOA).

Performance

WIA established state and local performance measures as part of the accountability system for the Youth program.73 This accountability system is in effect until PY2016. The measures, or "core indicators," for youth ages 14-18 were different than the indicators for youth ages 19-21, as shown in Table 5. The measures for younger youth focused on skill attainment and educational attainment. The older youth outcomes focused on employment. For each of the core indicators, the states negotiate with DOL to establish a level of performance. That is, the "measures" are identified in WIA, but the "levels" are determined by negotiation between states and DOL. The adjustments made for each state take into account specified factors, such as how the levels compare with the levels of performance established for other states given the differences in economic conditions, characteristics of program participants, and the services to be provided. Measures are reported as part of the Workforce Investment Act Standardized Record Data (WIASRD), which also collects demographic and other information about youth, adults, and dislocated workers who exit the program. Similarly, local workforce areas negotiate with the governor on the local levels of performance based on the state adjusted levels of performance. Separately, ETA implemented a "Common Measures" policy for several workforce programs and revised the reporting requirements for WIA Title I programs.74 Specifically, ETA introduced three youth measures, as listed in Table 5. It is important to note, however, that ETA specifically indicated that the Common Measures were not to supersede the existing statutory performance reporting requirements for WIA. Despite this, DOL has granted waivers to multiple states to permit implementation of and reporting on only the Common Measures rather than on the current, fuller array of measures in WIA for youth, adults, and dislocated workers.75 These states only negotiate performance levels for the Common Measures.

Table 5. Statutory and Common Measures for WIA Youth Programs

 

WIA Statutory Measures

Common Measures

Youth
(ages 14 through 18)

  • Attainment of Basic Skills, and As Appropriate, Work Readiness or Occupational Skills: (Number of basic skills goals attained + Number of work readiness skills goals attained + Number of occupational skills goals attained)/ (Number of basic skills goals set + Number of work readiness skills goals set + Number of occupational skills goals set).
  • Attainment of Diploma or Equivalent Attainment: Number of younger youth attaining secondary school diploma or equivalent by end of 1st quarter after exit / Number of younger youth exiters during exit quarter.
  • Placement and Retention: Number of youth in postsecondary education, advanced training, employment, or apprenticeships / Number of younger youth exiters during exit quarter.
  • Placement in Employment and Education: Number of youth in employment (including the military) or enrolled in post-secondary education and/or advanced training or occupational skills training in the first quarter after the exit quarter / Number of youth exiters during the exit quarter.
  • Attainment of a Degree or Certificate: Number of youth participants who attain a diploma, GED, or certificate by the end of the third quarter after the exit quarter / Number of youth exiters during the exit quarter.
  • Literacy or Numeracy Gains: Number of youth participants who increase one or more educational functional levels / Number of youth participants who have completed a year in the program (i.e., one year from the date of first youth program service) + the number of youth participants who exit before completing a year in the program.

Youth
(ages 19 through 21)

  • Entered Unsubsidized Employment: Number of older youth employed in 1st quarter after exit quarter / Number of older youth exiters during the exit quarter.
  • Employment Retention at Six Months: Number of older youth employed in 3rd quarter after exit / Number of older youth exiters during the exit quarter.
  • Earnings Change in Six Months: Earnings in 2nd and 3rd quarter after exit minus earnings in 2nd and 3rd quarter prior to participation / Number of older youth exiters during the exit quarter.
  • Credential/Certificate Number of older youth employed, in postsecondary education, or in advanced training after 1st quarter of exit and received credential by end of 3rd quarter / Number of older youth exiters during the exit quarter.
 

Source: Congressional Research Service, based on the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 (P.L. 105-220), ETA Training and Employment Guidance Letter (TEGL) No. 7-99, "Core and Customer Satisfaction Performance Measures for the Workforce Investment System," March 3, 2000, and ETA TEGL No. 17-05 (WIA Title IB Performance Measures and Related Clarifications," Attachment D, February 17, 2006.

WIOA createsWIOA established six primary indicators of performance for the Youth program that will supersede the existingsuperseded the WIA performance measures that are outlined in WIA. These six primary indicators will apply to all youth, regardless of age, and will gowent into effect inat the beginning of PY2016:76

  • 50percentage of program participants who are in education or training activities, or in unsubsidized employment, during the second quarter after exit from the program;
  • percentage of program participants who are in education or training activities, or in unsubsidized employment, during the fourth quarter after exit from the program;
  • median earnings of program participants who are in unsubsidized employment during the second quarter after exit from the program;
  • percentage of program participants who obtain a recognized postsecondary credential, or a secondary school diploma or its recognized equivalent,7751 during participation in or within one year after exit from the program;
  • percentage of program participants who, during a program year, are in an education or training program that leads to a recognized postsecondary credential or employment and who are achieving measurable skill gains toward such a credential or employment; and
  • indicators of effectiveness in serving employers.78

As with WIA, states will be52States are required to reach an agreement with DOL, in conjunction with the Department of Education (ED), about the levels of performance for each state. These levels of performance are to be based on specified factors, including how the levels compare with other states' adjusted levels of performance. Further, states are to ensure the levels are adjusted using an objective statistical model established by DOL.7953

The following sections of the report discuss, in less detail, additional programs for youth that are authorized under WIAWIOA.

Job Corps80

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Overview and Purpose

The Job Corps program is carried out by the Office of Job Corps within theDOL's Employment and Training Administration, and consists of residential centers throughout the country. The purpose of the program is to provide disadvantaged youth with the skills needed to obtain secondary school diplomas or recognized postsecondary credentials leading to successful careers in in-demand industry sectors or occupations or the Armed Forces, which will result in economic self-sufficiency and opportunity for advancement; or enrollment; or enroll in postsecondary education, including apprenticeship programs.8155

Program Structure

As of the date of this report, 126 Job Corps centers operate throughout the country. Of these 126 centers, 27Currently, 125 Job Corps centers are in operation, and there is at least one center in every state and Puerto Rico.56 Of these 125 centers, 26 are known as Civilian Conservation Corps Centers, which are operated by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Forest Service, through an interagency agreement with DOL.82 Programs at these sites focus on conserving, developing, or managing public natural resources or public recreational areas. Most Job Corps centers are located on property that is owned or leased long-term by the federal government. Job Corps campuses include dormitories, classrooms, workshops for various trades, wellness (or health)health centers, a cafeteria, a career services building, and administrative buildings. CentersIn addition to WIOA and its regulation, centers are to follow detailed guidelines about all aspects of the program as they are outlined in the program's extensive policy guidance, known as the Policy and Requirements Handbook.83

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As specified under WIOA (and previously under WIA), Job Corps centers may be operated by a federal, state, or local agency; an area career and technical education school, or residential vocational school; or a private organization. Authorization and funding for new Job Corps centers areis contained in appropriations law. DOL initiates a competitive process seeking applicants that are selected based on their ability to coordinate activities in the workforce system for youth, their; ability to offer vocationalcareer and technical training opportunities that reflect local employment opportunities, and; relationships with the surrounding communities, employers, and other stakeholders; and (where applicable) past performance. Additionally, under WIOA, an entity applying to operate a center must submit to DOL certain information, such as a description of the entity's strong fiscal controls in place. WIA did not specify the length of time DOL and the center operator may enter into an agreement; however, in practice the contract period is two years, with three one-year-option renewalshow employment, education, and other opportunities offered at the center will reflect state and local employment opportunities and a description of the entity's strong fiscal controls in place, among other information. WIOA specifies the contract may be for up to a two-year period with up to three one-year renewal periods.84

WIA also did not include provisions for high-performing centers; however, WIOA designates centers as high-performing based on their ranking and performance under the primary indicators of performance for eligible youth (see following discussion on indicators). It also enables the operator of a high-performing center to compete in any competitive selection process carried out for an award to operate such center.

WIOA further provides that DOL may not renew the agreement with an operator if the center is ranked in the lowest 10% of centers, and fails to achieve an average of 50% or higher in the expected levels of performance under each of the primary indicators of performance for eligible youth in the program.85 The law allows DOL to renew an agreement with these centers under certain circumstances (i.e., performance is due to circumstances beyond the operator's control, etc.), and specifies standards that all centers must meet for agreements to be renewed (i.e., satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics, etc.).

Services

58 Services for Students

While at a Job Corps center, students receive the following services:

  • education programprograms, including English language acquisition programs;
  • career and technical education, work experience, and work-based learning; and
  • recreational activities, physical rehabilitation and development, driver's education, and counseling, which may include information about financial literacy.

Youth also receive personal allowances while in the program and transition allowances as they are leaving the program. WIOA specifies that these transition allowances are to be incentive-based to reflect the graduate's completion of academic, career and technical education or training, and attainment of recognized postsecondary credentials.86 It also struck the provision in WIA pertaining to allowances for former enrollees.

59

Students tend to experience the program in four stages.87 In the first phase60 First, students learn about the program and center through orientation sessions and other outreach efforts conducted by the center and its contractor for outreach and admissions. StudentsSecond, students who decide they want to pursue the program and are selected participate in the second phase, which emphasizesto continue on in with career preparation, in the first few weeks of the program. Students learn about life at the center and focus on personal responsibility, social skills, and career explanation. Students also receive assessments of their abilities in math and reading, and they work with staff to develop and commit to what is known as a Personal Career Development Plan (PCDP). This plan includes the students' personal, academic, and career goals, which are evaluated as they progress through the program.

The third phase focuses on career development and is the stage at which most youth spend the majority of their time in the program. During this period, students learn and demonstrate career technical, academic, and employability skills. Training focuses on academic subject matters and how they are applied to specific trades or occupations. Students who did not graduate from high school can pursue a high school diploma or GED. Most Job Corps centers have developed a high school diploma program for their students through partnerships with public, private, and/or charter schools. Students who have already graduated focus on developing their technical skills at the center and on work sites under the direction of Job Corps' employer partners. Job Corps centers offer several technical training clusters, such as construction, health care, business and finance, hospitality, and advanced manufacturing. During this period, students also begin to look for a job and learn how to identify and access the support services that are needed to live independently.

Finally, in the fourth phase, activities in the first few weeks of enrolling in the program. Third, students who continue on focus on career development activities. During this period, students learn and demonstrate career technical, academic, and employability skills. Training focuses on academic subject matters and how they are applied to specific trades or occupations. Students who did not graduate from high school can pursue a high school diploma or GED. Finally, students participate in a period of career transition, in which they receive placement services that focus on placingtransitioning them in full-time jobs that are related to their vocationalcareer and technical training and pay wages that allow them to be self-sufficient, or placing them in higher education or advanced training programs, including apprenticeship programs. For one year after exiting the program, Job Corps must provide graduates with services that include transition support and workplace counseling. Some graduates may go on to participate in advanced trainingan advanced career training program. These students continue to remain in the program for another year while obtaining additional training and education, such as an Associate's Degree.

Job Corps centers provide services both on-site and off-site, and contract some of these services. Centers rely on outreach and admissions (OA) contractors 61 DOL contracts with entities—known as outreach and admissions (OA) contractors (though not referred to in the law as such)—to recruit students to the program. These contractors may include a one-stop center, community action organizations, private for-profit and nonprofit businesses, labor organizations, or other entities that have contact with youth. Contractors OA contractors seek out potential applicants, conduct interviews with applicants to identify their needs and eligibility status, and identify youth who are interested and likely Job Corps participants. Similarly, centers rely onDOL contracts career transition services (CTS) providers—organizations that enter into a contract or other agreement with Job Corps—to provide placement services for graduates and, to the extent possible, former students. Services such as career and technical training are sometimes provided by outside organizations.

In addition, eachOA and CTS providers work closely with Job Corps centers, and in some cases are operated by the same organizations. Community Engagement Each Job Corps center director must establish relationships with employers, applicable one-stop centers and local boards, entities carrying out relevant apprenticeship programs and youth programs, and other stakeholders.8862 Each center must also establish a workforce council, made up of private sector employers who must have substantial management and other responsibilities and represent businesses with employment opportunities for youth in the program; representatives of labor organizations, (where present, and ) and representatives of employees; and Job Corps students and graduates.63 A majority of the members must be employers. The council must work with local workforce development boards and review local market information to provide recommendations to the center director about the center's education and training offerings, including emerging occupations that would suitable for training. WIOA also requires the council to determine in-demand industries in the state for graduates to seek employment.89

Finally, each center must establish a community relations council to serve as a liaison between the center and the surrounding communities.90 The councils are to be comprised of representatives of business, civic, and educational organizations; elected officials; representatives from law enforcement agencies; other service providers; students; and staff. Centers must provide opportunities for students and staff to participate in community service activities on a regular basis about the center's education and training offerings.

Allocations

DOL enters into contracts with nonprofit and for-profit organizations to operate the centers. Contracts are competitively awarded to organizations based on ranked scores, in conjunction with other factors. The contract period is two years, with three one-year-option renewals. DOL transfers funding for Civilian Conservation Centers to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) under an interagency agreement.

Participants

Job Corps participants must be ages 16 through 24,9164 low-income, and be one or more of the following: (1) basic skills deficient; (2) a school dropout; (3) homeless, a runaway, or a foster child (including an individual who was in foster care and has aged out of foster care); (4) a parent; (5) victims of a severe form of trafficking, as defined by the Trafficking Victims Protection Act; or (6) an individual ; (4) a parent; (5) in need of additional education, vocational training, or intensive counseling and related assistance in order to participate in regular schoolwork or to secure and maintain employment; or (6) victims of a severe form of trafficking, as defined by the Trafficking Victims Protection Act. A veteran is eligible if he or she meets the eligibility criteria; however, the income requirement does not apply if the veteran's income earned in the military (within the six-month period prior to applying for the program) exceeds the income limit.9265

Job Corps centers take additional factors into consideration when selecting participants, such as whether the program can best meet their educational and vocational needs and whether the youth can engage successfully in group situations and settings. The applicant must also pass a background check that is conducted in accordance with applicable state and local laws.93 WIA prohibited66 WIOA prohibits an individual from being denied a position in the Job Corps program solely on the basis of his or her contact with the criminal justice system. Under WIOA,, except that an individual can be denied a position if he or she has been convicted of a felony consisting of murder (as described in Title 18 of the U.S. Code), child abuse, or a crime involving rape or sexual assault.9467 Each Job Corps center must develop standards for student conduct and implement what is known as a zero tolerance policy for offenses related to violence and drug and alcohol use, and selected other behaviors. Students are dismissed from the program if they violate this policy.

WIA specified that when selected for the program, students are usually placed at the site closest to their home; however, DOL could waive this requirement if the enrollee meets certain other criteria. WIOA changed this requirement such that the enrollee isStudents are to be assigned to the center that offers the type of career and technical education and training that he or she selects (unless the parent or the guardian of an enrollee under 18 objects). Among the centers that offer such education and training, the enrollee is to be assigned to the one closest to his or her home.9568 No more than 20% of participants may live off the grounds of the Job Corps center. Priority in non-residential placements is to be given to participants who are single parents.96

69

WIAWIOA specified that no individual may be enrolled in Job Corps for more than two years, except in certain cases. WIOA makes additional exceptions for enrolling for more than two years: (1(1) when completing an advance training program that would require the individual to participate for more than an additional year (as permitted for such a program); (2) an individual with a disability who would reasonably be expected to graduate, if allowed to participate for up to an additional year; and (23) in the case of an individual who participates in national service (as authorized by the Civilian Conservation CenterCorps program) who may extend enrollment to equal the period of such national service.70 Performance program) who may extend enrollment to equal the period of service.97

Performance

WIA requires DOL to establish multiple performance metrics for Job Corps. Pursuant to WIOA, these are generally in effect until PY2016 (July 1, 2016). Specifically, DOL had to establish indicators of performance for centers and the program that are consistent year to year, and that include certain specified measures relating to graduation, unsubsidized employment, average wage, postsecondary education or advance training programs. WIA also directed the Secretary to establish indicators of performance for local and national Job Corps recruitment service providers (known as Outreach and Admissions, or OA, staff) that relate to the number of enrollees retained in the program for 30 days and for 60 days after they are placed. The law did not specify performance indicators for career transition services (CTS) providers who assist youth as they transition from the center to the workplace. It additionally directed DOL to collect and submit as part of an annual report to Congress information on the expected and actual performance of each center, the program, and recruiters along with other items, such as the number of enrollees served, number of enrollees and graduates who enter postsecondary education, and average learning gains.98

DOL reports on performance through four report cards that include information about various aspects of the program's performance: Outreach and Admissions (OA) Report Card, which pertains to the recruiters; Center Report Card, which pertains to each individual center and all centers combined; Career Technical Training Reporting and Improvement System, which pertains to the students completing career technical training programs at centers; and Career Transitions Services (CTS) Report Card, which pertains to CTS providers.99 The report cards include the measurements specified in statute, as well as additional performance metrics. These additional measures were developed from DOL policy and the Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA), which established requirements in statute for most agencies to set performance goals, measure performance, and report the information to Congress for potential use.100 The program also collects information to assess performance through the Common Measures. As explained previously, DOL introduced the Common Measures for WIA Title I programs in 2005. The Common Measures for Youth are placement in employment and education, attainment of a degree or certificate, and literacy and numeracy gains. Together, these various measures are used by the Office of Job Corps to evaluate student performance and how well students are served at each of the centers.

Beginning with PY2016 (July 1, 2016), WIOA directs DOL to establish expected levels of performance for the program and individual centers that relate to each of the six primary indicators of performance for the Youth Workforce Activities program. Specifically, these indicators pertain toThese indicators include (1) entry into education, training, or unsubsidized employment (during both the (a) second quarter and (b) fourth quarter after exiting the program); (2) median earnings; (3) obtaining a recognized postsecondary credential or secondary school diploma or its equivalent; (4) participation in an education or training program that leads to a credential or employment; and (5) program effectiveness in serving employers. 71 WIOA further specifies performance measures for the OA staff and CTS providers. The OA performance measures pertain to recruitment, including whether the youth are from the state or region where their center is located, and the cost per graduate. The CTS performance measures include the performance measures for the Youth Workforce Investment Activities program, among others. WIOA further requires DOL to report to Congress certain specified information about enrollees and graduates. The report must include some of the same information under current law, as well as information on the performance of each center, program, and recruiter based on their specified performance measures. It adds other items to the report such as demographic information on enrollees; the number of graduates who entered apprenticeships; the total cost per enrollee and graduate; information about the state of Job Corps buildings and facilities; and national and community service activities of enrollees, particularly those at CCCs.

Performance Oversight

WIA specified that a Job Corps center failing to meet expected performance levels (as specified in the law) recruiters (outreach and admissions) and CTS contractors. The OA performance measures pertain to recruitment and performance of students, as well as some of the same information that is to be included in a DOL report to Congress.72 This report must include information on the performance of each center, the program overall, and the OA and CTS contractors; demographic information on enrollees; the number of graduates who entered the Armed Forces, apprenticeships, unsubsidized employment, and postsecondary education; average wage of graduates; total cost per enrollee and graduate; information regarding the state of Job Corps facilities and buildings; and information regarding the national and community service activities of students, particularly those enrolled at Civilian Conservation Centers, among other information.73 Performance Oversight

WIOA designates centers as high-performing based on their ranking and performance under the primary indicators of performance for youth. It also enables the operator of a high-performing center to compete in any competitive selection process carried out for an award to operate such center.74

WIOA specifies that a Job Corps center operator failing to meet expected performance levels can be placed under a performance improvement plan (PIP). PIPs are documented plans that outline deficiencies in program performance, corrective actions, and targets for improvement. Under WIA, theThe plan hadis to encompass certain actions taken by DOL during a one-year period, including providing technical assistance to the centers; changing the vocationalcareer and technical training offered at the center; changing the management staff of the center; replacing the operator of the center; reducing the capacity of the center; relocating the center; or closing the center. WIAWIOA also enabledenables DOL to establish a PIPadditional PIPs when a Job Corps center failed to meet additional criteria established by the Secretaryfails to meet performance requirements. These discretionary PIPs had to include the actions described above. WIOA maintained these same requirements, and adds that a PIP established when a center fails to meet expected performance levels must require the specified actions (i.e., providing technical assistance to the centers, etc.) to be undertaken within a one-year period.101

have to include the actions described above.75

WIOA provides that DOL may not renew the agreement with a center operator if in the most recent two preceding years for which data are available the center is ranked in the lowest 10% of centers and fails to achieve an average of 50% or higher in the expected levels of performance under each of the primary indicators of performance for eligible youth in the program.76 The law allows DOL to renew an agreement with these centers (for up to two years and if in the best interest of the program) under certain circumstances (e.g., performance is due to circumstances beyond the operator's control, etc.), and specifies standards that all centers must meet for agreements to be renewed (e.g., satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics, etc.). DOL must inform Congress of such renewals. WIOA specifies that DOL must select another entity to operate a Civilian Conservation Center if it fails to meet the expected levels of performance relating to the primary indicators of performance or fails to improve performance after three program years.77

Prior to the closure of any Job Corps center, DOL must ensure (1) that the proposed decision to close the center is announced in advance to the general public through publication in the Federal Register or other appropriate means; (2) that a reasonable comment period, not to exceed 30 days, is established for interested individuals to submit written comments to the Secretary; and (3) that the Member of Congress who represents the district in which a center is located is notified within a reasonable period of time in advance of any final decision to close the center. Finally, WIOA directs DOL to provide for a third-party evaluation of the program every five years, and to submit the results to Congress. The evaluation must address the general effectiveness of the program in relation to its costs; the effectiveness of the performance measures for the program; the effectiveness of the structure and mechanisms for delivering services; the impact of the program on the community, businesses, and participants involved; the extent to which the program and activities meet the needs of various demographic groups, and other such factors that may be appropriate.10278

Financial Oversight

WIA did not require reporting on financial oversight measures specifically for Job Corps; however, WIOA requires DOL to prepare and submit reports to Congress that include information about implementing financial oversight measures suggested in thea 2013 DOL IG report about oversight of Job Corps funding,10379 a description of any budgetary shortfalls in the period covered by the report, and an explanation for approving contract expenditures that are in excess of the amount specified under a contract. The reports are to be provided every six months for an initial three-year period, then annually for another two years. WIOA further requires DOL to submit an additional report to Congress if the program has a budget shortfall, including an explanation of how the shortfall will be addressed. The report must be submitted within 90 days after the shortfall is identified.104

80

YouthBuild105

81

Overview and Purpose

In 2007, YouthBuild was transferred from the Department of Housing and Urban Development to DOL under the YouthBuild Transfer Act (P.L. 109-281). The program was authorized under WIA, and the WIOA provisions for the program are effective as of July 1, 2015. As stated in the lawAs stated in WIOA, the purpose of YouthBuild is to (1) enable disadvantaged youth to obtain the education and employment skills necessary to achieve economic self-sufficiency in occupations in demand and post-secondary education and training opportunities; (2) provide disadvantaged youth with opportunities for meaningful work and service to communities; (3) foster the development of employment and leadership skills and commitment to community development among youth in low-income communities; and (4) expand the supply of permanent affordable housing for homeless individuals and low-income families by utilizing the energy of disadvantaged youth. WIOA adds an additional purpose area:; and (5) to improve the quality and energy efficiency of community and other nonprofit and public facilities, including those facilities that are used to serve homeless and low-income families.106 WIOA makes few other changes to YouthBuild.

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Program Structure

DOL competitively awards YouthBuild funds to organizations, which that carry out the program in cooperation with subgrantees or contractors or through arrangements made with local education agencies and certain other entities. Entities that are eligible to apply for funding include a public or private nonprofit agency or organization, including a consortium of such agencies or organizations. Specifically, such entities may include community-based or faith-based organizations; entities that carry out activities authorized under certain other parts of WIOA, such as a local workforce development board; community action agencies; state or local housing development agencies; an Indian tribe or agencies primarily serving Indians; state or local youth service or conservation corps; or any other entity eligible to provide education or employment training under a federal program.107

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While in the program, youth participate in a range of education and workforce investment activities, as listed in Table 65. These activities include instruction, skill building, alternative education, mentoring, and training in rehabilitation or construction of housing. Notably, any housing unit that is rehabilitated or reconstructed may be available only for rental by, or sale to, homeless individuals or low-income families; or for use as transitional or permanent housing to assist homeless individuals achieve independent living. All educational programs, including programs that award academic credit, and activities supported with YouthBuild funds must be consistent with applicable state and local educational standards.

At least 40% of the time, youth must participate in certain work and skill development activities (these activities are denoted by footnote "a" in Table 65). At least an additional 50% of the time, participants must be engaged in education and related services and activities designed to meet their educational needs (these activities are denoted by footnote "b" in Table 6). WIOA made a change to some of these activities to enable them to include, if5). If approved by the DOL Secretary, training and supports may be provided in additional in-demand industry sectors or occupations. This is consistent with a 2012 regulation for the program that enables grantees to expand their occupational skills training beyond construction skills training; however, all programs must still provide training in the construction trades.108

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Table 65. Eligible Activities Funded by YouthBuild as Specified Under WIOA

Education and Workforce Investment Activities

  • Work experience and skills training, coordinated, to the maximum extent feasible, with pre-apprenticeship and registered apprenticeship programs (in the rehabilitation and construction activities described under "Supervision and Training," below) and if approved by the Secretary, in additional in-demand industry sectors or occupations in the region in which the program operates.a
  • Occupational skills training.a
  • Other paid and unpaid work experiences, including internships and job shadowing.a
  • Services and activities designed to meet the educational needs of participants, including—(1) basic skills instruction and remedial education, (2) language instruction educational programs for participants who are English language learners, (3) secondary education services and activities designed to lead to the attainment of a high school diploma or its equivalent; (4) counseling and assistance in obtaining postsecondary education and required financial aid, and (5) alternative secondary school services.b
  • Counseling services and related activities, such as comprehensive guidance and counseling on drug and alcohol abuse and referral.b
  • Activities designed to develop employment and leadership skills, including community service and peer-centered activities encouraging responsibility and other positive social behaviors, and activities related to youth policy committees that participate in decision-making related to the program.b
  • Supportive services and provision of need-based stipends to enable individuals to participate in the program, and supportive services to assist individuals, for a period not to exceed 12 months after the completion of training, in obtaining or retaining employment, or applying for and transitioning to postsecondary education.b
  • Job search assistance.a

Supervision and Training

  • Supervision and training for participants in the rehabilitation or construction of housing, including residential housing for homeless individuals or low-income families, or transitional housing for homeless individuals. If approved by the Secretary, this may also include supervision and training in additional in-demand industry sectors or occupations in the region in which the program operates.
  • Supervision and training for participants in the rehabilitation or construction of community and other public facilities, except that not more than 15% of funds appropriated may be used for such supervision and training. If approved by the Secretary, this may also include supervision and training in additional in-demand industry sectors or occupations in the region in which the program operates.

Other

  • Payment of administrative costs of the applicant, except that not more than 10% of the amount of assistance provided to the grant recipient may be used for such costs.
  • Adult mentoring.
  • Provision of wages, stipends, or benefits to participants in the program.
  • Ongoing training and technical assistance that are related to developing and carrying out the program.
  • Follow-up services.

Source: Section 173A of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA; P.L. 113-128).

Notes: WIOA made a change to some of these activities to enable them to include, if approved by the Secretary, training and supports in additional in-demand industry sectors or occupations. In addition, WIOA changed the percentage of funds used for supervising and training participants in the rehabilitation or construction of community and other public facilities from 10% to 15%. The law also changed the percentage of funds used for payment of administrative costs of the applicant, from 15% to 10%.

a. a. a. This activity counts toward the requirement that at least 40% of the time, youth must participate in certain work and skill development activities.

b. b. This activity counts toward the requirement that at least 50% of the time, youth must participate in education and related services and activities.

Participants

Youth are eligible for the program if they are (1) ages 16 through 24; (2) a member of a low-income family, a youth in foster care, a youth offender, an individual with a disability, a child of incarcerated parents, or a migrant youth; and (3) a school dropout. However, up to 25% of youth in the program are not required to meet the income or dropout criteria, so long as they are basic skills deficient despite having earned a high school diploma, GED, or the equivalent; or have been referred by a high school for the purpose of obtaining a high school diploma.

Allocations

Grants are competitively awarded to organizations based on ranked scores, in conjunction with other factors, such as the applicant's potential for developing a successful YouthBuild program; the need for the program in the community; the applicant's commitment to providing skills training, leadership development, and education to participants; regional distribution of grantees; and the applicant's coordination of activities to be carried out with certain other stakeholders, including employers, one-stop partners, and national service and other systems; among other criteria.

DOL makes awards for three years (two years of program operations with a one-year period of follow-up). Applicants must provide cash or in-kind resources equivalent to at least 25% of the grant award amount as matching funds. Prior investments and federal resources do not count toward the match.

Performance

WIA requires grantees to use common indicators of performance for youth and lifelong learning, as identified by the Secretary. Accordingly, DOL directs YouthBuild grantees to report the Common Measures and two additional performance measures for all youth in the program. The two other measures are retention in employment or education and recidivism. Retention in employment and education tracks the share of young people who are employed or in an educational placement for each of the three quarters after exiting. The recidivism measure tracks the share of youth arrested and convicted of a new crime or parole violation within one year of enrollment.109

As of PY2016 (July 1, 2016), WIOA will requireWIOA requires YouthBuild grantees to meet the primary indicators of performance for eligible youth described in the Youth Activities program. Specifically, these indicators pertain to entry into education, training, or unsubsidized employment (both two and four quarters after exiting the program); median earnings; obtaining a recognized postsecondary credential or secondary school diploma or its equivalent; participation in an education or training program that leads to a credential or employment; and program effectiveness in serving employers.110

Reintegration of Ex-Offenders111

Overview and Purpose

Section 171 of WIA authorizes DOL to conduct pilot and demonstration programs. The purpose of these programs is to develop and evaluate innovative approaches to providing employment and training services. In recent years, two programs have been specified in appropriations language and funded under the authority of Section 171. One of the programs—Reintegration of Ex-Offenders—is targeted, in part, to youth. The youth component is comprised of related initiatives that seek to assist youth offenders and youth at risk of dropping out (or who have dropped out) with pre-release, mentoring, housing, case management, and employment services; to reduce violence within persistently dangerous schools through a combination of mentoring, educational, employment, case management, and violence prevention strategies; and to provide alternative education and related services for youth at risk of involvement with the justice system.112

Grants85 Reentry Employment Opportunities Program86 Overview and Purpose Grants to provide education and employment activities for youth offenders have been funded under WIAby DOL since FY2000.113 The program was a stand-alone program until FY2008, when it was made a FY1999.87 Under WIA, these grants were made part of the Reintegration of Ex-Offenders program, which also supports the Prisoner Reentry Initiative (PRI) for adults. Funding for the program was authorized under both WIA and Section 112 (Responsible Reintegration of Offenders) of the Second Chance Act (P.L. 110-199), enacted on April 9, 2008. The Second Chance Act authorizes DOL to make grants to nonprofit organizations for the purpose of providing mentoring, job training and job placement services, and other comprehensive transitional services to assist eligible offenders ages 18 and older in obtaining and retaining employment.

Congress appropriated funding for the Reintegration of Ex-Offenders program in FY2015 (P.L. 113-235)Following the enactment of WIOA, Congress has appropriated funding for the program, now known as the Reentry Employment Opportunities program, under the authority of Section 169 of WIOA and the Second Chance Act. Section 169 authorizes evaluations and research.

The youth component of the REO program (and its predecessor programs) has been comprised of related initiatives that seek to assist youth offenders and youth at risk of dropping out (or who have dropped out) with pre-release, mentoring, housing, case management, and employment services; to reduce violence within persistently dangerous schools through a combination of mentoring, educational, employment, case management, and violence prevention strategies; and to provide alternative education and related services for youth at risk of involvement with the justice system.88 Currently , the program supports education and reentry initiatives.

Program Structure .

Program Structure

The earliest DOL initiatives for youth offenders, from FY1999 through FY2004, operated under what is known as the Youth Offender Demonstration Project (YODP).11489 The pilot funded 52 grantees to assist youth at risk of court or gang involvement, youth offenders, and gang members ages 14 to 24 in finding long-term employment.

The more contemporary grant programs for youth offenders have funded multiple projects in recent years that have a focus similar to the earlier projects under YODP. RecentThese projects have included (1) education-related grants for the School District Youth Offender Initiative and Persistently Dangerous Schools Initiative; (2) apprenticeship and related grants under grants collectively called Categorical Grants (Youth Offender Registered Apprenticeship, Alternative Education, and Project Expansion Grants); (3) grants that focus on reentry, including Beneficiary-Choice Demonstration, High Growth Youth Offender Initiative, Planning, State/Local Implementation, and Replication Grants; and (4) grants that focus on community service, including Civic Justice Grants and Serving Young Adult Ex-Offenders through Training and Service Learning. Grantees includehave included local and state governments, nonprofit organizations, including faith-based organizations; school districts; and community colleges.115

Each of these projects has been funded in at least one year since PY2006.116 The projects are grouped below based on their focus. While the projects each have a distinct purpose, their overall aim is to provide employment and other assistance to youth who are involved in the justice system, or are at risk of becoming involved.

Education

The School District Youth Offender Initiative, also known as the School District Gang Reduction grants, was funded with FY2006 appropriations and focused on developing strategies for reducing youth involvement in gangs using a workforce development approach. The initiative was aimed at helping five public school districts—Baltimore; Chicago; Milwaukee; Orange County, FL; and Philadelphia—reduce the involvement of youth in gangs and violent crimes. Grant funds could be used for a range of education and employment interventions for youth who are involved, have been involved, or have a high risk of being involved in gangs or the juvenile justice system. Youth were eligible if they were in school and in grades 8-12, or were high school dropouts under the age of 21. School districts were required to partner with the local juvenile justice system, the mayor's office, the local WIB, the police department, and the U.S. Attorney's office in carrying out the program.

The Persistently Dangerous Schools Initiative used FY2007 and FY2008 appropriations to provide funding to three school districts—Berkshire Union Free School District in Canaan, NY; Baltimore; and Philadelphia—to improve outcomes of students in nine high schools that have been identified as persistently dangerous by the states' department of education, pursuant to the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. The grants funded a combination of new initiatives at each school, including reduced class size in core 9th and 11th grade English and math, which have a history of high rates of failure; a mentoring program using adult and peer mentors; career academies with particular themes; and a summer bridge program with remediation in English and math.

Apprenticeships, Alternative Education, and Expansion Grants

The Categorical Grants project funded programs with FY2006 appropriations that provided apprenticeship opportunities and alternative education to youth who had been adjudicated (i.e., cases have been judicially determined) or were at risk of involvement in the justice system. The grantees with programs on apprenticeship opportunities were intended to prepare young adult offenders for in-demand careers in fields such as construction, welding, masonry, and advanced manufacturing. Programs with an alternative education focus were focused on creating or enhancing schools to help young offenders earn diplomas and continue on to postsecondary education or jobs. Some grantees received funding to expand their programs to additional sites because of their records of successfully providing assistance to juvenile offenders. Grantees included state departments of corrections, school boards, and nonprofit organizations.

Reentry117

Multiple grant programs have focused on assisting young adults as they transition from the juvenile justice system. Two of the grants are currently funded while others received funding in the recent past.

Face Forward-Serving Juvenile Offenders grants (funded with FY2012, FY2013, FY2014 and FY2015 appropriations) seek to help improve long-term labor market outcomes for juvenile justice-involved youth. The grants are supporting community-based organizations to provide juvenile offenders with support services, training, and skills development. Eligible youth are ages 16 to 24 and meet certain criteria related to their involvement in the juvenile justice system. Another grant, Strategies Targeted to Characteristics Common to Female Ex-Offenders (funded with FY2011, FY2012, and FY2013 appropriations), focuses on providing employment and support services for previously incarcerated female youth and adults as they transition back to their communities.

The Serving Juvenile Offenders in High-Poverty, High Crime Communities (funded with FY2009, FY2010, FY2011, and FY2013 appropriations) has sought to improve the long-term labor market prospects of juvenile offenders ages 16 to 24 in high-poverty, high-crime areas. The grants funded efforts at multiple sites to provide a combination of workforce development, education and training, case management, mentoring, restorative justice (to provide community service or other activities as a way to repair damage to the community), and activities to reduce community-wide violence. For example, the grant funded the Latino Coalition for Faith & Community Leadership and Public/Private Ventures to support training opportunities for high school dropouts and young adult offenders ages 18 through 24 throughout the country.

The Beneficiary Choice Demonstration provided funding (in FY2006 and FY2008) to grantees to assist ex-offenders ages 18 through 29 transition from prison to the workplace. Participants could choose service providers from pools of faith-based and community groups. The grantees included the Arizona Women's Education and Employment, Inc., of Phoenix; the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment; the City of Chicago; the Indianapolis Private Industry Council, Inc.; and the Director's Council of Des Moines, IA. For example, Colorado's project focused on delivering individualized, comprehensive offender reentry strategies through partners such as the Department of Corrections, Salvation Army, Grant Valley Catholic Outreach, one-stop centers, and Goodwill, among other entities. The project offered mentoring, counseling, housing, education, and training and employment opportunities in industries with high growth.

The High Growth Youth Offender Initiative funded efforts (in each of FY2004 through FY2008) to help former offenders gain the skills necessary to enter industries with high growth. Projects focused on addressing the workforce needs of growing industries that provide employment opportunities and potential for advancement. Among the grantees were nonprofit organizations and workforce boards.

Finally, the Planning, State/Local Implementation and Replication Grants funded (with FY2008 appropriations) four state juvenile justice agencies in the District of Columbia, Maryland, Texas, and Washington to serve all youth returning from juvenile correctional facilities to one county in the state; five counties to develop plans for serving all youth returning from correctional facilities to the local area; and YouthBuild Newark to develop YouthBuild programs serving juvenile offenders in four additional cities in New Jersey.

Community Service/Restorative Justice

Some grants funded under the youth component of the Reintegration of Ex-Offenders program focus on community service and restorative justice projects to repair the harm former offenders may have caused and to help rebuild the community. These grants are known as Civic Justice Corps Grants Serving Juvenile Offenders (funded with FY2010 appropriations) and Serving Young Adult Ex-Offenders through Training and Service Learning (funded with FY2011 appropriations).

These grants sought to provide community service opportunities to juvenile offenders ages 18 to 24 involved with the juvenile justice system within the past year. Programs funded under these grants were to provide the following: (1) meaningful community service projects and service learning opportunities; (2) educational interventions that lead to a credential and increase placement in post-secondary education and/or vocational training; (3) community connections that result in opportunities for offenders to rebuild trust; (4) high staff-to-participant ratios, including close adult supervision on community service projects; (5) career development components that seek to place each participant in a job, apprenticeship, or educational setting that leads to an industry-recognized credential; and (6) post-program support and follow-up.

Military and Vocational Training

For FY2015, DOL has awarded funding to three Youth ChalleNGe sites to expand their programs with vocational education including work-based learning, job-shadowing, and other opportunities to prepare youth for the labor market. The Youth ChalleNGe Program is a quasi-military training program administered by the Army National Guard to improve outcomes for youth who have dropped out of school or have been expelled. Youth are eligible for the program if they are ages 16 to 18 and enroll prior to their 19th birthday; have dropped out of school or been expelled; are unemployed; are not currently on parole or probation for anything other than juvenile status offenses and not serving time or awaiting sentencing; and are drug free.118 In recent years, nearly 9,000 cadets (students) have graduated annually. The program consists of three phases: a two-week pre-program residential phase where applicants are assessed to determine their potential for completing the program; a 20-week residential phase; and a 12-month post-residential phase. During the residential phase, youth—known as cadets—work toward their high school diploma or GED and develop life-coping, job, and leadership skills.

Participants

Each of the initiatives targets90

FY2016 appropriations support an education-related grant, the Pathways to Justice Careers program. Funds have been provided to five nonprofit organizations and two local governments to support youth 16 to 21 who are at risk of dropping out of high school, becoming involved in the juvenile justice system, or already have had involvement in the juvenile justice system. The program focuses on providing mentoring—by individuals in justice-related positions (e.g., police officers, fire fighters, lawyers, etc.)—and career training that uses a career pathways model for youth who are in school. A career pathway model includes a sequence of rigorous academic and career and technical education courses that result in educational and skills credentials. The program also aims to ensure that youth graduate from high school and/or pursue further training or post-secondary education.

A reentry program, Reentry Demonstration Projects for Young Adults, is also funded with FY2016 appropriations. These projects are designed to assist youth ages 18 to 24 who are reentering, with a focus on interventions such as mentoring, registered apprenticeships, family unification efforts, and other promising practices that focus on providing occupational training and credentials. DOL intends to conduct a rigorous evaluation of the seven grantees.

Participants Each of the initiatives funded under the Reentry Employment Opportunities program (and its predecessor programs) have generally served select groups of at-risk youth. However, the projects generally serve youth ages 14 and older (or 18 or older) who have been involved with or have a high risk of involvement in gangs or the juvenile justice system or criminal justice system, or attend "persistently dangerous" schools, as reported by select states.

Allocations

Grants are. Allocations As noted, grants have been competitively awarded to entities such as community-based organizations and state and local juvenile justice agencies, based on ranked scores and other factors, depending on the project. Notably, onlyOnly schools that meet the criteria of "persistently dangerous," as specified by the states and as permitted under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), arewere eligible to apply for funds under the Persistently Dangerous Schools Initiative.11991 Allocations varyhave varied for each of the projects, but, generally, grantees have received grants of $1 million to $5 million for one or more years.

Performance

DOL has three performance measures for each REO initiative: (1) attainment of a degree or industry-recognized certificate for individuals age 18 or older; (2) literacy and numeracy attainment; and (3) out-of-school participants age 18 or older who are placed in unsubsidized jobs, post-secondary education, or occupational training. 92 Appendix. performance measures for each Youth Offender initiative. The standards vary for each initiative depending on the focus of the grants and the population of youth served. However, the program has uniform measures for the program overall: (1) percentage of youth ages 18 and older who are out of school entering employment or enrolling in post-secondary education, or occupational training; (2) percentage of youth offenders ages 14 through 17 who recidivate; and (3) percentage of youth offenders ages 18 and older who recidivate.120

Funding for the WIOA Youth Program

Table A-1. WIOA Youth Activities State Allotments, PY2009-PY2014, Plus Funding Under the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA, P.L. 111-5)

PY2016

Includes allotments for outlying areasOutlying Areas and Native Americans

Alabama

Alaska

Arizona

Arkansas

Colorado

Connecticut

Delaware

Florida

Georgia

Hawaii

Idaho

Illinois

Indiana

Iowa

Kansas

Louisiana

Maine

Maryland

Massachusetts

Michigan

Minnesota

Mississippi

Missouri

Montana

Nebraska

Nevada

New Hampshire

New Jersey

New Mexico

New York

North Dakota

Ohio

Oklahoma

Oregon

Pennsylvania

Puerto Rico

Rhode Island

Tennessee

Texas

Utah

Vermont

Washington

Wisconsin

Wyoming

Native Americans

State

ARRA
PY2009 (P.L. 111-58)

PY2009
PY2010 (P.L. 111-8110-351)

PY2010
(P.L. 110-351PY2011 (P.L. 112-5)

PY2011PY2012
(P.L. 112-574)

PY2012
(P.L. 112-74PY 2013 (P.L. 113-6)

PY2013
PY2014 (P.L. 113-676)

PY2014
PY2015 (P.L. 113-76235)

PY2015
PY2016 (P.L. 113-235114-113)

Total

$1,188,000,000

$924,069,000

$924,069,000

$825,913,862

$824,353,022

$781,375,289

$818,169,000

$829,547,000

Alabama

11,647,403

$870,931,000

9,059,768

11,777,698

12,455,574

11,711,479

10,504,766

10,363,134

10,973,635

Alaska

3,936,018

13,242,811

3,061,576

2,755,418

2,216,462

2,024,817

1,919,253

2,009,628

2,037,653

Arizona

17,830,637

2,296,191

13,869,309

15,982,731

15,326,190

16,510,641

15,938,449

16,873,353

18,380,399

Arkansas

12,065,555

20,040,831

9,385,022

8,446,520

6,794,393

6,431,994

6,367,716

6,814,031

7,694,400

California

186,622,034

7,839,730

California

145,161,310

136,875,948

117,952,080

123,857,750

118,211,133

119,122,833

120,707,084

Colorado

11,874,970

128,788,366

9,236,777

11,132,070

9,788,025

11,882,561

11,600,883

12,414,406

11,835,030

Connecticut

11,034,723

11,182,905

8,583,204

8,869,254

8,060,872

8,794,724

8,152,502

9,398,657

9,634,681

Delaware

2,918,025

10,313,964

2,269,744

2,269,744

2,028,651

2,024,817

1,919,253

2,009,628

2,037,653 2,139,306

District of Columbia

3,969,821

3,087,869

087,869

2,779,082

2,402,872

2,323,591

2,074,840

2,216,117

2,329,955

Florida

42,873,265

3,086,388

33,348,363

43,352,872

50,372,277

53,892,125

47,791,321

45,067,004

42,774,978

Georgia

31,361,665

49,787,759

24,394,229

28,251,785

24,305,197

25,482,266

25,123,453

27,467,948

27,630,735

Hawaii

2,918,025

30,707,383

2,269,744

2,690,193

2,272,811

2,243,958

2,174,842

2,049,527

2,037,653

Idaho

2,918,025

2,139,306

2,269,744

2,950,667

3,428,419

4,027,145

3,623,538

3,414,748

3,116,131

Illinois

62,203,400

2,944,428

48,384,035

43,545,632

36,086,031

32,767,678

33,775,763

38,093,547

42,336,174

Indiana

23,677,573

40,003,397

18,417,265

19,697,136

16,043,006

15,457,182

15,696,820

17,756,443

16,203,657

Iowa

5,172,183

17,064,726

4,023,109

4,750,212

5,519,334

4,962,142

4,671,103

4,739,579

4,781,261

Kansas

7,121,714

5,118,005

5,539,524

5,930,458

5,248,975

5,511,824

5,304,061

5,398,508

5,370,179

Kentucky

17,709,821

5,166,437

Kentucky

13,775,333

14,303,105

12,514,937

12,676,374

11,299,654

12,118,913

13,717,594

Louisiana

20,012,271

12,961,737

15,566,262

14,009,636

11,269,372

11,409,318

9,733,043

9,327,194

9,194,017

Maine

4,293,710

12,548,488

3,339,802

3,476,520

2,887,584

2,831,274

2,888,765

3,244,888

3,214,985

Maryland

11,585,610

3,208,693

9,011,703

11,311,383

10,073,999

10,354,690

10,289,216

11,989,592

12,364,002

Massachusetts

24,838,038

14,375,433

19,319,917

17,387,925

15,988,686

15,009,154

12,803,985

14,507,221

16,504,685

Michigan

73,949,491

15,595,256

57,520,566

51,768,509

41,642,666

37,407,571

31,911,591

30,072,831

31,250,104

Minnesota

17,789,172

29,709,018

13,837,056

14,264,509

11,474,392

10,523,152

9,841,004

9,947,978

9,078,036

Mississippi

18,687,021

8,577,825

14,535,436

13,081,892

10,523,093

9,452,885

8,556,357

9,200,818

9,151,084

Missouri

25,400,077

10,193,683

19,757,091

17,781,382

14,549,044

15,108,428

13,072,955

12,877,148

14,228,439

Montana

2,918,025

16,472,508

2,269,744

2,344,418

2,174,750

2,405,630

2,105,266

2,152,132

2,152,782

Nebraska

2,944,616

2,139,306

2,290,428

2,518,508

2,288,141

2,207,155

2,157,402

2,394,620

2,425,096

Nevada

7,570,212

2,291,470

5,888,382

7,654,897

8,303,837

9,104,832

9,407,590

8,865,521

9,034,617

New Hampshire

2,918,025

9,531,729

2,269,744

2,269,744

2,253,475

2,024,817

1,919,253

2,200,035

2,037,653

New Jersey

20,834,103

2,139,306

16,205,512

20,938,294

20,362,826

20,322,861

21,422,496

25,513,414

23,282,287

New Mexico

6,235,678

24,898,651

4,850,334

4,365,301

4,775,669

4,918,291

4,195,688

4,625,925

5,249,778

New York

71,526,360

6,167,206

55,635,768

51,835,670

46,253,787

45,892,839

46,093,646

52,011,703

52,128,262 54,003,637

North Carolina

25,070,698

19,500,888

25,351,154

24,598,968

23,736,834

26,575,543

28,871,997

26,347,165

North Dakota

2,918,025

25,235,370

2,269,744

2,269,744

2,028,651

2,024,817

1,919,253

2,009,628

2,037,653

Ohio

56,158,510

2,139,306

43,682,103

39,313,893

31,915,350

29,136,945

25,942,472

26,270,342

28,593,170

Oklahoma

8,708,036

28,162,375

6,773,423

6,970,582

6,877,913

6,676,111

5,982,158

6,258,954

6,941,080

Oregon

15,068,081

6,558,618

11,720,493

13,707,810

11,026,583

10,760,018

9,901,654

10,543,691

10,431,168

Pennsylvania

40,647,780

11,441,241

31,617,301

31,871,328

29,506,561

28,346,353

27,854,861

33,509,103

30,984,178

Puerto Rico

42,456,987

29,652,886

33,024,567

29,722,110

23,908,509

21,476,993

18,321,559

17,265,863

19,489,676

Rhode Island

5,611,097

23,096,083

4,364,513

4,531,698

3,767,218

3,687,520

3,676,868

3,743,023

4,106,989 3,880,689

South Carolina

24,712,293

19,222,108

17,299,897

13,916,063

12,754,206

12,151,961

12,574,365

11,474,747 14,636,640

South Dakota

2,918,025

2,269,744

269,744

2,269,744

2,028,651

2,024,817

1,919,253

2,009,628

2,037,653

Tennessee

25,099,116

2,139,306

19,522,993

18,716,506

16,288,215

15,784,120

15,045,025

16,496,140

17,503,627

Texas

82,000,708

18,911,472

63,783,091

57,404,782

52,833,195

55,664,646

52,525,623

52,492,802

54,914,867

Utah

5,067,154

51,888,988

3,941,414

3,547,273

4,121,624

5,347,985

4,562,251

4,304,671

3,928,231

Vermont

2,918,025

3,711,780

2,269,744

2,269,744

2,028,651

2,024,817

1,919,253

2,009,628

2,037,653

Virginia

12,982,612

2,139,306

Virginia

10,098,341

13,127,843

13,540,444

13,020,339

12,509,940

13,392,465

13,325,559

Washington

23,445,432

15,728,252

18,236,698

17,997,280

15,992,583

16,959,549

16,388,794

16,309,501

15,945,865 18,966,351

West Virginia

5,343,318

4,156,224

3,924,261

4,315,932

4,577,244

3,904,748

3,957,765

3,987,564

Wisconsin

13,808,812

5,350,384

10,740,989

13,963,286

13,099,180

12,342,748

12,133,146

13,562,824

14,041,859

Wyoming

2,918,025

13,268,135

2,269,744

2,269,744

2,028,651

2,024,817

1,919,253

2,009,628

2,037,653 2,139,306

State Total

1,167,210,000

907,897,792

907,897,792

907,897,792

811,460,369

809,926,844

767,701,222

803,851,042

815,061,036

855,722,367

Outlying Areas Total

2,970,000

2,310,173

310,173

2,310,173

2,064,785

2,060,883

1,953,438

2,045,423

2,042,759

Native Americans

17,820,000

2,144,668

13,861,035

13,861,035

12,388,708

12,365,295

11,720,629

12,272,535

12,443,205

13,063,965

Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) presentation of DOL, ETA, State Statutory Formula Funding, http://www.doleta.gov/budget/statfund.cfm.

Note: Does not include funds allocated under the Youth Activities program for evaluation activities. Funds appropriated for a given fiscal year correspond to funding for a program year. The program year is July 1 through June 30, although funds may be made available on April 1, pursuant to Section 189(g)(1)(B) of the Workforce Investment Act. Funds for the program are available for two program years, including funds appropriated under ARRA. ARRA funds were available for two program years—PY2009 and PY2010, which extended through June 30, 2011. For purposes of the summer youth component, youth may participate in summer activities from May 1 through September 30, though it would appear that youth could participate only through the end of June in 2011.

a. ARRA appropriated $1.2 billion for the Youth Activities program. Section 801 of ARRA permitted DOL to use 1% ($12 million) of funds for administration, management, and oversight of the program.

Author Contact Information

[author name scrubbed], Specialist in Social Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])

Footnotes

Two rules accompany the WIOA law. U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), Employment and Training Administration (ETA), "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act; Final Rule," 81 Federal Register 56072, August 19, 2016; and U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration and Department of Education, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act; Joint Rule for Unified and Combined State Plans, Performance Accountability, and the One-Stop System Joint Provisions; Notice of Proposed Rulemaking," PUT 80 Federal Register 20573—20687, April 16, 2015.

5. 35. 47. 51. 57.

Section 153 of WIOA.

Section 146 of WIOA.

Section 147(b) of WIOA.

Section 147(g) of WIOA.

1.

U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), Employment and Training Administration (ETA), Training and Employment Guidance Letter (TEGL) No. 19-14, "Vision for the Workforce System and Initial Implementation of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014," February 19, 2015; and DOL, ETA, TEGL No. 23-14, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) Youth Program Transition." See also, U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act; Notice of Proposed Rulemaking," PUT 80 Federal Register 20689–21150, April 16, 2015; and U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration and U.S. .

Author Contact Information

[author name scrubbed], Specialist in Social Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])

Footnotes

1.

CRS Report R42519, Youth and the Labor Force: Background and Trends, by [author name scrubbed]

2.
2.

The employment-to-population (E/P) ratio is the proportion of individuals in the population as a whole who are employed.

3.

DOL, Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey. (Hereinafter, DOL, BLS, Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey.)

4.

Andrew Sum, Joseph McLaughlin, and Sheila Palma, The Collapse of the Nation's Male Teen and Young Adult Labor Market, 2000-2009: The Lost Generation of Young Male Workers, Center for Labor Market Studies, Northeastern University, prepared for C.S. Mott Foundation, July 2009, http://www.nyec.org/content/documents/ThecollapseoftheNation'sMaleTeenandYoungAdult.pdf. See also, CRS Report R42519, Youth and the Labor Force: Background and Trends, by [author name scrubbed].

5.

DOL, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey.

6.

The average freshman graduation rate (AFGR) is an estimate of the percentage of an entering public school freshman class graduating in four years. For the most recent school years, the AFGR has been between 74% and 81%. Of the approximately 20% to 25% of youth who do not graduate in four years, some continue in school because they have a learning disability or for other reasons; however, many of these youth drop out, with some returning to school at a later time. U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, The Condition of Education 2015, "Averaged Freshman Graduation Rate (AFGR) for Public High School Students: School Years 1990-91 through 2011-2012," Indicator 28, Figure 1, May 2015, http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2015/2015144.pdf.

7.

Ibid, "Status Dropout Rates of 16- Through 24-year-olds, by Race/Ethnicity: 1990 through 2013," Indicator 29, Figure 2.

8.

Ibid.

9.

CRS Report R40535, Disconnected Youth: A Look at 16- to 24-Year Olds Who Are Not Working or In School, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

10.

Ibid.

11.

For further information about the challenges certain groups of youth face while making the transition to adulthood, see CRS Report RL33975, Vulnerable Youth: Background and Policies, by [author name scrubbed].

12Final Rule," 81 Federal Register 56072, August 19, 2016. See other DOL, ETA resources: "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act," http://www.doleta.gov/wioa/; Training and Employment Guidance Letter (TEGL) No. 19-14, "Vision for the Workforce System and Initial Implementation of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014," February 19, 2015; and TEGL No. 23-14, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) Youth Program Transition." See also, CRS Report R44252, The Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act and the One-Stop Delivery System, by [author name scrubbed].
3.

Most workforce programs operate on a program year basis, which extends from July 1 of one year through June 30 of the following year.

4.

For further information about youth prospects in the labor market, see CRS Report R42519, Youth and the Labor Force: Background and Trends, by [author name scrubbed]; and CRS Report R40535, Disconnected Youth: A Look at 16 to 24 Year Olds Who Are Not Working or In School, by [author name scrubbed].

DOL, BLS, "Employment projections: Earnings and Unemployment Rates by Educational Attainment," AprilMarch 15, 2015, http://www.bls.gov/emp/ep_chart_001.htm.

136.

Emily Richards and David Terkanian, "Occupational Employment Projections to 20222024," Monthly Labor Review, December 20132015, pp. 9-10, http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2013/article/pdf/occupational-employment-projections-to-2022.pdf. (Hereinafter Emily Richards and David Terkanian, "Occupational Employment Projections to 20222024.") See also, Anthony P. Carnevale, Nicole Smith, and Jeff Strohl, Help Wanted: Projections of Jobs and Education Requirements through 2018, Georgetown University, Center on Education and the Workforce, June 2010, http://cew.georgetown.edu/JOBS2018/.

14.

Anthony P. Carnevale et al., Career Cluster: Forecasting Demand for High School Through College Jobs 2008-2018, November 2011, http://cew.georgetown.edu/clusters/.

15.

Emily Richards and David Terkanian, "Occupational Employment Projections to 2022."

167.

Northeastern University, Center for Labor Market Studies, The Consequences of Dropping Out of High School: Joblessness and Jailing of High School Dropouts and the High Cost for Taxpayers, October 1, 2009, http://iris.lib.neu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1022&context=clms_pub; Paul E. Barton, One Third of a Nation: Rising Dropout Rates and Declining Opportunities, Educational Testing Services, February 2009, http://www.ets.org/Media/Education_Topics/pdf/onethird.pdf; and Clive R. Belfield, Henry M. Levin, and Rachel Rosen, The Economic Value of Opportunity Youth, prepared for the Corporation for National and Community Service and the White House Council for Economic Solutions, January 2012, http://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED528650.pdf.

178.

Unless otherwise noted, this section draws heavily on an archived report by the Congressional Research Service, Youth Employment: A Summary History of Major Federal Programs, 1933-1976. Available upon request.

189.

John H. Bremner, Tamara K. Hareven, and Robert M. Mennel, eds., Children & Youth in America, Vol. II: 1866-1932, Parts 1-6 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1971), pp. 687-749.

1910.

Much of this section on YEDPA was drawn from Charles L. Betsey, Robinson G. Hollister, and Mary R. Papageorgiou, eds., Youth Employment and Training Programs: The YEDPA Years, National Research Council, Washington, DC, 1985, http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/custom/portlets/recordDetails/detailmini.jsp?_nfpb=true&_&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=ED265245&ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=no&accno=ED265245. (Hereinafter, Betsey, Hollister, and Papageorgiou, Youth Employment and Training Programs.)

2011.

A fourth program, the Young Adult Conservation Corps (YACC), was operated by the Department of Agriculture and Department of the Interior, in cooperation with DOL, and targeted unemployed youth ages 16 to 23 who were not necessarily disadvantaged. This program operated year-round and was separate from a similarly named program, the Youth Conservation Corps (YCC). YCC was permanently authorized by the Youth Conservation Corps Act of 1970 (P.L. 91-378) and continues to operate.

2112.

Other parts of YEDPA required close coordination with the school system. According to an assessment of the act's implementation, the schools maintained their focus on in-school youth and provided essentially the same set of educational services as usual. The lack of influence of YEDPA on schools may be largely attributed to the schools' resistance to allocating services according to income and the schools' perception that their mission was exclusively to educate students. Betsey, Hollister, and Papageorgiou, Youth Employment and Training Programs, pp. 84-87.

2213.

Unless otherwise noted, this section was drawn heavily from an archived report by the Congressional Research Service, The Job Training Partnership Act: A Compendium of Programs. Available upon request.

2314.

Archived report by the Congressional Research Service, Job Training Partnership Act: Legislation and Budget Issues. Available upon request.

2415.

Archived report by the Congressional Research Service, The School-to-Work Opportunities Act. Available upon request.

2516.

For further information about the Adult and Dislocated Worker programs, see CRS Report RL33687, The Workforce Investment Act (WIA): Program-by-Program Overview and Funding of Title I Training Programs, by [author name scrubbed].

26.

U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP), Subcommittee on Employment and Workplace Safety, Modernizing the Workforce Investment Act (WIA) of 1998 to Help Workers and Employers Meet the Changing Demands of a Global Market, 111th Cong., 1st sess., July 16, 2009.

27.

U.S. Congress, House Committee on Education and Labor, Ensuring Economic Opportunities for Young Americans, 111th Cong., 1st sess., October 1, 2009.

28.

House Committee on Education and the Workforce and Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee, "Bipartisan, Bicameral Group Announces Deal to Improve American Workforce Development System," May 21, 2014.

29.

Most workforce programs operate on a program year basis, which extends from July 1 of one year through June 30 of the following year. WIOA specifies that most of the bill's provisions go into effect at the beginning of the first full program year following the law's enactment, which is July 1, 2015. DOL, ETA has a website that includes guidance and other information about the new law. See DOL, ETA, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act," http://www.doleta.gov/wioa/.

30.

Another youth program, Youth Opportunity Grants program, was authorized under WIA. The program was funded from FY1999 through FY2003, and operated until 2005. As stated in WIA, the program was intended to provide employment, educational, and youth development activities to increase the long-term employment of youth who live in enterprise communities, empowerment zones, and high-poverty areas and who seek assistance. By definition, enterprise communities and empowerment zones are in low-income areas. WIOA did not reauthorize this program.

3117.

Section 101(b)(1)(II) of WIOA.

3218.

Section 102(b)(1)(D) of WIOA.

3319.

Section 108(b)(9) of WIOA.

3420.

Section 107(b)(4)(ii) of WIOA.

3521.

Section 121(b)(1)(B) of WIOA. For further information, see CRS Report R44252, The Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act and the One-Stop Delivery System, by [author name scrubbed].

3622.

Section 189(g)(1)(A) of WIOA. Section 173(h)(2), which pertains to authorization for YouthBuild, states that notwithstanding Section 189(g), appropriations for any fiscal year for programs and activities carried out under this section are to be available for obligation only on the basis of a fiscal year.

3723.

Section 189(g)(2) of WIOA.

24.

Title I, Chapter 2 of WIOA and 20 C.F.R. 20 C.F.R. §681.

25.

Section 102 and Section 103 of WIOA.

26.

Section 121 of WIOA.

27.

Section 107(b) of WIOA.

28.

Section 107(2)(iv) of WIOA.

29.

Section 123(b) of WIOA. The regulations (20 C.F.R. §681.400) specify that local workforce development boards may choose to directly provide some or all youth workforce activities.

30.

Section 107(d)(10(B) and Section 123 of WIOA.

31.

20 C.F.R. §681.700.

32.

Section 129(c)(3)(C) of WIOA.

33.

Section 107(b)(4)(A)(ii) of WIOA.

34.

20 C.F.R. §681.100.

Section 189(g)(2) of WIOA.

38.

For further information, see CRS Report R43611, Recent Developments in the Job Corps Program: Frequently Asked Questions, by [author name scrubbed].

39.

Appropriations law generally specifies that funds appropriated for the administration account are available for the fiscal year in which they are appropriated; funds appropriated for the operations account are available for the accompanying program year (i.e., funds appropriated in FY2013 support the program in PY2013); and funds appropriated for the CRA account are available for the accompanying program year and the two succeeding program years (i.e., funds appropriated in FY2013 are available through June 30, 2017).

40.

The FY2014 appropriations law (P.L. 113-76) and FY2015 appropriations law (P.L. 113-235) authorize DOL to transfer up to 15% of CRA funds to the operations account or administration account.

41.

DOL, Office of Inspector General, Office of Audit, The U.S. Department of Labor's Employment and Training Administration Needs to Strengthen Controls Over Job Corps Funds, Report No. 22-13-015-03-370, May 31, 2013, http://www.oig.dol.gov/public/reports/oa/2013/22-13-015-03-370.pdf. (Hereinafter, U.S. DOL, Office of Inspector General, The U.S. Department of Labor's Employment and Training Administration Needs to Strengthen Controls Over Job Corps Funds.)

42.

Title I, Chapter 4 of the Workforce Investment Act and 20 C.F.R. 664.

43.

Section 129(a) of WIA.

44.

Section 102 and Section 103 of WIOA (and Section 112(b)(12) of WIA).

45.

Section 107(b) of WIOA (Section 117(b) of WIA).

46.

Section 121 of WIOA (Section 134(b) of WIA).

47.

DOL, ETA, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act; Notice of Proposed Rulemaking; Proposed Rules," 80 Federal Register 20732, April 16, 2015 (proposed 20 CFR 681.700).

48.

Section 117(h) of WIA.

49.

Section 129(c)(3)(C) of WIA. WIA specified that the youth council include members of the local board with special interest or expertise in youth policy; representatives of youth service, juvenile justice, and local law enforcement agencies; representatives of local public housing authorities; and parents of eligible youth seeking assistance through the Adult or Dislocated Worker programs, among others. Further, the local board had to ensure that parents, participants, and other members of the community with experience relating to programs for youth were involved in the design and implementation of the Youth program.

50.

Section 107(2)(iv) of WIOA.

51.

Section 107(b)(4)(A)(ii) of WIOA.

52.

Section 129(c)(3)(C) of WIOA.

53.

DOL, ETA, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act; Notice of Proposed Rulemaking; Proposed Rules," 80 Federal Register 20732, April 16, 2015 (proposed 20 CFR 681.100).

54.

The outlying areas comprise the U. S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, and the Republic of Palau. WIOA specifies that the Republic of Palau may not apply for funding during any period during which DOL and the Department of Education (ED) determine that a Compact of Free Association (COFA) is in effect and contains provisions for training and education assistance that prohibit the assistance provided under WIOA. COFA defines the relationship that Palau has entered into as an associated state agreement with the United States.

No such determination prohibiting assistance to Palau has been made.
5536.

Section 127(1) of WIOA (Section 127(1) of WIA).

5637.

Section 127(b)(1)(B)(ii) of WIOA (and Section 127(1)(B)(ii) of WIA). In practice, funds for outlying areas were distributed under WIA by formula.

57. In practice, funds for outlying are based on a formula determined by the Secretary that was used under WIOA. See, for example, DOL, ETA, Training and Employment Guidance Letter (TEGL) No. 17-5, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) Adult, Dislocated Worker and Youth Activities Program Allotments.... " April 5, 2016. 38.

The word "relative" means the number of individuals in a state compared to the total number in all states.

5839.

As with WIA, WIOA provides small state minimums such that no state receives less than the total of three-tenths of 1% of $1 billion that is allocated to states, or two-thirds of 1% of the excess if the allocation exceeds $1 billion. Under WIA, in years where appropriations exceed $1 billion, the minimum allotments were the higher of (1) 90% of a state's relative share of the previous year's funding, (2) the amount the state received in 1998, or (3) 0.3% of the first $1 billion plus 0.4% of the amount over $1 billion.

59 40.

Section 128(a) of WIOA (Section 128(a) of WIA).

6041.

Section129(b) of WIOA (Section129(b) of WIA).

6142.

Section 128(b) of WIOA (Section 128(b) of WIA).

.
6243.

Section 129(c) of WIOA.

44.

Section 129(c)(3) of WIOA.

45.

Section 129(c)(3)(4) of WIOA

46.

20 C.F.R. §681.470.

Section 107(d)(10(B) and Section 123 of WIOA. "For cause" is not defined under WIOA. (Section 117(d)(2)(B) and Section 123 of WIA.)

63.

DOL, ETA, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act; Notice of Proposed Rulemaking; Proposed Rules," 80 Federal Register 20732, April 16, 2015 (proposed 20 CFR 681.400).

64.

Section 129(c) of WIOA (Section 129(c) of WIA).

65.

These elements were classified under these categories (for purposes of WIA) in the Workforce Investment Act Standardized Record Data (WIASRD) Data Book.

66.

Section 129(c)(3) of WIOA (Section 129(c)(3) of WIA).

67.

DOL, ETA, TEGL No. 9-00, "Workforce Investment Act of 1998, Section 129—Competitive and Non-competitive Procedures for Providing Youth Activities Under Title I", January 31, 2001, and U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, Training and Employment Guidance Letter No. 18-00, April 23, 2001. Local boards are advised to establish ongoing relationships with non-WIA funded activities that provide services for WIA-eligible youth.

68.

DOL, ETA, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act; Notice of Proposed Rulemaking; Proposed Rules," 80 Federal Register 20732, April 16, 2015 (proposed 20 CFR 681.470).

69.

A local area is exempt if it is in a state that (1) receives 90% of the allotment percentage for the preceding fiscal year for the Youth Activities program (per Section 127(b)(1)(C)(iv)(I)) or Adult program (Section 132(b)(1)(B)(iv)(I)); or (2) receives the small state minimum allotment under the Youth Activities program (per Section 127(b)(1)(C)(iv)(II)) or Adult program (per Section 132(b)(1)(B)(iv)(II). A local area that meets one of these two criteria would be able to decrease the funds used for out-of-school youth to 50% of their allotment (that is used for non-administrative costs) only if the state (1) determines that the local area will be unable to use at least 75% of the funds available due to a low number of out-of-school youth; (2) submits to the Secretary of DOL, on behalf of the local area, a request including a proposed percentage decrease (not less than 50%), and (3) a summary of the analysis about the determination. This request has to be approved by the Secretary. WIA included these same requirements.

7048.

Section 129(a)(4) of WIOA (Section 129(c)(4) of WIA).

7149.

20 C.F.R. §681.430.

50.

Section 116(A) of WIOA.

Less than 1% of youth tend to enroll in both programs as implemented under WIA. See Social Policy Research Associates, WIASRD Data Book, Table II-14.

72.

DOL, ETA, "Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act; Notice of Proposed Rulemaking; Proposed Rules," 80 Federal Register 20732, April 16, 2015 (proposed 20 C.F.R. 681.430).

73.

Section 136 of WIA.

74.

DOL, ETA, Training and Employment Guidance Letter (TEGL) No. 18-04 "Announcing the Soon-to-be Proposed Revisions to Existing Performance Reporting Requirements... ," February 28, 2005.

75.

U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, "WIA Waiver Authority: Increased Flexibility
and Improved Programmatic Outcomes, Summary of WIA Waivers," http://www.doleta.gov/waivers/.

76.

Section 116(A) of WIOA.

77.

Program participants who obtain a secondary school diploma or its recognized equivalent are to be included in the percentage counted if, in addition to obtaining such diploma or its recognized equivalent, they have obtained or retained employment or are in an education or training program leading to a recognized postsecondary credential within one year after exit from the program.

7852.

The law specifies that DOL and the Department of Education are to jointly develop and establish one or more indicators of performance that indicate the effectiveness of the Youth program (and Adult and Dislocated Worker programs) in serving employers.

7953.

Section 116(b(3)(v) of WIOA.

8054.

Title I, Chapter 4, Subtitle J of the Workforce Investment ActC of WIOA and 20 C.F.R. §670.

8155.

Section 141 of WIA and WIOA. These are the purposes under WIOA. The purposes specified under WIA are similar.

WIOA.
8256.

DOL closed the Treasure Lake Job Corps Center in Oklahoma in 2014 and the Ouachita Civilian Conservation Center in Arkansas in 2016 due primarily to low performance. See, DOL, ETA, "Final Notice of Job Corps Center for Closure," 79 Federal Register 61099, October 9, 2014; and DOL, ETA, "Final Notice of Job Corps Center for Closure," 81 Federal Register 43250, July 1, 2016.

Under WIA, the DOL Secretary may select an entity to operate a CCC on a competitive basis if the center fails to meet national performance standards (as with DOL-operated centers). WIOA specifies that DOL must select another entity to operate a CCC if it fails to meet the expected levels of performance relating to the primary indicators of performance or fails to improve performance after three program years. WIOA also adds that enrollees in CCCs may provide assistance in addressing disasters, consistent with current child labor laws.

83.

DOL, ETA, Office of Job Corps, Policy and Requirements Handbook, http://www.jobcorps.gov/Libraries/pdf/prh.sflb. (Hereinafter, DOL, ETA, Office of Job Corps, Policy and Requirements Handbook.)

8458.

Section 147(a) of WIOA (Section 147(a) of WIA).

85.

Section 147(g) of WIOA.

86. 59.

Section 150 of WIOA (Section 150 of WIA).

8760.

DOL, ETA, Office of Job Corps, Policy and Requirements Handbook.

88.

Section 154 of WIOA (Section 154 of WIA). WIA specified that a business and community liaison designated by the director was responsible for these activities: and U.S. Government Accountability Office, Job Corps Better Targeted Career Training and Improved Preenrollment Information Could Enhance Female Residential Student Recruitment and Retention, GAO-09-470, June 2009.

8961.

Section 154 of WIOA (Section 154 of WIA). WIA referred to this body as the industry advisory council.

148(c) of WIOA.
62.
9063.

IbidSection 154(c) of WIOA.

9164.

No more than 20% of participants may be ages 22 through 24 on the date of enrollment. The age limit may be waived by DOL, in accordance with DOL regulations, for individuals with a disability.

9265.

Section 145 of WIOA (Section 145 of WIA).

9366.

Section 145(a) of WIOA (Section 145(a) of WIA).

9467.

Section 145(b) of WIOA (Section 145(b) of WIA).

9568.

Section 145(d) of WIOA (Section 145(d) of WIA).

9669.

Section 147(b) of WIOA (Section 147(b) of WIA).

70.
9771.

Section 146 of WIOA (Section 146 of WIA).

159(c)(1) of WIOA.
9872.

Section 159(c)(2) and Section 159(dc)(3) of WIA.

WIOA.
9973.

For further information, see DOL, ETA, Office of Job Corps, "Performance Management System Overview Guide."

Section 159(d) of WIOA.
74.
10075.

DOL, ETA, Office of Job Corps, "Performance Management System Overview Guide."

Section 159(f) of WIA and WIOA.
76.
10177.

Section 159(f) of WIA and147(g)(4) of WIOA.

10278.

Section 161(b) of WIOA.

10379.

DOL, Office of Inspector General, The U.S. Department of Labor's Employment and Training Administration Needs to Strengthen Controls Over Job Corps Funds.

10480.

Section 161(a) of WIOA.

10581.

Title I, Chapter 4, Subtitle D, Section 173A of the Workforce Investment Act171 of WIOA.

10682.

Section 171(a) of WIOA (Section 173A(a) of WIA).

10783.

Section 173(b) of WIOA (Section 173A(b) of WIA).

10884.

U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, "YouthBuild Program Final Rule," 77 Federal Register 9112, February 15, 2012.

10985.

U.S. DOL., ETA, "ETA Quarterly Workforce System Results, YouthBuild," http://www.doleta.gov/performance/results/#etaqr.

Section 171(c) of WIOA (and Section 173(c) of WIA).
11086.

Section 171(c) of WIOA (and Section 173(c) of WIA)Title I, Chapter 4, Subtitle D, Section 169 of WIOA.

11187.

Title I, Subtitle D, Section 171 of the Workforce Investment Act.

This program was known as the Youth Offender Pilot Program, and funded 14 communities that provided educational, employment, re-entry, and other services to youth.
11288.

This is based on a review of initiatives funded by the Reintegration of Ex-Offenders program. DOL, ETA, Youth Services Discretionary Grants, http://www.doleta.gov/Youth_services/Discretionary.cfm.

113.

This program was known as the Youth Offender Pilot Program, and funded 14 communities that provided educational, employment, re-entry, and other services to youth.

11489.

The earliest funding for the program was authorized under Title IV of the Job Training Partnership Act. See U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, Notice Inviting Proposals for Youth Offender Demonstration Projects, August 28, 1998, http://www.doleta.gov/grants/sga/01-101sga.cfm.

11590.

For a list of grantees and grant funding amounts, see DOL, ETA, Youth Services Discretionary Grants, http://www.doleta.gov/grants/.

116.

Between PY2000 and PY2006, DOL used Youthful Offender funding to support the Serious and Violent Reentry Initiative at the Department of Justice; to award competitive grants to serve youthful offenders in 29 communities; to award non-competitive grants to several nonprofit organizations to serve young offenders and youth at risk of becoming offenders; and to award grants to eight states to improve the academic and workforce preparation programs in one juvenile correctional facility in each state.

117.

Youth ages 18 and older may also be eligible to participate in the Prisoner Reentry Initiative (PRI), which seeks to reduce recidivism by helping former inmates find work when they return to their communities.

118.

For further information about Youth ChalleNGe, see CRS Report RL34306, Vulnerable Youth: Federal Mentoring Programs and Issues, by [author name scrubbed].

11991.

ESEA requires each state receiving funds under the act to establish and implement a statewide policy requiring that a student attending a persistently dangerous school, as determined by the state in consultation with a representative sample of local education agencies (LEAs), or a student who becomes a victim of a violent criminal offense on school grounds be allowed to attend a safe school within the LEA.

12092.

DOL, ETA, Budget Justification of Appropriation Estimates for Committees on Appropriations, FY2016, vol. I, p. TES-83CRS correspondences with DOL, ETA, December 2016.