You are here: Home / Community Assets Search / Emerging Workforce Coalition

Emerging Workforce Coalition

 

Organization Info
Impacts/Projects/Collaborators 
Beam Assessment

Organization Information


Organization: Emerging Workforce Coalition

Sector: Collective

Organization Mission: The Emerging Workforce Coalition, a group of eight nonprofit organizations that serve communities of color, hosted a panel to speak about their efforts and challenges in improving minority employment involvement. Four representatives from different organizations spoke on their experiences conducting focus groups in the area, opening up opportunities for minority members, and addressing the needs of different groups of color in the area, including the growing Somali-American community.

PB Website     

Star Tribune 

Star Tribune 

Minnesotans must face the facts and unite to reverse the economic disparities that plague the black community in this state.

Fact is … the latest statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau found black Minnesotans’ median household income dropped to $27,000 in 2014.

Fact is … Minnesota now trails Mississippi when it comes to median household income for blacks.

Fact is … the unemployment rate for blacks in Minnesota is 15.6 percent — four times the state’s overall rate of 4 percent.

Fact is … the state and many business leaders seem willing to give blacks everything but a job.

Now that we know the facts, here are concrete solutions that must be implemented to eradicate what many have become accustomed to hearing about Minnesota.

Offer GED services for older adults. Statistics show that 60,000 adults in Hennepin County, 29,000 in Minneapolis alone, do not have a GED — a basic requirement for any type of vocational training or higher education coursework. To be successful we must provide a structured learning environment that is culturally based and not only supports student retention but puts them on a path to industry-relevant careers.

Promote small-business start-ups in the African-American community. Entrepreneurship is prevalent in this state and we need to ensure that we provide technical assistance and funding for business start-ups in African-American communities.

Implement the Emerging Workforce Coalition’s proposal. Nine agencies of color recently partnered to propose the creation of a referral and placement system to bring minorities into the workforce by training low-skilled populations and tapping into the underemployed workforce. The report is being considered by the state Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED). It needs to be implemented now.

Increase SNAP benefits. MSPWin — a philanthropic collaborative formed in 2013 to strengthen the workforce in the seven-county metro area — recently issued a report that found the Minnesota Department of Human Services and DEED are leaving millions of dollars on the table that could be used for job training. Leaders need to change their strategy, accept these dollars and use them to fund community-based agencies that provide short-term training in high-growth areas that will effectively transition minorities and other low-income households from the food-stamp program to earning a living wage.

Provide free short-term training certificates. The economic value of the short-term certificate cannot be overstated, given that workers with occupation-based certificates earn an average of 20 percent more than workers with a high school diploma. In high-demand industries, 39 percent of male certificate holders earn more than the median male worker with an associate degree and 24 percent earn more than the median male bachelor’s degree holder.

Add to that the fact that by 2018 more than two-thirds of the 47 million job openings in America will require some level of postsecondary education or training, with a growing demand for industry-specific certification, and it cannot be denied that these certificates successfully change low-income workers into middle-income workers.

The sooner we implement these solutions, the better, but we can’t do it alone. We need a coalition made up of a rainbow of faces, including whites, that has one goal in mind — to ensure that every person in Minnesota has the ability to succeed.

History has shown that there is strength in numbers, and while our talking points may differ, we must remain laser-focused on our purpose to finally do the right thing by the black community.

Fact is … Minnesota continues to have one of the worst racial disparities in the nation in employment and academic achievement.

Fact is …. our region cannot succeed without everyone contributing to the regional economy and vice-versa.

Time to face facts and implement solutions. Are you with us?

 

 


Related News and Status


 

Status Reports / News 
Related PlanScape Status on: Diversity and Inclusion, Economic Development, Workforce Development

Key reports on: Emerging Workforce Coalition


June 26, 2024: City of Rochester - Justice, Diversity, Equity, Inclusion (JEDI) Audit Status

June 24, 2024 City Council Study Session: Justice Equity Diversity and Inclusion (JEDI) Audit per Goodenough 

Departmental Audit reports of: Human Resources; Rochester Public Library; Parks & Rec 

 

Read more ...
June 21, 2024: Somali American Social Service Association

SASSA to receive $1M from MN to train workers for high-demand employment. 

The funding is awarded under the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED) Targeted Populations Workforce Competitive Grant Program.

Read more ...
June 20, 2024: Community Building Fund
The City of Rochester welcomes applications for the Community Building Fund.  This fund is all about supporting projects, programs, and events in the city that actively promote equity and inclusion.

Read more ...
June 15, 2024: Homes for our Neighbors Community Gathering
Calling for Community Support at Community Meeting:  The most recent Olmsted County Maxfield Study found that from 2020-2030, housing demand required 18,000 new housing units. 71% would need to be general-occupancy and 29% age-restricted senior housing.

 

Read more ...
June 09, 2024: ISAIAH Rochester Agenda

Focus Area: Housing; Our Next Generation; Healthcare; Community-Building; Climate

Activities: Rochester Faith in MN & ISAIAH Calendar and Strategic Missions

Reference: CMRC June 24, 2024 Meeting Presentation Video

 

Read more ...
June 03, 2024: May 2024 Minnesota Compass Newsletter

May MN Compass Newsletter

Importance of data disaggregation: Minnesota's Asian Population, Minnesota's Black communities

Read more ...
June 01, 2024: 2024 Targeted Business Enterprise Utilization Plan Reports

2Q 2024: May 2024 - Admin Message, TBE Report; April 2024 - Admin Message, TBE Report

1Q 2024: Feb 2024 - Admin Message, TBE Report; Jan 2024: Admin Message, TBE Report

Special callouts: Women in Construction; City of Rochester Equity in Development 

Read more ...
May 29, 2024: Mr and Ms JuneTeenth 2024
2024 Recognition

$1K Scholarship: 2024 Rochester H.S. Graduate: Application and Nomination, Sponsorship and Donation support

Facebook photos of 2024 Mr. and Miss Juneteenth

Read more ...
May 27, 2024: DMC's BioRoch effort to Collaborate with MN MedTech 3.0

DMCC Board Updates:

1. May 2024 Status Memo to DMCC Board  

2. Feb 2024 DMCC Board Meeting: Video Clip of Discussion at Feb 1 2024 DMCC Board - DMC part of MedTech 3.0; Memo to DMCC

3. Nov. 2023 Video Clip of Discussion at DMCC Board Meeting about MN MedTech 3.0 Description and Webinar

References: US DEA Tech Hub Awardees 

Read more ...
May 24, 2024: 1H 2024 Destination Medical Center
Proceedings

May 2024 DMCC Board Meeting and City, County, DMC Joint Meeting

Feb 2024 DMCC Board Meeting

Read more ...
May 21, 2024: M.O.V.E: A Collaboration of SHIP, Joint Study, One Olmsted

Mobilizing Olmsted Voices for Equity (M.O.V.E.) community council application

M.O.V.E. Promotional Flyer and Application to join M.O.V.E.

5/10/2024 Conversation Olmsted County Rep and CMRC Rep.: Regarding Olmsted County Community Council's DEI initiative called Mobilizing Olmsted Voices for Equity (M.O.V.E) 

Rochester Area Foundation Support Message

 

Read more ...
May 17, 2024: Minnesota Housing Profile Housing Statistics and Findings

2023 Olmsted County Housing Profile

State of MN Profile and Findings

Read more ...
May 01, 2024: Community Outreach Public Relations
Austin KSMQ R-Town Program Interview Segment about CMRC

Read more ...
April 27, 2024: 2024 Destination Medical Center (DMC) Updates
DMC Updates April 29 Presentation to City Council Study Session 

Transit Village

Business Development

Historic District

Read more ...

Community Anchor Participation:

 

 

.

Impacts

The work of this organization may have impacts on the following areas:

PlanScape

Lvl 1: Diversity and Inclusion ; Economic Development ; Workforce Development

Lvl 2:

DMC Impact:

Community Health Impact area:

 

Projects/Programs

Confirmed Project Involvement:


Potential Projects

Project Involvement Candidates:


 

Organization Life Cycle Assessment (Pause, Startup, Steady, Isolated Impact, Collective Impact  Unknown)

Startup

Site Information
Project Phase Definitions
The following defines the various project phases:
  1. Available - a product, program or service is in production
  2. Develop - program or application is being developed
  3. Plan - idea is solid, stakeholders are identified, and there is strong commitment to go forward from all parties.
  4. Concept Phase - idea scoped out with enough details to give an early sizing and/or to build a proof of concept
    demonstration
  5. Pre-concept Phase - an early idea or a requirement.
About Beam
  • For the commercial sector, we tend to register startup activities (new companies and new commercial projects) that bring diversification and high-impact opportunities to the area.
  • For the non-profit sector, we wish to shine light on all the organizations and services that otherwise labor under relative obscurity.
  • Our hope is that dmcbeam.org will encourage cross-sector collaborations and creative solutions.

While there are a number of registries in the community, dmcbeam.org's  distinct value is to pilot a database with a data structure and categorizations that answer the questions such as: What organizations or projects/programs in our community that have purported relevance with some of the over-arching focuses put forward by initiatives such as DMC, J2G and Health Improvements?

This database could be used as one of the ways to explore the capacities of the community. If you are someone on an exploratory journey to learn about the greater Rochester community. dmcbeam.org could be an interesting first step.

Links to Beam sub-sites 
Sample of Beam sub-sites: