California 2019-2020 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SB1103 Compare Versions

OldNewDifferences
1-Amended IN Assembly July 27, 2020 Amended IN Senate June 18, 2020 Amended IN Senate May 19, 2020 Amended IN Senate March 23, 2020 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 1103Introduced by Senator HurtadoFebruary 19, 2020 An act to add Article 4.5 (commencing with Section 14050) to Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, relating to job training.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 1103, as amended, Hurtado. Workforce training programs: supportive services.The California Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act establishes the California Workforce Development Board as the body responsible for assisting the Governor in the development, oversight, and continuous improvement of Californias workforce investment system and the alignment of the education and workforce investment systems to the needs of the 21st century economy and workforce. That act requires the establishment of a local workforce development board in each local workforce development area of the state to assist the local chief elected official in planning, oversight, and evaluation of local workforce investment. The act requires local boards to carry out specific tasks consistent with the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, including, with representatives of secondary and postsecondary education programs, to lead efforts in the local area to develop and implement career pathways within the local area by aligning the employment, training, education, and supportive services that are needed by adults and youth, particularly individuals with barriers to employment.The act also provides for training partnerships that are overseen by the board, including the High Road Training Partnerships initiative, a demonstration project to model partnership strategies for the state among various industry sectors.This bill would require the California Workforce Development Board to establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty Supportive Services Program. The bill would require the board, upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, to make $50,000,000 $25,000,000 in grants available to consortia, composed of combinations of local workforce development boards, community colleges, or other stakeholders, that apply for funding to provide supportive services, as defined, and are approved in accordance with the bill.The bill would require the California Workforce Development Board to develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with the bill. The bill would require a consortium to apply for a grant by submitting a plan with prescribed elements to the board, and would authorize the board to approve the submitted plan and award grant funds, up to $5,000 per low-income workforce participant to be enrolled, per year. The bill would require the board to develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded are consistent with the intent of these provisions.The bill would also require the board, as part of the supportive services program described above, to develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar programs to address the displacement of workers, including farmworkers in the southern central valley and youth who are in or out of school who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as specified. The bill would also authorize a High Road Training Partnership or other similar workforce training program to focus on the healthcare industry and evaluate provider network adequacy. The bill would require a consortium that receives a grant to report annually to the board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Workforce, Education, and Training Subcommittee of the state Lifting Children and Families Out of Poverty Task Force was responsible for investigating existing workforce training programs and policies including community college training, career and technical education, work opportunity tax credits, and policies within the K12 education system.(b) The evidence provided to the task force showed that there is a need for supportive services to address the common reasons that low-income workforce training participants do not complete workforce training programs.(c) A lack of childcare or affordable transportation are among the primary reasons that participants do not complete their vocational training programs.(d) The subcommittee and the full task force determined that additional funding for supportive services for low-income workforce participants and an increase in coordination across the many programs aiming to support education and employment for this population are necessary to lift families out of poverty and to ensure that they can fully participate in programs that will provide them the regional market skills to sustain upward mobility. SEC. 2. Article 4.5 (commencing with Section 14050) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read: Article 4.5. Supportive Services For Workforce Program Participants14050. As used in this article:(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.(b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.(c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.(d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.14055. (a) The board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.(b) The board shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.(c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:(1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.(3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.(4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.(d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f).(f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:(1) The number of people to be served.(2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program.(4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.(g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.(c) A High Road Training Partnership or other similar workforce training program may also focus on the healthcare industry and evaluate provider network adequacy.14055.3. The California Workforce Development Board shall develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded pursuant to Section 14055 are consistent with the intent of this article.
1+Amended IN Senate June 18, 2020 Amended IN Senate May 19, 2020 Amended IN Senate March 23, 2020 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 1103Introduced by Senator HurtadoFebruary 19, 2020 An act to add Article 4.5 (commencing with Section 14050) to Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, relating to job training.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 1103, as amended, Hurtado. Workforce training programs: supportive services.The California Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act establishes the California Workforce Development Board as the body responsible for assisting the Governor in the development, oversight, and continuous improvement of Californias workforce investment system and the alignment of the education and workforce investment systems to the needs of the 21st century economy and workforce. That act requires the establishment of a local workforce development board in each local workforce development area of the state to assist the local chief elected official in planning, oversight, and evaluation of local workforce investment. The act requires local boards to carry out specific tasks consistent with the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, including, with representatives of secondary and postsecondary education programs, to lead efforts in the local area to develop and implement career pathways within the local area by aligning the employment, training, education, and supportive services that are needed by adults and youth, particularly individuals with barriers to employment.The act also provides for training partnerships that are overseen by the board, including the High Road Training Partnerships initiative, a demonstration project to model partnership strategies for the state among various industry sectors.This bill would require the California Workforce Development Board, in partnership with the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, Board to establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty High Road Training Partnerships Supportive Services Program. The bill would require the board, upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, to make $50,000,000 in grants available to consortia, composed of combinations of local workforce development boards, community colleges, or other stakeholders, that apply for funding to provide supportive services, as defined, and are approved in accordance with the bill.The bill would require the California Workforce Development Board and the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges to jointly to develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with the bill. The bill would require a consortium to apply for a grant by submitting a plan with prescribed elements to the board, and would authorize the board, after consultation with the State Department of Social Services, board to approve the submitted plan and award grant funds, up to $5,000 per low-income workforce participant to be enrolled, per year. The bill would require the board to develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded are consistent with the intent of these provisions.The bill would also require the board, as part of the supportive services program described above, to develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar programs to address the displacement of workers, including farmworkers in the southern central valley. valley and youth who are in or out of school who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as specified. The bill would require a consortium that receives a grant to report annually to the board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Workforce, Education, and Training Subcommittee of the state Lifting Children and Families Out of Poverty Task Force was responsible for investigating existing workforce training programs and policies including community college training, career and technical education, work opportunity tax credits, and policies within the K12 education system.(b) The evidence provided to the task force showed that there is a need for supportive services to address the common reasons that low-income workforce training participants do not complete workforce training programs.(c) A lack of childcare or affordable transportation are among the primary reasons that participants do not complete their vocational training programs.(d) The subcommittee and the full task force determined that additional funding for supportive services for low-income workforce participants and an increase in coordination across the many programs aiming to support education and employment for this population are necessary to lift families out of poverty and to ensure that they can fully participate in programs that will provide them the regional market skills to sustain upward mobility. SEC. 2. Article 4.5 (commencing with Section 14050) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read: Article 4.5. Supportive Services For Workforce Program Participants14050. As used in this article:(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholder, stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.(b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.(c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.(d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.14055. (a) The board, in partnership with the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty High Road Training Partnerships Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income High Road Training Partnerships participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.(b) The board and the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges shall jointly shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.(c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:(1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program, Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.(3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.(4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.(d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f). After consultation with the State Department of Social Services, the board may approve the submitted plan and award grant funds.(f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:(1) The number of people to be served.(2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program. Program or another similar workforce training program.(4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.(g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state and disconnected youth and youth at risk of disconnection. state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the initiative project, programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.14055.3. The California Workforce Development Board shall develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded pursuant to Section 14055 are consistent with the intent of this article.
22
3- Amended IN Assembly July 27, 2020 Amended IN Senate June 18, 2020 Amended IN Senate May 19, 2020 Amended IN Senate March 23, 2020 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 1103Introduced by Senator HurtadoFebruary 19, 2020 An act to add Article 4.5 (commencing with Section 14050) to Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, relating to job training.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 1103, as amended, Hurtado. Workforce training programs: supportive services.The California Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act establishes the California Workforce Development Board as the body responsible for assisting the Governor in the development, oversight, and continuous improvement of Californias workforce investment system and the alignment of the education and workforce investment systems to the needs of the 21st century economy and workforce. That act requires the establishment of a local workforce development board in each local workforce development area of the state to assist the local chief elected official in planning, oversight, and evaluation of local workforce investment. The act requires local boards to carry out specific tasks consistent with the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, including, with representatives of secondary and postsecondary education programs, to lead efforts in the local area to develop and implement career pathways within the local area by aligning the employment, training, education, and supportive services that are needed by adults and youth, particularly individuals with barriers to employment.The act also provides for training partnerships that are overseen by the board, including the High Road Training Partnerships initiative, a demonstration project to model partnership strategies for the state among various industry sectors.This bill would require the California Workforce Development Board to establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty Supportive Services Program. The bill would require the board, upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, to make $50,000,000 $25,000,000 in grants available to consortia, composed of combinations of local workforce development boards, community colleges, or other stakeholders, that apply for funding to provide supportive services, as defined, and are approved in accordance with the bill.The bill would require the California Workforce Development Board to develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with the bill. The bill would require a consortium to apply for a grant by submitting a plan with prescribed elements to the board, and would authorize the board to approve the submitted plan and award grant funds, up to $5,000 per low-income workforce participant to be enrolled, per year. The bill would require the board to develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded are consistent with the intent of these provisions.The bill would also require the board, as part of the supportive services program described above, to develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar programs to address the displacement of workers, including farmworkers in the southern central valley and youth who are in or out of school who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as specified. The bill would also authorize a High Road Training Partnership or other similar workforce training program to focus on the healthcare industry and evaluate provider network adequacy. The bill would require a consortium that receives a grant to report annually to the board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Senate June 18, 2020 Amended IN Senate May 19, 2020 Amended IN Senate March 23, 2020 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 1103Introduced by Senator HurtadoFebruary 19, 2020 An act to add Article 4.5 (commencing with Section 14050) to Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, relating to job training.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 1103, as amended, Hurtado. Workforce training programs: supportive services.The California Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act establishes the California Workforce Development Board as the body responsible for assisting the Governor in the development, oversight, and continuous improvement of Californias workforce investment system and the alignment of the education and workforce investment systems to the needs of the 21st century economy and workforce. That act requires the establishment of a local workforce development board in each local workforce development area of the state to assist the local chief elected official in planning, oversight, and evaluation of local workforce investment. The act requires local boards to carry out specific tasks consistent with the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, including, with representatives of secondary and postsecondary education programs, to lead efforts in the local area to develop and implement career pathways within the local area by aligning the employment, training, education, and supportive services that are needed by adults and youth, particularly individuals with barriers to employment.The act also provides for training partnerships that are overseen by the board, including the High Road Training Partnerships initiative, a demonstration project to model partnership strategies for the state among various industry sectors.This bill would require the California Workforce Development Board, in partnership with the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, Board to establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty High Road Training Partnerships Supportive Services Program. The bill would require the board, upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, to make $50,000,000 in grants available to consortia, composed of combinations of local workforce development boards, community colleges, or other stakeholders, that apply for funding to provide supportive services, as defined, and are approved in accordance with the bill.The bill would require the California Workforce Development Board and the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges to jointly to develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with the bill. The bill would require a consortium to apply for a grant by submitting a plan with prescribed elements to the board, and would authorize the board, after consultation with the State Department of Social Services, board to approve the submitted plan and award grant funds, up to $5,000 per low-income workforce participant to be enrolled, per year. The bill would require the board to develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded are consistent with the intent of these provisions.The bill would also require the board, as part of the supportive services program described above, to develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar programs to address the displacement of workers, including farmworkers in the southern central valley. valley and youth who are in or out of school who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as specified. The bill would require a consortium that receives a grant to report annually to the board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Amended IN Assembly July 27, 2020 Amended IN Senate June 18, 2020 Amended IN Senate May 19, 2020 Amended IN Senate March 23, 2020
5+ Amended IN Senate June 18, 2020 Amended IN Senate May 19, 2020 Amended IN Senate March 23, 2020
66
7-Amended IN Assembly July 27, 2020
87 Amended IN Senate June 18, 2020
98 Amended IN Senate May 19, 2020
109 Amended IN Senate March 23, 2020
1110
1211 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION
1312
1413 Senate Bill
1514
1615 No. 1103
1716
1817 Introduced by Senator HurtadoFebruary 19, 2020
1918
2019 Introduced by Senator Hurtado
2120 February 19, 2020
2221
2322 An act to add Article 4.5 (commencing with Section 14050) to Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, relating to job training.
2423
2524 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2625
2726 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2827
2928 SB 1103, as amended, Hurtado. Workforce training programs: supportive services.
3029
31-The California Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act establishes the California Workforce Development Board as the body responsible for assisting the Governor in the development, oversight, and continuous improvement of Californias workforce investment system and the alignment of the education and workforce investment systems to the needs of the 21st century economy and workforce. That act requires the establishment of a local workforce development board in each local workforce development area of the state to assist the local chief elected official in planning, oversight, and evaluation of local workforce investment. The act requires local boards to carry out specific tasks consistent with the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, including, with representatives of secondary and postsecondary education programs, to lead efforts in the local area to develop and implement career pathways within the local area by aligning the employment, training, education, and supportive services that are needed by adults and youth, particularly individuals with barriers to employment.The act also provides for training partnerships that are overseen by the board, including the High Road Training Partnerships initiative, a demonstration project to model partnership strategies for the state among various industry sectors.This bill would require the California Workforce Development Board to establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty Supportive Services Program. The bill would require the board, upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, to make $50,000,000 $25,000,000 in grants available to consortia, composed of combinations of local workforce development boards, community colleges, or other stakeholders, that apply for funding to provide supportive services, as defined, and are approved in accordance with the bill.The bill would require the California Workforce Development Board to develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with the bill. The bill would require a consortium to apply for a grant by submitting a plan with prescribed elements to the board, and would authorize the board to approve the submitted plan and award grant funds, up to $5,000 per low-income workforce participant to be enrolled, per year. The bill would require the board to develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded are consistent with the intent of these provisions.The bill would also require the board, as part of the supportive services program described above, to develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar programs to address the displacement of workers, including farmworkers in the southern central valley and youth who are in or out of school who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as specified. The bill would also authorize a High Road Training Partnership or other similar workforce training program to focus on the healthcare industry and evaluate provider network adequacy. The bill would require a consortium that receives a grant to report annually to the board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.
30+The California Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act establishes the California Workforce Development Board as the body responsible for assisting the Governor in the development, oversight, and continuous improvement of Californias workforce investment system and the alignment of the education and workforce investment systems to the needs of the 21st century economy and workforce. That act requires the establishment of a local workforce development board in each local workforce development area of the state to assist the local chief elected official in planning, oversight, and evaluation of local workforce investment. The act requires local boards to carry out specific tasks consistent with the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, including, with representatives of secondary and postsecondary education programs, to lead efforts in the local area to develop and implement career pathways within the local area by aligning the employment, training, education, and supportive services that are needed by adults and youth, particularly individuals with barriers to employment.The act also provides for training partnerships that are overseen by the board, including the High Road Training Partnerships initiative, a demonstration project to model partnership strategies for the state among various industry sectors.This bill would require the California Workforce Development Board, in partnership with the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, Board to establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty High Road Training Partnerships Supportive Services Program. The bill would require the board, upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, to make $50,000,000 in grants available to consortia, composed of combinations of local workforce development boards, community colleges, or other stakeholders, that apply for funding to provide supportive services, as defined, and are approved in accordance with the bill.The bill would require the California Workforce Development Board and the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges to jointly to develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with the bill. The bill would require a consortium to apply for a grant by submitting a plan with prescribed elements to the board, and would authorize the board, after consultation with the State Department of Social Services, board to approve the submitted plan and award grant funds, up to $5,000 per low-income workforce participant to be enrolled, per year. The bill would require the board to develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded are consistent with the intent of these provisions.The bill would also require the board, as part of the supportive services program described above, to develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar programs to address the displacement of workers, including farmworkers in the southern central valley. valley and youth who are in or out of school who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as specified. The bill would require a consortium that receives a grant to report annually to the board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.
3231
3332 The California Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act establishes the California Workforce Development Board as the body responsible for assisting the Governor in the development, oversight, and continuous improvement of Californias workforce investment system and the alignment of the education and workforce investment systems to the needs of the 21st century economy and workforce. That act requires the establishment of a local workforce development board in each local workforce development area of the state to assist the local chief elected official in planning, oversight, and evaluation of local workforce investment. The act requires local boards to carry out specific tasks consistent with the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, including, with representatives of secondary and postsecondary education programs, to lead efforts in the local area to develop and implement career pathways within the local area by aligning the employment, training, education, and supportive services that are needed by adults and youth, particularly individuals with barriers to employment.
3433
3534 The act also provides for training partnerships that are overseen by the board, including the High Road Training Partnerships initiative, a demonstration project to model partnership strategies for the state among various industry sectors.
3635
37-This bill would require the California Workforce Development Board to establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty Supportive Services Program. The bill would require the board, upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, to make $50,000,000 $25,000,000 in grants available to consortia, composed of combinations of local workforce development boards, community colleges, or other stakeholders, that apply for funding to provide supportive services, as defined, and are approved in accordance with the bill.
36+This bill would require the California Workforce Development Board, in partnership with the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, Board to establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty High Road Training Partnerships Supportive Services Program. The bill would require the board, upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, to make $50,000,000 in grants available to consortia, composed of combinations of local workforce development boards, community colleges, or other stakeholders, that apply for funding to provide supportive services, as defined, and are approved in accordance with the bill.
3837
39-The bill would require the California Workforce Development Board to develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with the bill. The bill would require a consortium to apply for a grant by submitting a plan with prescribed elements to the board, and would authorize the board to approve the submitted plan and award grant funds, up to $5,000 per low-income workforce participant to be enrolled, per year. The bill would require the board to develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded are consistent with the intent of these provisions.
38+The bill would require the California Workforce Development Board and the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges to jointly to develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with the bill. The bill would require a consortium to apply for a grant by submitting a plan with prescribed elements to the board, and would authorize the board, after consultation with the State Department of Social Services, board to approve the submitted plan and award grant funds, up to $5,000 per low-income workforce participant to be enrolled, per year. The bill would require the board to develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded are consistent with the intent of these provisions.
4039
41-The bill would also require the board, as part of the supportive services program described above, to develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar programs to address the displacement of workers, including farmworkers in the southern central valley and youth who are in or out of school who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as specified. The bill would also authorize a High Road Training Partnership or other similar workforce training program to focus on the healthcare industry and evaluate provider network adequacy. The bill would require a consortium that receives a grant to report annually to the board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.
40+The bill would also require the board, as part of the supportive services program described above, to develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar programs to address the displacement of workers, including farmworkers in the southern central valley. valley and youth who are in or out of school who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as specified. The bill would require a consortium that receives a grant to report annually to the board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.
4241
4342 ## Digest Key
4443
4544 ## Bill Text
4645
47-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Workforce, Education, and Training Subcommittee of the state Lifting Children and Families Out of Poverty Task Force was responsible for investigating existing workforce training programs and policies including community college training, career and technical education, work opportunity tax credits, and policies within the K12 education system.(b) The evidence provided to the task force showed that there is a need for supportive services to address the common reasons that low-income workforce training participants do not complete workforce training programs.(c) A lack of childcare or affordable transportation are among the primary reasons that participants do not complete their vocational training programs.(d) The subcommittee and the full task force determined that additional funding for supportive services for low-income workforce participants and an increase in coordination across the many programs aiming to support education and employment for this population are necessary to lift families out of poverty and to ensure that they can fully participate in programs that will provide them the regional market skills to sustain upward mobility. SEC. 2. Article 4.5 (commencing with Section 14050) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read: Article 4.5. Supportive Services For Workforce Program Participants14050. As used in this article:(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.(b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.(c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.(d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.14055. (a) The board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.(b) The board shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.(c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:(1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.(3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.(4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.(d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f).(f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:(1) The number of people to be served.(2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program.(4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.(g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.(c) A High Road Training Partnership or other similar workforce training program may also focus on the healthcare industry and evaluate provider network adequacy.14055.3. The California Workforce Development Board shall develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded pursuant to Section 14055 are consistent with the intent of this article.
46+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Workforce, Education, and Training Subcommittee of the state Lifting Children and Families Out of Poverty Task Force was responsible for investigating existing workforce training programs and policies including community college training, career and technical education, work opportunity tax credits, and policies within the K12 education system.(b) The evidence provided to the task force showed that there is a need for supportive services to address the common reasons that low-income workforce training participants do not complete workforce training programs.(c) A lack of childcare or affordable transportation are among the primary reasons that participants do not complete their vocational training programs.(d) The subcommittee and the full task force determined that additional funding for supportive services for low-income workforce participants and an increase in coordination across the many programs aiming to support education and employment for this population are necessary to lift families out of poverty and to ensure that they can fully participate in programs that will provide them the regional market skills to sustain upward mobility. SEC. 2. Article 4.5 (commencing with Section 14050) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read: Article 4.5. Supportive Services For Workforce Program Participants14050. As used in this article:(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholder, stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.(b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.(c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.(d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.14055. (a) The board, in partnership with the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty High Road Training Partnerships Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income High Road Training Partnerships participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.(b) The board and the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges shall jointly shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.(c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:(1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program, Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.(3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.(4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.(d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f). After consultation with the State Department of Social Services, the board may approve the submitted plan and award grant funds.(f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:(1) The number of people to be served.(2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program. Program or another similar workforce training program.(4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.(g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state and disconnected youth and youth at risk of disconnection. state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the initiative project, programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.14055.3. The California Workforce Development Board shall develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded pursuant to Section 14055 are consistent with the intent of this article.
4847
4948 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5049
5150 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5251
5352 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Workforce, Education, and Training Subcommittee of the state Lifting Children and Families Out of Poverty Task Force was responsible for investigating existing workforce training programs and policies including community college training, career and technical education, work opportunity tax credits, and policies within the K12 education system.(b) The evidence provided to the task force showed that there is a need for supportive services to address the common reasons that low-income workforce training participants do not complete workforce training programs.(c) A lack of childcare or affordable transportation are among the primary reasons that participants do not complete their vocational training programs.(d) The subcommittee and the full task force determined that additional funding for supportive services for low-income workforce participants and an increase in coordination across the many programs aiming to support education and employment for this population are necessary to lift families out of poverty and to ensure that they can fully participate in programs that will provide them the regional market skills to sustain upward mobility.
5453
5554 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Workforce, Education, and Training Subcommittee of the state Lifting Children and Families Out of Poverty Task Force was responsible for investigating existing workforce training programs and policies including community college training, career and technical education, work opportunity tax credits, and policies within the K12 education system.(b) The evidence provided to the task force showed that there is a need for supportive services to address the common reasons that low-income workforce training participants do not complete workforce training programs.(c) A lack of childcare or affordable transportation are among the primary reasons that participants do not complete their vocational training programs.(d) The subcommittee and the full task force determined that additional funding for supportive services for low-income workforce participants and an increase in coordination across the many programs aiming to support education and employment for this population are necessary to lift families out of poverty and to ensure that they can fully participate in programs that will provide them the regional market skills to sustain upward mobility.
5655
5756 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
5857
5958 ### SECTION 1.
6059
6160 (a) The Workforce, Education, and Training Subcommittee of the state Lifting Children and Families Out of Poverty Task Force was responsible for investigating existing workforce training programs and policies including community college training, career and technical education, work opportunity tax credits, and policies within the K12 education system.
6261
6362 (b) The evidence provided to the task force showed that there is a need for supportive services to address the common reasons that low-income workforce training participants do not complete workforce training programs.
6463
6564 (c) A lack of childcare or affordable transportation are among the primary reasons that participants do not complete their vocational training programs.
6665
6766 (d) The subcommittee and the full task force determined that additional funding for supportive services for low-income workforce participants and an increase in coordination across the many programs aiming to support education and employment for this population are necessary to lift families out of poverty and to ensure that they can fully participate in programs that will provide them the regional market skills to sustain upward mobility.
6867
69-SEC. 2. Article 4.5 (commencing with Section 14050) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read: Article 4.5. Supportive Services For Workforce Program Participants14050. As used in this article:(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.(b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.(c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.(d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.14055. (a) The board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.(b) The board shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.(c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:(1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.(3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.(4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.(d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f).(f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:(1) The number of people to be served.(2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program.(4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.(g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.(c) A High Road Training Partnership or other similar workforce training program may also focus on the healthcare industry and evaluate provider network adequacy.14055.3. The California Workforce Development Board shall develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded pursuant to Section 14055 are consistent with the intent of this article.
68+SEC. 2. Article 4.5 (commencing with Section 14050) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read: Article 4.5. Supportive Services For Workforce Program Participants14050. As used in this article:(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholder, stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.(b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.(c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.(d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.14055. (a) The board, in partnership with the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty High Road Training Partnerships Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income High Road Training Partnerships participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.(b) The board and the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges shall jointly shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.(c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:(1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program, Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.(3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.(4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.(d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f). After consultation with the State Department of Social Services, the board may approve the submitted plan and award grant funds.(f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:(1) The number of people to be served.(2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program. Program or another similar workforce training program.(4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.(g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state and disconnected youth and youth at risk of disconnection. state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the initiative project, programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.14055.3. The California Workforce Development Board shall develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded pursuant to Section 14055 are consistent with the intent of this article.
7069
7170 SEC. 2. Article 4.5 (commencing with Section 14050) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read:
7271
7372 ### SEC. 2.
7473
75- Article 4.5. Supportive Services For Workforce Program Participants14050. As used in this article:(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.(b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.(c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.(d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.14055. (a) The board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.(b) The board shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.(c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:(1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.(3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.(4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.(d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f).(f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:(1) The number of people to be served.(2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program.(4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.(g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.(c) A High Road Training Partnership or other similar workforce training program may also focus on the healthcare industry and evaluate provider network adequacy.14055.3. The California Workforce Development Board shall develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded pursuant to Section 14055 are consistent with the intent of this article.
74+ Article 4.5. Supportive Services For Workforce Program Participants14050. As used in this article:(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholder, stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.(b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.(c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.(d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.14055. (a) The board, in partnership with the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty High Road Training Partnerships Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income High Road Training Partnerships participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.(b) The board and the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges shall jointly shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.(c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:(1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program, Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.(3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.(4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.(d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f). After consultation with the State Department of Social Services, the board may approve the submitted plan and award grant funds.(f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:(1) The number of people to be served.(2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program. Program or another similar workforce training program.(4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.(g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state and disconnected youth and youth at risk of disconnection. state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the initiative project, programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.14055.3. The California Workforce Development Board shall develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded pursuant to Section 14055 are consistent with the intent of this article.
7675
77- Article 4.5. Supportive Services For Workforce Program Participants14050. As used in this article:(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.(b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.(c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.(d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.14055. (a) The board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.(b) The board shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.(c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:(1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.(3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.(4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.(d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f).(f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:(1) The number of people to be served.(2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program.(4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.(g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.(c) A High Road Training Partnership or other similar workforce training program may also focus on the healthcare industry and evaluate provider network adequacy.14055.3. The California Workforce Development Board shall develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded pursuant to Section 14055 are consistent with the intent of this article.
76+ Article 4.5. Supportive Services For Workforce Program Participants14050. As used in this article:(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholder, stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.(b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.(c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.(d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.14055. (a) The board, in partnership with the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty High Road Training Partnerships Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income High Road Training Partnerships participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.(b) The board and the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges shall jointly shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.(c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:(1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program, Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.(3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.(4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.(d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f). After consultation with the State Department of Social Services, the board may approve the submitted plan and award grant funds.(f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:(1) The number of people to be served.(2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program. Program or another similar workforce training program.(4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.(g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state and disconnected youth and youth at risk of disconnection. state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the initiative project, programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.14055.3. The California Workforce Development Board shall develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded pursuant to Section 14055 are consistent with the intent of this article.
7877
7978 Article 4.5. Supportive Services For Workforce Program Participants
8079
8180 Article 4.5. Supportive Services For Workforce Program Participants
8281
83-14050. As used in this article:(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.(b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.(c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.(d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.
82+14050. As used in this article:(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholder, stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.(b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.(c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.(d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.
8483
8584
8685
8786 14050. As used in this article:
8887
89-(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.
88+(a) Consortium means an entity that may be composed of any combination of local workforce development board, community college, California Adult Education Program Consortium, Adult Education Program, or other local stakeholder, stakeholders, working in partnership to enroll and support individuals in poverty in workforce training programs aligned with regional labor market needs, except that every consortium shall include the local workforce development board that corresponds to its geographical area.
9089
9190 (b) Supportive services mean childcare, transportation, or other services identified by the state or local workforce development board as necessary to enable an individual to successfully participate in High Road Training Partnerships programs or other similar workforce programs.
9291
9392 (c) Training includes all services described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of Section 14013.
9493
9594 (d) Workforce training program means California Workforce Development Board workforce programs that are industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality aligned with the needs of the regional labor market.
9695
97-14055. (a) The board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.(b) The board shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.(c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:(1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.(3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.(4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.(d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f).(f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:(1) The number of people to be served.(2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program.(4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.(g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.
96+14055. (a) The board, in partnership with the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty High Road Training Partnerships Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income High Road Training Partnerships participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.(b) The board and the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges shall jointly shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.(c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:(1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program, Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.(3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.(4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.(d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f). After consultation with the State Department of Social Services, the board may approve the submitted plan and award grant funds.(f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:(1) The number of people to be served.(2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program. Program or another similar workforce training program.(4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.(g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.
9897
9998
10099
101-14055. (a) The board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.
100+14055. (a) The board, in partnership with the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, board shall establish and administer the Lifting Families Out of Poverty High Road Training Partnerships Supportive Services Program. Upon appropriation by the Legislature for that purpose, the board shall make fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) in grants available to consortia that apply for funding and are approved in accordance with this article. A grant shall not exceed $5,000 per year per low-income High Road Training Partnerships participant to be enrolled pursuant to this article.
102101
103-(b) The board shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.
102+(b) The board and the Office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges shall jointly shall develop criteria, policies, and guidelines for the award of supportive service grant funds to a consortium consistent with this article.
104103
105104 (c) These criteria, policies, and guidelines shall consider, but are not limited to, the following:
106105
107106 (1) The ability of a consortium to leverage additional funds in support of the program.
108107
109-(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.
108+(2) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the regional labor market based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program, Program or another similar workforce training program, including the alignment of the training partnerships program with regional labor market demand.
110109
111110 (3) The process through which a consortium of local partners will assess the needs of participants and determine the most cost-effective manner possible for the provision of supportive services, including through the referral to, and utilization of, all other public and private programs and supportive services that may be available.
112111
113112 (4) The list of designated qualified opportunity zones (QOZ) that meet the criteria for low-income community, as defined in Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 of the federal Internal Revenue Code.
114113
115114 (d) The criteria, guidelines, and policies developed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code). The board shall make the criteria, guidelines, and policies available to the public by posting them on its internet website.
116115
117-(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f).
116+(e) A consortium shall apply for a grant by submitting a plan to the board in accordance with subdivision (f). After consultation with the State Department of Social Services, the board may approve the submitted plan and award grant funds.
118117
119118 (f) A plan submitted pursuant to subdivision (e) shall include all of the following:
120119
121120 (1) The number of people to be served.
122121
123122 (2) The coordination with local governments, public and private employers in the area, community colleges, and other stakeholders.
124123
125-(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program or another similar workforce training program.
124+(3) The availability and likelihood of full-time employment in the local area based on the successful completion of the High Road Training Partnerships Program. Program or another similar workforce training program.
126125
127126 (4) The process through which the needs of participants will be assessed, and those needs met, in the most cost-effective manner possible including through the referral to and utilization of all other public and private programs and services that may be available.
128127
129128 (g) A consortium that receives a grant shall report annually to the California Workforce Development Board how it used supportive service funds in sufficient detail to determine what services qualified as support services and how much funding went to each category of service.
130129
131-14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.(c) A High Road Training Partnership or other similar workforce training program may also focus on the healthcare industry and evaluate provider network adequacy.
130+14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state and disconnected youth and youth at risk of disconnection. state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the initiative project, programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.
132131
133132
134133
135-14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).
134+14055.1. (a) The board, as part of its supportive services program pursuant to Section 14055, shall also develop High Road Training Partnerships or other similar workforce training programs to address the displacement of workers, including, but not limited to, farmworkers in the southern central valley of the state and disconnected youth and youth at risk of disconnection. state, and youth who are in or out of school and who are individuals with a barrier to employment, as defined in Title 1 of the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act of 2014 (Public Law 113-128).
136135
137-(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.
138-
139-(c) A High Road Training Partnership or other similar workforce training program may also focus on the healthcare industry and evaluate provider network adequacy.
136+(b) High Road Training Partnerships means the initiative project, programs administered or overseen by the board, to model strategies for the state to develop industry-based, worker-focused training partnerships that deliver equity, sustainability, and job quality and address questions of income inequality, economic competitiveness, and climate change through regional skills development designed to support communities across the state. To be similar to the High Road Training Partnership, another workforce training program shall have similar objectives and employ similar strategies to achieve those objectives.
140137
141138 14055.3. The California Workforce Development Board shall develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded pursuant to Section 14055 are consistent with the intent of this article.
142139
143140
144141
145142 14055.3. The California Workforce Development Board shall develop necessary policies to ensure that grants awarded pursuant to Section 14055 are consistent with the intent of this article.