how we work
An
overview of America Works services
General
Approach & Range of Services Available
America
Works places hard-to-serve populations and has jobs for all skill
levels. The average TANF (AFDC) recipient that we successfully place
has been on welfare for 5 years and scores academically at the 8th
grade level. Half do not have a GED/high school diploma. The New
York State Department of Labor has determined that 88% of the people
placed by America Works remain off the welfare rolls three years
later. Our Supported Work model is largely responsible for this
success rate.
Job
Readiness
America
Works pioneered the now nationally adopted work-first approach to
welfare reduction. Clients first participate in up to four weeks
of training, focusing on soft skills like communication, getting
along, developing a positive attitude and overcoming fears. We prepare
clients for interviews, let them brush up on clerical or non-clerical
skills, match them with job openings and arrange interviews with
potential employers. America Works Job Readiness services
prepare participants for jobs with the specific companies at which
we place, with curricula geared to the specific soft and hard skills
that our employers demand. America Works tailors its 4-week curriculum
to the unique training procedures and needs of selected employers
thereby giving our participants a competitive advantage when competing
against outside applicants for positions.
Job
Placement
Employer
relationships and intensive follow up support are two key elements
of our Supported Work model. America Works ability to use
a seasoned private sector sales force to get participants quickly
into jobs separates us from the competition. Companies want to work
with us and want to hire our TANF clients. Sales Representatives
compete amongst each other to place participants in well-suited
jobs, with performance bonuses awarded to sales representatives
who consistently make placements that work and last.
Nationwide,
America Works places participants in a wide range of clerical and
non-clerical positions, at an average nation-wide starting salary
of $8.50/hour. Each office brings in over 50 new position openings
per week and places over 20 participants per week. Having many jobs
and a wide variety of jobs allows us to place people carefully according
to their skills and their interests, a strategy that translates
into higher long-term retention rates.
Supported
Work
Clients
are placed at companies for up to a four-month training period,
called Supported Work. Supported Work allows us to provide 4 months
of training at no additional cost. During Supported Work, companies
pay participants an hourly wage, thereby matching funds provided
through government contracts. During Supported Work, America Works
is the employer, which allows us to play a hands-on role during
the crucial initial training period. This extra support up front
improves our retention rates in the long run, by getting the welfare
recipient off to a strong start. Supported Works typically lasts
for four months, after which unsubsidized employment is secured
at the same site. Not every participant engages in Supported Work;
some go directly on to the company payroll in unsubsidized positions,
if the company requests it.
Unsubsidized
Placement
After
completing the Supported Work trial period, the candidates are hired
permanently onto companies payrolls. Companies sign contracts
with America Works stating that each participant with a satisfactory
performance record will be hired into an unsubsidized position at
the end of the Supported Work period, at the companies discretion.
Case
Management
A personalized
Case Manager mentors candidates on personal and professional issues,
by visiting them and their supervisors on the job and meeting with
them during non-working hours. This allows America Works to continuously
assess the job match to ensure it is ideal, and provide clients
with additional support services as required. The Case Manager acts
as an advocate, partner, mentor and supervisor, helping candidates
confront the challenges to entering the workforce, whether professional
or personal. The Case Manager works with a small caseload of 20
participants, allowing them to provide clients with intensive and
cohesive one-on-one counseling. Case Managers also help coordinate
social services with work obligations, making sure that clients
receive the counseling and services necessary to ensure long-term
workplace success. Case Managers continue to counsel and assist
clients for an additional 6 months once unsubsidized employment
is obtained, and indefinitely as needed.
Job
Retention Services
The
America Works Case Manager meets at least once per week with each
participant. The Case Manager makes work site visits and conducts
evaluations with the on-site supervisor, coaching the participant
on workplace skills and behaviors. In addition, the Case Manager
coordinates the provision of social services through CBOs during
non-working hours, monitoring attendance and personal improvements.
The key to the success of our case-management retention services
is that the same coach monitors success both on the job and off,
providing a level of continuity while teaching TANF recipients how
to manage the demands of the workplace with the competing demands
of their home and personal lives.
This
method is the reason why America Works ensures at least 6 months
of retention at unsubsidized jobs support is consistent and
integrated. The wisdom of this strategy is proven by retention statistics
yet to be paralleled by any of our competitors.
Supportive
Services
America
Works recognizes that the barriers to employment among TANF recipients
are often daunting and debilitating. For this reason, America Works
collaborates with a range of social service providers who tend to
the wide variety of client needs. In addition, America Works ensures
that those supportive services are coordinated with the work schedule
of participants.
Advancement
Services
America
Works likes to make sure that participants realize growth opportunities
by urging them to continually develop improved work and personal
skills. The majority of the positions in which we place participants
offer room for growth and advancement.
In
addition, America Works Case Managers encourage participants
to take advantage of training and educational opportunities available
in their communities to improve their market value for future advancements
and salary increases. Historically, those programs have included
GED, ESL, college credits, and vocational training. We enroll participants
in an array of educational and training programs, based on community
availability. Again, such services are coordinated with work schedules,
with the Case Manager acting as the liaison between the school and
the client, monitoring attendance and achievement.
|