Peninsula-wide program put 85 teens to work this summer
Stephanie McDonald is looking for business owners who could use some help and for young people who could use an open door.
McDonald is youth services coordinator of Pathways to Success, a job training and career-guidance program serving Clallam and Jefferson counties.
At the finale of the Summer Youth Employment Program on Friday at Peninsula College, she reminded attendees that Pathways is an additional year-round service, ready to match people age 16 to 21 with work sites.
There's still room for 15 to 20 youths in this year's program, McDonald said.
"We're always looking for employers to provide meaningful work experiences," also known as WEXes.
Pathways, after finding a good match, pays the worker for up to 160 hours of labor. So the program can help offset training costs, McDonald said.
After the 160 hours, the employer may choose to hire the trained worker or not. And if the youth doesn't meet the employer's expectations at any point, the WEX ends.
Either way, the worker gains real-world experience, McDonald said, as well as guidance from the Pathways counselors on how to conduct an efficient job search, write a resume and finish or continue schooling.
Pathways' mission is to provide local youth with a chance to build their futures, she said.
"It is also our goal to provide committed, responsible and productive workers" for local firms.
Pathways is funded by the federal Workforce Investment Act, and youth usually must meet low-income guidelines, but McDonald said she and the staff consider other factors on a case-by-case basis.
She urged Clallam and Jefferson youth, as well as employers, to learn more by contacting her in Pathways' Port Angeles office at 228 W. First St., on the top floor of the Armory Square building. McDonald can also be reached at 360-565-2001 and smcdonald@esd.wa.gov.
McDonald is youth services coordinator of Pathways to Success, a job training and career-guidance program serving Clallam and Jefferson counties.
At the finale of the Summer Youth Employment Program on Friday at Peninsula College, she reminded attendees that Pathways is an additional year-round service, ready to match people age 16 to 21 with work sites.
There's still room for 15 to 20 youths in this year's program, McDonald said.
"We're always looking for employers to provide meaningful work experiences," also known as WEXes.
Pathways, after finding a good match, pays the worker for up to 160 hours of labor. So the program can help offset training costs, McDonald said.
After the 160 hours, the employer may choose to hire the trained worker or not. And if the youth doesn't meet the employer's expectations at any point, the WEX ends.
Either way, the worker gains real-world experience, McDonald said, as well as guidance from the Pathways counselors on how to conduct an efficient job search, write a resume and finish or continue schooling.
Pathways' mission is to provide local youth with a chance to build their futures, she said.
"It is also our goal to provide committed, responsible and productive workers" for local firms.
Pathways is funded by the federal Workforce Investment Act, and youth usually must meet low-income guidelines, but McDonald said she and the staff consider other factors on a case-by-case basis.
She urged Clallam and Jefferson youth, as well as employers, to learn more by contacting her in Pathways' Port Angeles office at 228 W. First St., on the top floor of the Armory Square building. McDonald can also be reached at 360-565-2001 and smcdonald@esd.wa.gov.
By Diane Urbani de la Paz
Peninsula Daily News
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Deep recession. Massive layoffs across the country. Everywhere you look, lots more applicants than openings.
But thanks to people such as Cheryl Stough of Sequim, Carl Chastain of Forks and Wes Livingston of Port Ludlow, it turned into a happy ending for 85 young workers on the North Olympic Peninsula.
The Summer Youth Employment Program provided six weeks of work for minimum wage for youths age 16 to 24 with $313,000 in funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, also known as the federal stimulus package.
For employers, it was "truly fantastic," Chastain said Friday during the program finale at the Peninsula College Longhouse.
The program paid for 72 young workers in Clallam County and 13 in Jefferson County to toil for $8.55 an hour in local workplaces.
Employer pleased
Chastain, executive director of the Pacific Salmon Coalition, was among the employers who welcomed workers from the program.
He taught them the nuts and bolts of salmon habitat restoration across the West End: sandbagging, trail clearing and trash pickup -- dirty jobs that people like Brett Crump, 16, didn't shrink from doing.
And the federally funded program, Chastain added, enabled his strapped nonprofit organization to hire extra workers he couldn't have otherwise afforded.
It was a good deal for him and for the teens, Forks High School students who wanted the work experience and the mentorship, he said. And it helped the coalition "accomplish more with the limited resources we all seem to have these days."
An education
Whitley Barnes, an 18-year-old from Joyce, said she got a well-rounded education in her month-and-a-half stint at the YMCA's Port Angeles summer camp.
She organized camp activities, from sports to skits to knitting, with kids age 5 to 11. She developed a mentor in her boss, Susie Hancock, and learned much from her fellow workers.
"Whitley is phenomenal," said Stough, coordinator of the youth employment program in Clallam County.
Barnes graduated from Crescent High School in June with a 4.0 grade-point average and plans to study political science at Washington State University, "and she only wants to become a lawyer, and then a judge," Stough added.
This summer, Barnes said, she realized her own ability to be a role model.
"I got to be the older kid," she said, demonstrating how to have fun while working hard.
The program's 36-hour work week included workshops on resume writing and other job readiness skills for all the young workers.
In those workshops, Barnes said, she met women her own age who already have children and who spent their summer wages on food and rent. And she watched other workers who, after starting out shy and uncertain at the beginning of summer, bloomed.
Tony Cortani, owner of Tim's Custom Cabinets in Sequim, learned something about teenagers this summer.
Joshua Kober, 19, worked with him, preparing cabinets for finishing and installation -- and dispelling Cortani's doubts about the employment program.
"At first I had a lot of reservations. I thought I was going to get kids who would have no interest and who would waste my time," Cortani said.
'Good work ethic'
"I found out there are kids out there who have a good work ethic and want to apply themselves."
"Thank you," Kober responded.
Brittany Willert, a 17-year-old from Marrowstone Island, has been rising at 4 a.m. four mornings a week to work her 6 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. shift at the Resort at Port Ludlow.
With Wes Livingston training and supervising, she mowed around the model homes, cut weeds on the golf course, pruned, fertilized -- and learned all about golf terms and players' needs.
Livingston and the rest of the landscaping crew were "mostly older gentlemen; they were like the dads I never had," Willert said. "They were really cool with me asking questions."
And Willert, who had planned to become a dental hygienist, called her landscaping job a "powerful eye-opener" to the benefits of working outdoors.
"I was at work, but it was like a getaway because it's beautiful and the people are so, so nice," she said.
Like Barnes, Willert was inspired by other teens in the summer work program.
"The kids have been through some pretty rough times. They're all just wanting to work," she said.
Both counties
Clallam County, because it has both a higher proportion of economically disadvantaged youth and more severe unemployment, received far more -- $259,000 -- for its summer-job program than Jefferson County, which got just $54,000.
In both counties the employers made the program possible, said Stough, who matched organizations such as the salmon coalition, Tim's Custom Cabinets and the YMCA with young people particularly interested in those lines of work.
In Jefferson County, coordinator Anne Burns matched workers with 13 businesses ranging from Seams to Last, a children's clothing shop in Port Townsend, the Chimacum Veterinary Hospital and The Village Baker in Port Townsend.
There's no telling, the coordinators said, whether more federal money will be available in 2010.
The young people in this summer's program, whatever happens, believe they will hold onto its benefits.
"We built so many strong ties," Barnes said of her boss, the program coordinators and her fellow workers.
The golf-course landscaping team, Willert added, "taught me about golf, and about life."
________
Sequim-Dungeness Valley reporter Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360-681-2391 or at diane.urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.
Last modified: August 16. 2009 8:47PM



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