With an emphasis on equity, the projects also seek to remove systemic barriers that have limited access to quality jobs. Toward that end, their training programs will include holistic support services for participants. Once participants complete training, grantees work with local employers committed to hiring candidates.
Emphasizing Quality Jobs in Connecticut
The project led by the Connecticut Office of Workforce Strategy (OWS), the Strengthening Sectoral Partnerships Initiative, offers a good example of how the GJC initiative emphasizes quality jobs. The OWS received a GJC grant of more than $21 million to develop a “robust, statewide approach” to training thousands of people for quality jobs in manufacturing, health care, information technology, and biomedicine via initiatives led by sectoral partnerships.
As part of that program, the OWS has developed an employer self-assessment tool that integrates JFF’s Quality Jobs Framework with the priorities of the EDA’s Good Jobs Challenge. Working closely with employers to identify the components of a “good” job, the OWS encourages discussion of factors such as compensation, employee agency, workplace culture and structure, and advancement opportunities, posing questions like these: “Does the job provide a living wage?” and “Does the job offer autonomy?”
The approach is empowering, says OWS Program Director Tracy Ariel. For example, Ariel notes that it helps ensure that an employer looking to fill an entry-level position has “thought about other aspects of the job that go beyond the job description and how they can implement those aspects that might be missing.”
As part of its GJC project, the OWS is working to create an ongoing process through which Connecticut’s regional sector partnerships will consider job quality before building new training pathways.
The Good Jobs Challenge will continue until 2026. As the work progresses, JFF will periodically provide updates highlighting grantee projects like the one in Connecticut that address regional workforce development needs through comprehensive systemic approaches to promoting equitable access to quality careers. With a diverse group of leaders approaching their projects in a variety of innovative ways, the initiative is sure to provide excellent insights into how regional partnerships are fusing business and workforce development strategies to build resilient regional economies that offer all jobseekers sustainable opportunities for economic advancement.