Policy Goal: An Equitable Rebound
Earlier this month, Democrats on the House Education and Labor Committee introduced a bill called the Relaunching America’s Workforce Act that proposed more than $15 billion in funding for the nation’s workforce development programs in response to COVID-19. That figure is considerably higher than the $2 billion included in the HEROES Act, but that’s the level of spending that will be needed, at a minimum, if we are going to provide people with the navigation, skills development, and reemployment assistance necessary to ensure that the nation and its workers succeed in a post-COVID economy. If there is one area where the HEROES Act falls short, it is here—the need to help millions of workers rethink and reskill for new careers.
It is unclear whether the HEROES Act will make it through the Senate, and even if it does, the president has indicated that he will veto it.
But as the Senate deliberates, we urge all policymakers to begin looking beyond the immediate response to the COVID-19 crisis and toward recovery. If we are to rebound equitably as a nation, we must think of the millions of Americans who won’t be able to return to jobs they lost and help them retool for new careers that will be in demand in the future.