Renee’s Reflection: A New Workforce Delegation for the HIRE Initiative

Renee’s Reflection: A New Workforce Delegation for the HIRE Initiative

At our recent Tocqueville Conversation, we discussed the rapidly increasing population and cost of living in Dane County and how that’s impacting hard-working families – especially those with children. One of the ways United Way is working to empower more people to find pathways out of poverty is through our HIRE Initiative – fostering opportunities for our neighbors to gain financial security through better-paying jobs.

I’m thrilled to share with you that our HIRE initiative’s new workforce delegation is launching at the end of this month! 

Thanks to the work of the delegation as well as a generous new grant from Ascendium Education Group to create demand-driven, short-term training programs to get people into higher-paying, specialized positions, we’re working together to help our neighbors secure reliable work making family-sustaining wages. 

At our recent Tocqueville Conversation, we discussed the rapidly increasing population and cost of living in Dane County and how that’s impacting hard-working families – especially those with children. Today, a single adult living in Dane County needs to earn $28/hour (almost four times Wisconsin’s minimum wage) to lead a stable, successful life. But we can help. 

One of the ways United Way is working to empower more people to find pathways out of poverty is through our HIRE Initiative – fostering opportunities for our neighbors to gain financial security through better jobs. Thanks to Tocqueville leaders and investors like Jack Salzwedel, Diane Ballweg, Dave Beck-Engel and many more, we launched HIRE in 2013. 

Alongside community partners, we’ve helped more than 3,000 people secure reliable work making family-sustaining wages. But there’s still so much to be done. That’s why I’m thrilled to share with you that our HIRE initiative’s new workforce delegation is launching at the end of this month! 

The delegation, chaired by fellow Tocqueville member Lisa Barton, CEO of Alliant Energy, and Seth Lentz, CEO of the Workforce Development Board of South-Central Wisconsin, is made up of 21 individuals across sectors including educators from MMSD and Madison College. Together, these community leaders will take an in-depth look at existing strategies, how they respond to current needs and gaps in our workforce and make recommendations for the future.  

Additionally, HIRE has been awarded a generous grant from Ascendium Education Group to create demand-driven, short-term training programs to get people into higher-paying, specialized positions. Through this grant, we’ll design programs that will not only provide stable employment but fill critical gaps in the workforce.  

Many of you have a critical role to play in this process as employers. If you’d like to get involved, please reach out to Bill Clingan, Program Manager, Community Impact at bill.clingan@uwdc.org. 

Your continued investments have allowed us to break down barriers and prepare people for employment. Thank you for continuing to champion this work through Tocqueville! I’m so proud of what we’re accomplishing together.

June 25, 2024: top story Dane County food pantries ask for assistance

Dane County food pantries ask for assistance

SUN PRAIRIE, Wis. — Food pantries across Dane County are warning that the community is facing a rising number of people facing food insecurity, while supply at food pantries is dropping.

“The options we have to keep our shelves stocked continue to shift, and we’re more limited than we were just a few years ago,” said Mark Thompson, president of Sun Prairie Food Pantry. “Buying food in bulk is, of course, more expensive now, and our traditional suppliers of free food can’t keep up with the demand.”

The demand for food pantries is increasing in line with rising costs across the board advocates said during a rally at the state Capitol. Rising housing prices in Dane County are leaving more people with fewer resources to spend on food.

“We are seeing record numbers of families using the pantry 2023 was an all time record for us,” Thompson said. “We’re probably going to break that record halfway through this year. We’re probably going to almost double what we did in 2023.”

June 25, 2024: Dane County Food Pantries Issue Call to Action, Amidst Shortages and High Demand

Dane County Food Pantries Issue Call to Action, Amidst Shortages and High Demand

Today’s call to action asks for your help, as food pantries struggle to balance a record number of clients in need but shortages in supply. The 36 local food pantries followed up on their letter with a press conference at the state Capitol this morning. They compared numbers with other local food pantries last February and found that, over the last two years, demand has gone up by 112%.

Ellen Carlson is director of WayForward, a food and housing resource non-profit in Middleton spearheading this campaign. She says that the rising need started once pandemic-era resources went away.

“People throughout our community are increasingly showing up at food pantries and seeing a lot less options. And we know that we are a lifeline for so many and we really wanted to make people aware.”

June 13, 2024: United Way of Dane County invests in community impacted by gun violence

United Way of Dane County invests in community impacted by gun violence

MADISON, Wis. (WMTV) – A Dane County organization is investing $25,000 into a Madison east side community impacted by gun violence.

The money is being granted by United Way of Dane County (UWDC) to grassroots organizations working with the Harmony Apartments neighborhood to create change.

“It’s very important to not rush the process and allow them to feel whatever it is that they may be feeling,” grant recipient Myesha Thompson said.

Thompson wants to serve the Harmony Apartments community the right way. Those who lived in the neighborhood have been through a pair of homicides over the last year, resulting in the loss of Devon Grant and Kyesha Miller.

“Whether or not if it’s sadness, grief, anger, they are entitled to their emotions. They are entitled to their opinions about how the community, the people in our community, is responding,” Thompson said.

May 21, 2024: By Youth for Youth awards more than $25,000 to area youth programs

By Youth for Youth awards more than $25,000 to area youth programs

MADISON (WKOW) — More than $25,000 is being distributed to youth-led organizations and organizations in Dane County thanks to a round of grants from the By Youth for Youth program.

By Youth for Youth (BYFY) is a collaborative program through the Dane County Youth Commission, United Way of Dane County and other organizations. High school leaders reviewed and identified grants that will benefit other young people.

“The applications that the group solicits and reviews are designed by or implemented by youth themselves. So that’s why it’s called by Youth for Youth. The youth are preparing the grant applications or working on the grants in some way, and the youth are reviewing the applications and deciding which ones received funding,” Lindsey Gearin with the United Way of Dane County explained.

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April 21, 2024: Confronting disparities in Black maternal health

Confronting disparities in Black maternal health

In 2019, I gave birth to my first child. As a first-time mother, I was anxious and afraid, but I was also excited and very well prepared. By the time I arrived at my hospital’s labor and delivery unit that morning, all illusions of a natural birth had vanished. As many women can attest, the pain of childbirth is as universal as it is staggering. So, I was surprised when, in between mind-bending contractions, an L&D nurse leaned over me and said, without any kindness in her voice, “If you don’t quiet down, we won’t give you an epidural.” I was stunned, but I was also in pain and afraid. As a graduate student researching the Rhetoric of Race, I knew the concepts, the arguments, and the statistics to explain what I was experiencing. I knew that I was less likely to be believed or treated well because of the color of my skin. But I also knew that I needed the hospital’s help, and that was not the moment to stand and fight. I did my best to be quiet.

March 5, 2024: United Way’s 2023 Community Fundraising Campaign raises $16.8M

United Way’s 2023 Community Fundraising Campaign raises $16.8M

United Way of Dane County’s 2023 Community Fundraising Campaign raised $16.8 million thanks to over 16,000 individuals and 500 businesses across the county.

On Friday, United Way of Dane County hosted a Community Celebration with more than 500 community members at the Monona Terrace.

December 28, 2023: Together we can create more opportunities for Dane County neighbors

Together we can create more opportunities for Dane County neighbors

Every morning, I look at my wife and say, “Lori, time to wake up and try to make the world a better place today.” This affirmation guides us to be involved across the community and has led me to take on the important role of chairing United Way of Dane County’s 2023 Campaign.

With the end of the year just around the corner, I want to express my sincere gratitude to every person who has generously donated their hard-earned dollars to a worthy cause in our community. And I humbly request that you consider making an even greater difference with United Way of Dane County, the organization that mobilizes us to act together for greater impact. There’s still time to create opportunities for neighbors before we ring in 2024.

December 6, 2023: In season of giving, Wisconsin nonprofits face new challenges

In season of giving, Wisconsin nonprofits face new challenges

 

MILWAUKEE — The newest edition of the Nonprofit Total Rewards Survey out of Dane County shows Wisconsin nonprofits are facing expanding challenges, in part, thanks to the economy, inflation and ongoing issues tied to worker retention.

“A lot of non-for-profit organizations are experiencing the many challenges that other organizations are facing coming out of the pandemic and with our tightened labor market,” said Rebekah Temple, vice president of human resources consulting with The QTI Group. “Wages have had to increase from what we used to see at around $15 per hour, now we’re seeing those have increased to around $17.70 per hour or $18 per hour just for entry-level jobs.”

An annual effort by QTI and the United Way of Dane County, this year’s analysis surveyed more than 60 nonprofit groups in and around Dane County.

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