city_hall

Official websites use .boston.gov

A .boston.gov website belongs to an official government organization in the City of Boston.

lock

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS

A lock or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Last updated:

Boston Private Industry Council / MassHire Boston meeting

The Boston Private Industry Council / MassHire Boston Workforce Board Meeting will be held virtually via Zoom on Thursday, June 24, 2021, at 8:30 a.m.

Join the Zoom meeting

(no passcode necessary)

By phone: 929-205-6099, Meeting # 889 0998 0661

Discussion Topics

  1. Agenda

    I.    Welcome and Introductions   (10 minutes)

    •    Approval of May 3 minutes: Ken Montgomery

    •    Finance report: Darren Donovan

    II.    Career center annual review and charter continuation: Harneen Chernow

       

    Vote:    To extend the terms of the career center charters awarded to JVS and to Morgan Memorial Goodwill Industries on May 3 from one year to two years in order to allow the time necessary to develop a new request for proposals for release in the fall of 2022.

    III.    FY 2022 Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act distribution: Harneen Chernow / Angela McCabe

    Vote(s):  To approve the distribution of FY 2022 funding as detailed below.

    A.    Fiscal agent and board activities

    To set aside 19.5% of the total WIOA FY 2022 allocation for fiscal agent and board activities ($607,126), while maintaining a 70/30 split between the two organizations (OWD and PIC)

    B.    Equalizing low-income adult and dislocated worker program funding

    To transfer $78,560 from the adult to dislocated worker categories to achieve a 50/50 split.

    C.    Dividing adult program funding between training (ITAs) and career center services

    To establish a split of the low income and dislocated worker funding with 50% allocated for career center services ($980,050) and 50% for ITAs ($980,050)    

                               

    D.    Wagner-Peyser and state line item set-asides funding

    To allocate $200,000 from our Wagner-Peyser funds to level fund the two existing Access Points at $100,000 each and to allocate $50,000 from the state career center item for the development of a new Access Point partnership with MassHire Boston

    E.    Dividing WIOA funding between the two career centers

    To approve a 53/47 split between MassHire Downtown Boston Career Center and MassHire Boston Career Center for all core funding (see Table 5, FY 2022 revenue distribution memo)

    IV.    WIOA Youth: FY22 re-funding and FY23 Strategic Planning: Michael O’Neill

    Vote:    To fund current WIOA Youth providers for FY 2022 with a 30.6% increase over FY 2021 levels, with the exception of EDCO/Brighton to be funded at its reduced funding request – with guidance that the increase in funding be focused on student stipends to support increased retention and completion. 

    V.    Sector updates



    VI.    2021 Summer Jobs Preview

Back to top