Youth Training
and Employment Program Lessens
Burden for Chicago Tax-payers
CHICAGO, IL.
(August 17, 2009) – Chicago's youths may be facing greater
employment challenges in the fall when legislature reconvenes
to votes on raising taxes. Jobs For Youth, a non-profit
that averages over 1,000 job placements for Chicago youths
(ages 17 to 24) from low-income families every year, may
be losing funding. This potential cut in funding comes at
a time when unemployment rates are escalating, especially
among African American and Hispanic youths.
The
unemployment rate in the Chicago metropolitan area rose
to 11.3 percent in June, up from 6.9 percent last year,
according to the Illinois Department of Employment Security.
This is the highest level the city has seen since July 1983.
The
economic benefit of having employed youth versus having
a youth in jail is staggering. It costs roughly $25,000
a year to house one inmate at a prison in Illinois versus
the $2,500 it costs Jobs For Youth to train one youth with
job-readiness skills, place the client and provide two years
of follow-up.
"When
services are cut, youths are forced to the streets,"
said (insert JFY representative). "Jobs For Youth provides
an alternative to the bleak statistics for Chicago's teens.
It is an alternative to the streets where gun violence is
making the news and opportunity for success seems an unreachable
dream for some."
Meet
Jasper Robinson, a Chicago Youth Who Turned His Life Around
Twenty-two year old Robinson is a recent Jobs For Youth
graduate with a felony on his record. At nineteen, Robinson
was convicted of possession and served eight months in Cook
County Jail and four months of Boot Camp. "I made the
biggest mistake of my life," Robinson said.
Robinson
did not graduate high school due to numerous absences helping
his mother financially and emotionally. At the time, his
step-father was sentenced to twenty years in prison for
selling drugs, and Robinson needed to support his mother
and younger brother. Upon completing his senior year but
not graduating, Robinson turned to selling drugs and the
day before being sent to Boot Camp, Robinson's eighth grade
brother was beaten to death.
"It
was unimaginable. I can finally talk about it. My life is
what drives me now. I want better for myself and my mom,"
Robinson said.
After
being incarcerated, Robinson received his GED and enrolled
in Harold Washington College, where he is currently pursuing
his associates in Liberal Arts. It is at Harold Washington
where Robinson discovered Jobs For Youth.
"Jobs
For Youth sharpened my skills, and I learned so much. The
resources are amazing. Everything is free," Robinson
says.
After
completing Jobs For Youth's eight-day pre-employment/ job-readiness
workshop, Robinson went on further and took advantage of
one of Jobs For Youth's special programs, Customer Service
Training. Robinson is now nationally certified with a National
Professional Certification in Customer Service. Two days
later, Robinson was hired as an Executive Assistant at Richmond
Group, a marketing and promotions company. Robinson hopes
to one day be a criminal defense attorney and eventually,
a high school history teacher.
It
is youth like Jasper that benefit from community programs
like Jobs For Youth and make the services crucial to the
economic health of Chicago. Jobs For Youth brings hope to
Chicagoans experiencing poverty first-hand, youths who regularly
see bullets in their own neighborhood, youths who have to
choose between eating breakfast and having money to get
to work or school and youths who are seen as the exception
when attending school. It is places like Jobs For Youth
that provide opportunity. Like JFY's tagline says - A LIFE.
A JOB. A FUTURE.
About Jobs
For Youth/Chicago, Inc.
Jobs For Youth/
Chicago, Inc. (JFY) helps young men and women from low-income
families become a part of the economic mainstream; and,
in the process, provides the business community with motivated
job-ready workers. JFY offers pre-employment training, GED
preparation and job placement services to youth that are
between the ages of 17 and 24. Established in 1979, JFY
has made over 26,000 job placements and had 964 students
receive their GED (since 1987). More information is available
at www.jfychicago.org,
including a short video about JFY programs and services.
# # #