Archive for » May 1st, 2012«

New Lawyers in New York to Be Required to Do Some Work Free

The approximately 10,000 lawyers who join the New York State Bar each year will each have to perform 50 hours of pro bono work, said the judge, Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman. He said the move was intended to provide about a half-million hours of legal services to those with urgent, noncriminal legal problems like foreclosure and domestic violence.

The need has exploded in recent years as the economic crisis delivered what legal advocates call a “triple whammy”: more people struggling financially; more people facing foreclosures, evictions and credit and employment problems that could push them into long-term poverty; and a plunge in state and federal funding for legal services.

New York is already a national leader in trying to address that “justice gap,” and as a magnet for top law schools across the country, its bar requirements could help spur the expansion of pro bono work across the country, said Don Saunders, a vice president at the National Legal Aid and Defender Association in Washington, who called Judge Lippman’s work to increase funding for legal services “groundbreaking.”

Pro bono work would be defined as anything from representing poor people in civil court to legal work for a nonprofit organization or government agency, the judge said. Because detailed regulations have yet to be drafted, it is unclear whether lawyers moving to New York in the middle of their careers will be affected by the requirements. But Judge Lippman made it clear that the aim was to further integrate pro bono work into the practice and teaching of law.

“The legal profession should not be seen as argumentative, narrow or avaricious,” he said in Albany at one of the many Law Day ceremonies held around the country to celebrate the rule of law, “but rather one that is defined by the pursuit of justice and the desire to assist our fellow man.” 


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Job Fair set for May 8 in Morristown

At a time when employment is in high demand and hard to come by one of New Jersey’s leading human services providers, New Jersey MENTOR, is proud to announce it will create more than 200 new jobs by July 1, 2012. The company anticipates hiring will continue at a similar pace for three to six months as the state of New Jersey begins to move individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities from state developmental centers and out-of-state placements and into community-based settings across the Garden state.

Prospective employees are invited to learn more about the direct support professional (DSP) positions available at one of three job fairs being held throughout May in Morristown, Cherry Hill and Millville.

New Jersey MENTOR has been a trusted partner of the state of New Jersey for more than 20 years, providing an array of residential and community-based programs to support individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities and youth with emotional and behavioral challenges. As a partner of The MENTOR Network, a national network of local human services providers, employees and those served by the company benefit from their ability to leverage the national structure to develop new programs to meet the urgent needs of New Jersey’s residents of all abilities.

“After college, I began my career in human services working as a direct service professional,” said Valery Bailey, Executive Director of New Jersey MENTOR. “Working as a DSP I knew I was making a difference in people’s lives and it propelled my career to where I am today, overseeing the operations of New Jersey MENTOR. I am truly excited to have the opportunity to give so many people the start I had, and create jobs at a time when they are needed in our state.”

New Jersey MENTOR is looking for caring professionals to support the needs of New Jersey’s adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Direct service professionals want to make a difference in their community while gaining valuable experience in a job offering flexible hours and competitive wages. They must be 18 years or older, have a high school diploma or equivalent, and hold a valid driver’s license.

“We would not be able to provide the level of services and supports we do without the continued dedication of our invaluable employees,” Bailey continued. “Our DSP staff is at the core of what we do. We are thrilled to welcome new members to our passionate and talented team of health and human services professionals.”

Committed to providing community-based services and supports, including those individuals currently served in state-run facilities and out-of-state placements, New Jersey MENTOR will continue the hiring process throughout the summer and fall months. Interested individuals are encouraged to apply online at www.jobs.thementornetwork.com/dspnj and join New Jersey MENTOR at one of three job fairs – Tuesday, May 8 at the Hyatt Morristown, Tuesday, May 15 at the Crowne Plaza Cherry Hill or Tuesday, May 22 at the Fairfield Inn and Suites Millville.

New Jersey MENTOR Job Fairs

Tuesday, May 8th 10am-4pm

Hyatt Morristown

3 Headquarters Plaza

Morristown, NJ 07960

 

Tuesday, May 15th, 10am-4pm

Crowne Plaza Cherry Hill

2349 West Marlton Pike

Cherry Hill, NJ 08002

 

Tuesday, May 22nd, 10am-4pm

Fairfield Inn Suites

301 Bluebird Lane

Millville, NJ 08332

 


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Economix: Bruce Bartlett: Taxes and Employment

DESCRIPTION

Bruce Bartlett held senior policy roles in the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations and served on the staffs of Representatives Jack Kemp and Ron Paul. He is the author of “The Benefit and the Burden: Tax Reform – Why We Need It and What It Will Take.”

Since the beginning of the economic crisis, Republicans have insisted that tax cuts and only tax cuts are the appropriate medicine. They almost never explain how, exactly, this would reduce unemployment other than to say it worked for Ronald Reagan in the 1980s.

Today’s Economist

Perspectives from expert contributors.

If one were to take the Republican argument seriously, the linkage would have to be via the tax wedge. This is the principal means by which the government affects employment, according to the Republican economist Arthur Laffer. The tax wedge is the difference between the cost to an employer of employing a worker and the after-tax reward that the employee receives.

When taxes go up, the tax wedge gets larger, costing employers more to hire workers at a given after-tax wage. Therefore, it is theoretically possible that a tax cut could increase employment by reducing the tax wedge and allowing employers to hire workers at a lower cost without reducing their after-tax wages.

This is a perfectly reasonable theory. There undoubtedly have been times when the tax wedge was increasing because of bracket creep or legislated increases in payroll taxes that may have had a negative effect on hiring. Whether this is the case now, as Republicans assert, is a question for analysis.

One problem with the tax-wedge theory is that taxes are at a historical low as a share of the gross domestic product. According to the Congressional Budget Office, federal revenues will be 15.8 percent of G.D.P. this year. The postwar average is about 18.5 percent, and taxes averaged 18.2 percent during the Reagan administration; indeed, at their lowest point in 1984, federal revenues were 1.5 percent of G.D.P. higher than they are now.

Another problem is that there hasn’t been a significant tax increase affecting average working people since 1983, when Reagan raised the payroll tax rate to 15.3 percent from 13.4 percent (employer plus employee). Contrary to popular belief among Republicans, there have been no significant tax increases during the Obama administration. In fact, there have been tax cuts aimed directly at workers.

The making-work-pay tax credit consumed some 40 percent of the budgetary cost of the 2009 stimulus package and reduced taxes for every person or household with a positive income-tax liability and an income below $75,000 in 2009 and 2010. In 2011 and 2012, the making-work-pay credit was replaced by a temporary 2 percent cut in the payroll tax rate, reducing taxes for every worker.

The reason that unemployment is high clearly has nothing to do with taxes. Consequently, there is no reason to think that reducing taxes further will do anything to raise employment by reducing the tax wedge.

Additional evidence on this point comes from a new study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on taxes paid by average workers in its 34 member countries. The data below are for a single worker without children.

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development

As one can see, the United States is a low-tax country with a total tax wedge of 29.5 percent. Three-fourths of O.E.C.D. countries have a larger tax wedge on average workers.

I have also included the latest data on the percentage of workers employed as a share of the working-age population. I think this is a better measure of the health of the labor market than the unemployment rate, which goes up and down for a variety of reasons unconnected to taxes.

Here, too, there is little evidence that taxes affect employment one way or another. Almost half of the countries with a bigger tax wedge employ a larger percentage of their working-age populations than the United States does, and more than half of those with a smaller tax wedge have lower employment ratios.

One argument Republicans could make in response is that the tax system has been in flux for the last 11 years. The Bush tax cuts were all set to expire at the end of 2010 and then were extended at the last minute for two additional years. The making-work-pay credit and subsequent payroll tax cut were also enacted temporarily.

One might reasonably conclude that businesses are unlikely to react to temporary tax changes and need some idea of the long-term tax environment to really affect their hiring actions.

But Republicans designed their tax cuts to be temporary in the first place; they rejected the idea of a bipartisan permanent tax cut because that would have required compromising with Democrats.

The latest Republican tax cut proposal, to reduce taxes for all businesses with fewer than 500 employees, no matter how profitable or big in other respects, would be in effect for only one year.

This is a key reason that the Republicans’ own committee report (see Page 20) said the legislation would have a negligible effect on employment.

There is simply no evidence that cutting taxes at the present time will do anything to raise employment.


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The Best Cities For Jobs

The Best Big Cities For Jobssee photosGetty Images North America

Click for full photo gallery: The Best Big Cities For Jobs

By Joel Kotkin and Michael Shires

Throughout the brutal recession, one metropolitan area floated serenely above the carnage: Washington, D.C.  Buoyed by government spending, the local economy expanded 17% from 2007 to 2012. But for the first time in four years, the capital region has fallen out of the top 15 big cities in our annual survey of the best places for jobs, dropping to 16th place from fifth last year.

It’s a symptom of a significant and welcome shift in the weak U.S. economic recovery:  employment growth has moved away from the public sector to private businesses. In 2011, for the first time since before the recession, growth in private-sector employment outstripped the public sector. More than half (231) of the 398 metro areas we surveyed for our annual study of employment trends registered declines in government jobs, with public-sector employment dropping 0.9 percent overall. Meanwhile, private-sector employment expanded 1.4 percent.

Instead of government, the big drivers of growth now appear to be three basic sectors: energy, technology and, most welcome all, manufacturing. Energy-rich Texas cities dominate our list — the state has added some 200,000 generally high-paying oil and gas jobs over the past decade — but Texas is also leading in industrial job growth, technology and services. In first place in our ranking of the 65 largest metropolitan areas is Austin, which has logged strong growth in manufacturing,  technology-related employment and business services. Houston places second, Fort Worth fourth, and Dallas-Plano-Irving sixth. Another energy capital, Oklahoma City, ranks 10th, while resurgent New Orleans-Metairie places 13th among the largest metro areas.

To determine the best cities for jobs, we ranked all 398 current metropolitan statistical areas based on employment data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics covering November 2000 through January 2012. Rankings are based on recent growth trends, mid-term growth, long-term growth and the region’s momentum. (Click here for a detailed description of our methodology.) We also broke down rankings by size — small, medium and large — since regional economies differ markedly due to their scale.

The Best Big Cities For Jobs

The Best Mid-Size Cities For Jobs

The Best Small Cities For Jobs

The strong growth of the energy sector, and Texas, is even more evident in our overall ranking, which includes many small and medium-sized metropolitan areas. The top 10 fastest growers overall include such energy-centric places as No. 1 Odessa, Texas; second-place Midland, Texas;  Lafayette, La. (fourth place); Corpus Christi, Texas (sixth), San Angelo, Texas (seventh); and Casper, Wyo. (10th).

The shift from public to private can be seen in the falling rankings of many of the most government-dependent economies. Outside of Washington, D.C. (where federal employment actually has continued to grow), Bethesda-Rockville-Frederick, Md., took an even more dramatic tumble in our big city table,  dropping 34 places to No. 46.There were sizable relative declines in the rankings of many state capitals such as Springfield, Ill. and Madison, Wisc. College towns, which had previously done well in the face of the recession, have also moved sharply lower in our rankings, due to a combination of state budget cuts and better performance elsewhere. College Station, Texas, plummeted from fourth last year on our overall list to 167th; Fairbanks, Alaska, slid from 15th place to 165th, Corvallis, Ore., tumbled from 40th place to 203rd place; and Cedar Rapids, Iowa, dropped from 81st to 246th.

Budget constraints have also hurt military towns, which previously had been largely immune to the recession. Last year’s overall No. 1, Killeen-Ft. Hood, Texas, slid to 43rd place; Jacksonville, N.C., home to Camp Lejeune, fell to 102nd from 19th last year; and Lawton, Okla., home to Fort Sill, slipped to 274th from  No. 20 last year.


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Conservative cuts put half of Statscan jobs at risk

Nearly half of the roughly 5,000 people working at Statistics Canada are being warned that their jobs are at risk, suggesting deep cuts are in store for one of the country’s most trusted sources of information.

The notices to staff that their employment could be affected by cuts are the second major blow to the organization in recent years, after the Conservative government’s 2010 decision to replace the mandatory long-form census with a voluntary one. Canada’s chief statistician resigned in protest over the change.

Everyone from the Bank of Canada to academics, economists, marketers, urban planners and public policy researchers use Statistics Canada surveys.

The agency has a shortfall of nearly 10 per cent due to a mix of budget cuts and a plunge in revenue as other federal departments, such as Human Resources and Transport Canada for which it does surveys, face cuts themselves.

“There is no doubt that the cuts can’t be absorbed without reducing the amount of information Statistics Canada produces,” said Michael Veall, president of the Canadian Economics Association and an economics professor at McMaster University.

Frances Woolley, an economics professor at Carleton University, said she’s concerned data collection and processing might be contracted out.

“The great strength of StatCan analysis is that it is non-political and non-partisan – it’s analysis that people can trust,” she said.

The more than 2,300 notices at Statistics Canada were part of another big wave of internal cuts announced in at least 10 departments, affecting nearly 7,000 government employees under three major unions.

While some public servants were laid off on Monday, most who receive notices will likely remain in the public service once various staffing changes play out.

The March 29 budget indicated that when the cost cutting over the next two years is complete, the government expects to have reduced federal positions by 19,200 and to be saving $5.2-billion a year.

Parks Canada also signalled deep cuts to staff on Monday.

Union leaders said Canadians will see shorter seasons at national parks and historic sites as a result.

The Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC) – the largest union of federal public servants – said 1,689 PSAC members at Parks Canada received notices and staff were told that 638 positions will be eliminated.

According to the union, Parks Canada workers whose jobs could be affected include scientists, engineers, technicians, mechanics, carpenters and program managers. Seasonal workers are being told they will work for shorter periods and hours will be reduced.

-At Human Resources and Skills Development Canada, 908 PSAC members received notices, including in areas aimed at helping aboriginals and people with disabilities find jobs. The union said the cuts to workforce programs contradict the government’s claims it is addressing Canada’s labour skills shortages.

-At Transport Canada, union leaders say airport and marine security will be sacrificed as 180 PSAC members received notices. The union said notices were given on Monday to 11 air security inspectors whose work is “double checking” airport security. A Transport Canada official said the cuts are “minor” and will have “no impact” on safety.

-The department of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development confirmed it will eliminate 480 positions over the next two years.

- At Library and Archives Canada, 235 PSAC members received notices their jobs could be affected, and 105 positions are expected to be eliminated. Notices also went to 69 employees with the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC).

“These are people that document and archive our history, our heritage and to keep it for future generations. I guess that’s not important,” PIPSC president Gary Corbett said sarcastically.

At Correctional Services Canada, 17 inmate rights and redress workers received notices. John Edmunds of the Union of Solicitor General Employees warned that prisons become more dangerous when prisoners feel their concerns are not heard.

A spokesperson for Public Safety Minister Vic Toews said an internal review found room to streamline the grievance process. The department is also aiming to better manage “frivolous” grievances from inmates.


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Target sets job fair to hire 200 workers for new store in Myrtle Beach area

“This is where we hire the bulk of our team members,” she said.

Jobseekers should fill out an application online at www.target.com/careers or at one of the kiosks in Target stores – Target has one other area location off Seaboard Street in Myrtle Beach.

The store’s managers will schedule interviews, to be conducted during the job fair, in advance with candidates who have already applied, though others can show up at the job fair and talk to Target leaders, Mike said, declining to give pay ranges for the available positions.

“We’d really encourage them to [fill out an application] beforehand,” she said.

Jobseekers who attend the job fair should bring a valid identification such as a driver’s license, Mike said.

The 135,000-square-foot Target is the anchor of the new SayeBrook Town Center, which also will have a Marshalls and a Petco. The Petco is set to open Sept. 1, said Steve Alger with The Jackson Cos., which is developing SayeBrook.

Officials are recruiting other tenants for the commercial center, including clothing stores, restaurants, a coffee shop, service providers such as a cell phone operator and a massage provider that is part of a national chain, though Alger declined to give specific names of potential tenants. SayeBrook also will have offices for doctors, attorneys and others, Alger said.

The commercial square, which recently added a fountain, is the first piece of the 700-acre SayeBrook development, which is designed as a walkable development with houses, townhouses, retailers with offices on the second floor and the commercial hub.

There’s no timetable to start work on the housing in the development, as officials are waiting for the battered real estate market to recover, Alger said.


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Economix Blog: Bruce Bartlett: Taxes and Employment

DESCRIPTION

Bruce Bartlett held senior policy roles in the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations and served on the staffs of Representatives Jack Kemp and Ron Paul. He is the author of “The Benefit and the Burden: Tax Reform – Why We Need It and What It Will Take.”

Since the beginning of the economic crisis, Republicans have insisted that tax cuts and only tax cuts are the appropriate medicine. They almost never explain how, exactly, this would reduce unemployment other than to say it worked for Ronald Reagan in the 1980s.

Today’s Economist

Perspectives from expert contributors.

If one were to take the Republican argument seriously, the linkage would have to be via the tax wedge. This is the principal means by which the government affects employment, according to the Republican economist Arthur Laffer. The tax wedge is the difference between the cost to an employer of employing a worker and the after-tax reward that the employee receives.

When taxes go up, the tax wedge gets larger, costing employers more to hire workers at a given after-tax wage. Therefore, it is theoretically possible that a tax cut could increase employment by reducing the tax wedge and allowing employers to hire workers at a lower cost without reducing their after-tax wages.

This is a perfectly reasonable theory. There undoubtedly have been times when the tax wedge was increasing because of bracket creep or legislated increases in payroll taxes that may have had a negative effect on hiring. Whether this is the case now, as Republicans assert, is a question for analysis.

One problem with the tax-wedge theory is that taxes are at a historical low as a share of the gross domestic product. According to the Congressional Budget Office, federal revenues will be 15.8 percent of G.D.P. this year. The postwar average is about 18.5 percent, and taxes averaged 18.2 percent during the Reagan administration; indeed, at their lowest point in 1984, federal revenues were 1.5 percent of G.D.P. higher than they are now.

Another problem is that there hasn’t been a significant tax increase affecting average working people since 1983, when Reagan raised the payroll tax rate to 15.3 percent from 13.4 percent (employer plus employee). Contrary to popular belief among Republicans, there have been no significant tax increases during the Obama administration. In fact, there have been tax cuts aimed directly at workers.

The making-work-pay tax credit consumed some 40 percent of the budgetary cost of the 2009 stimulus package and reduced taxes for every person or household with a positive income-tax liability and an income below $75,000 in 2009 and 2010. In 2011 and 2012, the making-work-pay credit was replaced by a temporary 2 percent cut in the payroll tax rate, reducing taxes for every worker.

The reason that unemployment is high clearly has nothing to do with taxes. Consequently, there is no reason to think that reducing taxes further will do anything to raise employment by reducing the tax wedge.

Additional evidence on this point comes from a new study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on taxes paid by average workers in its 34 member countries. The data below are for a single worker without children.

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development

As one can see, the United States is a low-tax country with a total tax wedge of 29.5 percent. Three-fourths of O.E.C.D. countries have a larger tax wedge on average workers.

I have also included the latest data on the percentage of workers employed as a share of the working-age population. I think this is a better measure of the health of the labor market than the unemployment rate, which goes up and down for a variety of reasons unconnected to taxes.

Here, too, there is little evidence that taxes affect employment one way or another. Almost half of the countries with a bigger tax wedge employ a larger percentage of their working-age populations than the United States does, and more than half of those with a smaller tax wedge have lower employment ratios.

One argument Republicans could make in response is that the tax system has been in flux for the last 11 years. The Bush tax cuts were all set to expire at the end of 2010 and then were extended at the last minute for two additional years. The making-work-pay credit and subsequent payroll tax cut were also enacted temporarily.

One might reasonably conclude that businesses are unlikely to react to temporary tax changes and need some idea of the long-term tax environment to really affect their hiring actions.

But Republicans designed their tax cuts to be temporary in the first place; they rejected the idea of a bipartisan permanent tax cut because that would have required compromising with Democrats.

The latest Republican tax cut proposal, to reduce taxes for all businesses with fewer than 500 employees, no matter how profitable or big in other respects, would be in effect for only one year.

This is a key reason that the Republicans’ own committee report (see Page 20) said the legislation would have a negligible effect on employment.

There is simply no evidence that cutting taxes at the present time will do anything to raise employment.


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Blagojevich’s summer jobs program called ‘disaster’

A 2008 summer youth jobs program launched by then-Gov. Rod Blagojevich using money set aside for transportation turned into “a disaster” that instead saw teens doing community organizing and helping on golf courses, according to a state watchdog report released Monday.

The misspent money became the subject of a federal investigation, and the Illinois Department of Transportation is trying to recoup some of the funds.

The review by the office of the executive inspector general concluded that the $7 million program in which Blagojevich promised to hire up to 10,000 youths for eight-week jobs ended up costing $7.8 million and led to jobs for only 3,500 youths.

The report said transportation officials conducted an audit of the jobs program, and findings were referred to Attorney General Lisa Madigan. In December 2010, Madigan’s office “responded to the referral stating that the matter was the subject of an active federal investigation” and would not take action, the report said.

Randall Sanborn, a spokesman forU.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, had no comment Monday when asked if the investigation was ongoing. Fitzgerald’s office successfully prosecuted Blagojevich on federal corruption-related crimes, and the former governor is serving a 14-year term in a Colorado prison.

The report said five Chicago nonprofit social service agencies that deal with minority, ethnic and disadvantaged youths administered the program for more than 100 service providers, including neighborhood churches.

The work was supposed to be transportation-related because the money came from the state’s road construction fund. But the audit of activity work sheets found several teens participating in non-transportation-related work, including “community organizing,” “moving furniture,” “help cart attendants at golf course” and “clean out ball washer.”

State transportation officials said they have tried to recoup more than $643,000 in overpayments to the five agencies that acted as financial administrators: Chicago Area Project, Westside Health Authority, Alternative School Network, Latin Women in Action and Black United Fund.

The Black United Fund repaid $170,000 — what it earned in administrative fees — while the four other nonprofit fiscal agents are disputing the bill, a transportation spokesman said.

Morris Reed, CEO of the Westside Health Authority, said the Department of Human Services ran the program on behalf of the transportation agency and promised a flat administrative fee. Reed contended that after payments went out to youth workers and service providers, IDOT later sought to change the terms of the contracts.

“At the end of the day, they’re trying to hold community agencies responsible,” Reed said. “IDOT provided the funds. They really should be going after DHS.”

Reed said he was not familiar with a federal investigation and had not been contacted by agents.

Blagojevich cobbled together the program out of road-fund dollars after lawmakers rejected his plans for a massive public works program incorporating a youth jobs effort.

Though transportation officials had questioned making a second round of payments because of “red flags” about the jobs workers had performed, one unidentified agency official said “there was considerable pressure from … (Blagojevich’s office) to just keep this program going,” the report said.

An unidentified top transportation official interviewed by the state executive inspector general’s office was quoted as calling the program “a disaster” and “thrown together at the last minute.”

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Feds probed IDOT spending on youth jobs program, audit reveals – Chicago Sun

BY ANDREW MALONEY
apmaloney@suntimes.com
Sun-Times Springfield Bureau

April 30, 2012 3:44PM




Updated: April 30, 2012 5:04PM

SPRINGFIELD — The state’s transportation department was being investigated by the feds for spending over $7 million on a youth employment initiative created by former Gov. Rod Blagojevich, a state audit released Monday said.

Calling the program “ill-conceived and mismanaged,” the report from the Office of the Executive Inspector General knocked the Illinois Department of Transportation for using road money to pay for odd-jobs done by student workers, and indicated that a federal investigation into the matter was active as of December 2010.

The inspector general’s office also criticized the department for authorizing millions in payments after signs of mismanagement became apparent and failing to ensure that youth workers were performing transportation-related work, as stipulated by agency agreements and state law.

The transportation department itself said it overpaid for the work by over $643,000, and is seeking reimbursement from the non-profit organizations it paid to hire the workers and administer the program.

“We do believe that the intentions of the program were good,” said Guy Tridgell, a spokesman for the transportation department. He added, however, that it “was probably not a good idea” to make the transportation department responsible for funding the program while the Department of Human Services selected which non-profits to hire.

Under the program, workers between the ages of 13 and 22 were brought on to perform tasks focusing on community service, highway beautification and job training. The program began in July 2008 and ran for eight weeks, and an estimated 2,847 youth workers were paid for their services.

However, in need of a cash infusion before the program started, the governor’s office recruited the transportation department to help with payments, and pressured the department to keep paying from the fund designated for transportation-related work only.

The report found that the tasks were frequently vague or else unrelated to transportation.


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Job fair draws hiring groups

1:00 AM

Job fair draws hiring groups

Mike Lange

BY MIKE LANGE

WHO’S HIRING

Employers and staffing agencies signed up to attend the 5th Annual Pittsfield Regional Job Fair as of last Friday include ADECCO, Allies Inc., Argo Marketing Group, Assistance Plus, @Work Personnel Services, Bonney Staffing Center, Care and Comfort, Charlotte White Center, Cianbro, Damsel in Defense, Kelly Services, Manpower, MAS Homecare of Maine, Merrymeeting Behavioral, Maine Staffing Group Inc., Maine State Police, Nikken Inc., Redington Fairview General Hospital, Reed Reed, Sebasticook Family Doctors, Sebasticook Valley Health, Scentsy/Velata, SKILLS Inc., Spectrum Generations — Bridges Home Care, U.S. Border Patrol, T-Mobile, Time Warner Cable and Visalus Sciences.

Correspondent

PITTSFIELD — While the job market remains pretty tight, there are still companies in central Maine hiring today. The trick is to find them and convince them that you’ve got the skills they’re looking for.

For job-seekers and employers looking to fill openings, the 5th Annual Pittsfield Regional Job Fair is expected to draw a huge gathering on Wednesday, May 9, at Warsaw Middle School from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m.

People who are out of work or want to change careers will have an opportunity to meet representatives of companies and agencies in an informal setting. In addition, there are free workshops on business start-up resources, nontraditional jobs for women, and using social media in a job search.

The fair is a cooperative effort of the town of Pittsfield, the Somerset-Kennebec Transition Team, Employment Times/MyJobWave.com and the Kennebec Valley Community Action Program.

Somerset-Kennebec Transition Team Project Director Dana Hamilton said this will her third fair. She said the first two were well attended.

“Word is getting out that it’s one of the larger job fairs in the area,” Hamilton said. “Not only is it bringing in a lot of folks who are job hunting, but a lot of employers who are hiring.”

“Word is getting out that it’s one of the larger job fairs in the area,” Hamilton said. “Not only is it bringing in a lot of folks who are job hunting, but a lot of employers who are hiring.”

Even the U.S. Border Patrol will have a booth at the fair for the second consecutive year, thanks to Hamilton’s recruiting efforts.

“We had a mini-job fair in Jackman last year, so I approached the Border Patrol about participating there and in Pittsfield. I’m delighted they’re coming back,” Hamilton said.

Pittsfield Town Manager Kathryn Ruth said the average attendance has been 300 to 500 job hunters and 35 to 40 employers.

“We have a large offering of positions available this year, so the attendance will be high,” Ruth said. “While this saves the employers time and money, it also allows the interested job seeker to actually interact with employers.”

Hamilton also had some advice for prospective job-seekers: Be prepared.

“Although the fair is a casual atmosphere, people still need show up with an attitude that they want to work,” she said. “You don’t have to dress up in a three-piece suit, but you should be neat and professional. Also, bring a résumé with you. Even some homemade business cards with your contact information will help.”

 

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