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Government of Canada invests in skills training to help get Canadians back to work

Share this article Share this article GATINEAU, QC, May 18, 2021 /CNW/ - The COVID-19 pandemic has had a tremendous impact on Canadian workers with many facing job losses and the need to upgrade or learn new skills to re-join the workforce. The Government of Canada has been there for workers and their families throughout the pandemic and continues to make ground-breaking investments to create jobs and help businesses come roaring back. Making sure that workers can improve or acquire new skills is key to achieving that goal. Today, during a virtual meeting with stakeholders, Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Disability Inclusion, Carla Qualtrough launched Skills for Success, a new skills training program to help Canadians improve their foundational skills so they can find and keep good jobs. The program will provide training to nearly 90,000 Canadians and help get them back to work.

Learning the interactive way: BFAIR opens lab to help students explore careers

NORTH ADAMS — Berkshire Family & Individual Resources is taking a new approach to helping its students transition into employment and research possible career opportunities. The nonprofit that works with people who have developmental disabilities recently opened its Learning Lab at the BFAIR Bottle and Can Redemption Center at 1000 Massachusetts Ave., which BFAIR has owned since 2019 and operated for 12 years. The two-room space, which took a month to renovate, was set up to house all five elements involved in the Massachusetts Rehabilitation Commission s Pre-Employment Training Program in one place for the first time. The Learning Lab is an idea that we came up with to help better serve the students in our program, said Becky McAllister, BFAIR s director of employment services.

Ithaca foundation boosts job seekers connectivity during COVID-19

– By Evan Williams A grant from the J.M. McDonald Foundation has been enabling Challenge Workforce Solutions to deliver remote job readiness services to participants who are staying at home during the COVID-19 pandemic. Founded in 1968 in Ithaca, New York, Challenge is dedicated to creating pathways to employment for people with disabilities and other barriers. J.M. McDonald was a retail executive and dairy cattle breeder who settled in Cortland, New York in the 1920s. Shortly before his death in 1956, he established a trust that continues to award grants to various charitable causes primarily in Upstate New York. The foundation’s grant to Challenge was used to purchase tablets and hotspots for job seekers without reliable, dedicated internet access at their residence. Challenge was able to fulfill all requests for hardware, ensuring full involvement in valuable programming throughout all the phases of lockdown.

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