Workday Foundation, JFF, Opportunity@Work, SkillUp Coalition Launch Bay Area Opportunity Onramps to Help 5,000 Workers Without College Degrees Restart Their Careers
Four organizations addressing workforce development announced Bay Area Opportunity Onramps, a new collaborative that aims to place 5,000 workers from the Bay Area in full-time, middle-wage jobs over the next three years. The initiative seeks to engage employers and training providers across the Bay Area as partners to help people recovering from the past year’s economic fallout.
Led by JFF, Opportunity@Work, and the SkillUp Coalition, with seed support from the Workday Foundation, and on-the-ground support from JVS, Bay Area Opportunity Onramps offers a new approach for jointly addressing the needs of employers, jobseekers, and training providers. The unique initiative aims to create new pathways to economic mobility for workers who are Skilled Through Alternative Routes, known as “STARs,” rather than through a four-year college degree.
HR Technology News: Boardable Enhances Video Conferencing Capabilities Through Spotlight
The Bay Area is home to 1.1 million STARs, among whom are the majority of Black and Hispanic workers, essential workers, and veterans. Many have been displaced during the COVID-19 crisis. STARs have developed valuable, in-demand skills through community college, workforce training, bootcamps, certificate programs, military service, or on-the-job learning, but are often screened out when employers require a four-year degree. Employers that join Bay Area Opportunity Onramps will gain access to Stellarworx, Opportunity@Work’s online talent platform, which leverages Workday’s skill cloud. Stellarworx helps employers find, vet, and hire local STARs who meet their need for skilled talent and whose employment is essential to achieving an equitable economic recovery.
Bay Area Opportunity Onramps is modeled after a similar program at Workday, a leader in enterprise cloud applications for finance and human resources. “Providing economic mobility for all, particularly people from under-resourced communities, is more important than ever in today’s changing world of work,” said Carrie Varoquiers, vice president of Global Impact & Employee Life at Workday, and president of the Workday Foundation. “At Workday, Opportunity Onramps®️ has catalyzed a movement, and to keep this momentum going, we’re calling on employers from across the Bay Area to join forces to help change the way we as organizations hire. Together, we can work to close the opportunity gap.”
Bay Area Opportunity Onramps offers an equitable solution to meet today’s hiring demand in the region. “As Bay Area companies seek to diversify their talent, they will find a solution in the 1.1 million Bay Area STARs. STARs represent a massive and diverse talent pool, which is why we created the Stellarworx platform to connect them to companies,” said Byron Auguste, the CEO of Opportunity@Work. “According to our research, 23,000 Bay Area STARs in retail sales roles have transferable skills for tech sales positions. Low-wage work is often falsely equated with ‘low skill,’ and the lack of a degree is wrongly presumed to reflect a lack of skills.”
HR Technology News: Dartmouth College Deploys AI to Offer Students and Faculties with Real-time Personalization
“What really sets this Bay Area collaboration apart from other job training and placement programs is the coalition’s unique partnerships,” said Maria Flynn, president and CEO of JFF and a SkillUp Coalition board member. “The coalition’s diverse partners, innovative tech platforms, training providers, and community leaders like JVS, with deep connections throughout the region, provide workers with a unique, end-to-end experience where they can connect to quality training and prepare them for quality roles and careers.”
Today SkillUp also launched a website where STARs can explore vetted, trusted upskilling programs to help them secure a foothold in high-growth industries such as technology, health care, business, and the skilled trades.
“Few areas in the country better exemplify the so-called ‘K-shaped recovery’ than the Bay Area. While most knowledge economy workers have remained employed, that hasn’t been the case for far too many workers without college degrees,” said Steven Lee, executive director of the SkillUp Coalition. “SkillUp was founded to help the latter grab on to and achieve the same prosperity those on the upward slope have been experiencing. We’re so grateful to all of our partners, especially the Workday Foundation for their meaningful financial support, for joining in a collective effort to help workers in the Bay Area upskill and access a brighter future.”
HR Technology News: Driving Digital Inclusion to Promote Global Equality