Help Wanted:
Jobs For Chicago’s Youth
Jobs For Youth/Chicago has opportunities for Chicago
teens and young adults
CHICAGO, IL.
(June 3, 2008) – Twenty-four students murdered from
Chicago Public Schools from September 2007- April 2008.
Most of them shot. A predicted summer teen employment rate
of 34.2%, a rate below last year’s historically low employment
numbers. It is a bleak picture for Chicago’s teens. But
there is hope.
Jobs For Youth/Chicago
(JFY) has more job orders than clients. Currently, there
are at least 964 unfilled jobs from 229 different employers.
Since 1979, JFY has made over 25,000 job placements for
Chicago’s low-income 17-24 year olds who have their high
school diploma or GED. Working with over 600 Chicagoland
employers, JFY prepares Chicago’s teens and young adults
with the skills necessary to find a job. From July 1, 2005
– June 30, 2007, Jobs For Youth has trained and placed 1,682
youth making 2,907 job placements with an average wage of
$8.68/hour.
Youth employment
is crucial to the economy and the sustainability of businesses.
In a sample of 137 students that Jobs For Youth placed into
jobs under its TIF (tax-increment finance district) contract,
JFY’s young men and women had total earnings of $1.75 million
(earnings over five quarters in 2004 and 2005). Jobs For
Youth’s investment into these students was $347,000. Over
$1.4 million was the net investment into Chicago’s economy.
"We know
that a job is the very essence of our free market, whether
you have a GED or PhD," says Robert Barnett, Executive
Director of Jobs For Youth/Chicago.
Jobs For Youth
does not provide summer jobs. Instead, it provides full-time
or part-time permanent jobs leading to careers. In fact,
some of our employers are now looking for clients
who will have longevity at their company with opportunities
for advancement. JFY has job orders from a variety of industries
including: financial/banking, healthcare, retail, transportation,
warehouse and logistics, and hospitality.
As a recent study
released by the Center for Labor Market Studies from Northeastern
University points out, younger teens and adults (16-24),
males, Black and Hispanic youth, and low-income youth are
more at-risk of joblessness this coming summer. In FY07,
over 92% of Jobs For Youth’s students were African-American
and close to 6% were Hispanic.
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. Chicagoans don’t have to look
overseas to help someone in poverty, someone who regularly
sees bullets in his own neighborhood, someone who has to
choose between eating breakfast and having money to get
to work or school and someone who is seen as the exception
when he attends 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 25,000 job placement to help Chicago’s deserving
youth enter the workforce. More information is available
at www.jfychicago.org,
including a short video about JFY programs and services.
# # #