Aim Hire Texas prepares Texans for work needs
PROTECTED CONTENT
If you’re a current subscriber, log in below. If you would like to subscribe, please click the subscribe tab above.
Username and Password Help
Please enter your email and we will send your username and password to you.
Texans for work needs
DALLAS— A new statewide workforce initiative, Aim Hire Texas, will help close gaps preventing many Texans from finding good, high-paying jobs that Texas employers seek to fill, thereby equitably expanding economic opportunities both today and for future generations, organizers announced last week.
The effort is a collaboration between Texas 2036 — a data-driven nonprofit working to ensure that Texas remains the best place to live and work through its bicentennial and beyond — and the Commit Partnership, which will co-chair the effort and help facilitate policy advocacy and the implementation of effective education and workforce data-driven practices. They are joined by a diverse group of founding partners including the Dallas Regional Chamber, Greater Houston Partnership, Texas Association of Community Colleges, Texas Rural Funders and United Ways of Texas.
Aim Hire Texas (AHT) will create a statewide hub of private data and analysis, leveraging Texas 2036’s existing resources and analytics to maintain a near-real-time analysis of the state’s workforce. It also will work with public- and private-sector officials to share and promote emerging and proven strategies for workforce development, serving as a clearinghouse for information, policy ideas and leadership.
This initiative recognizes that state agencies and educators want to connect with private employers more than ever before. A key priority of Aim Hire Texas will be to identify areas where jobs are open because existing training and education programs need to revise their focus, expand their outreach, or scale up to meet the demand of high-growth fields. With effective recruiting and training, Texas can support a shift in workforce development priorities to produce the skilled workers that Texas employers need.
Aim Hire Texas will seek to support and expand programs that provide skills training from both traditional and new public and private sources, ensuring that Texans who need a 21st century job can find one, and employers can access a growing talent pool to meet their needs.
“Education is among the most important functions this state serves,” said Texas 2036 President and CEO Margaret Spellings, the former U.S. Secretary of Education. “But too little thought and research have gone into whether future generations of Texans will be able to find a job, or whether Texas employers will be able to find home-grown talent in the Lone Star State. Aim Hire Texas was created based on the premise that every Texan should have the opportunity to contribute to our economy, and to do that, Texans need to know what skills the marketplace wants and be connected with Texas employers who want to hire them.”
And it’s not just residents of Texas’s major metropolitan areas who will benefit. Ellen Ray, Chair of Texas Rural Funders and Executive Director of the Still Water Foundation, said efforts like Aim Hire Texas can connect rural residents with opportunities across the state and in their communities. “Rural communities are vital to Texas’ economic health, and the rural education-to-workforce pipeline is a critical part of Texas’ workforce conversation,” Ray said.