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JobSight Helping WestCare Residents Get Back in Workforce After
Treatment
By Michael Cornett, EKCEP, Inc.
January 31, 2007
ASHCAMP - Twice each month, nearly 50 residents of the WestCare Kentucky
substance abuse treatment facility in rural Pike County file into a
large classroom on the grounds. They have gathered to see one person-Jim
Stewart, manager of the Pike County JobSight.
Some of the residents are only days from completing the facility's
3-to-4 month residential rehabilitation program and returning home with
a new sense of clarity and sobriety. Those are the people Stewart is
there to work with.
After introducing himself and explaining his services to the entire
group, he gets down to business with the "short-timers" who are seated
together around a small table at the front of the classroom.
Stewart holds one-on-one conversations with each of them, interviewing
the men about businesses in their home areas, their work experience, and
any local employers they would be interested in working for. He takes
copious notes throughout. At each session's end, Stewart promises the
resident he will send information back to him about jobs available in
the community he will return to upon his release.
"My goal is that when they leave WestCare, they'll have a job interview
waiting for them when they get back home," Stewart says. "I develop
individual plans for all of them so they've got ideas on how to get back
to work or into school or training once they go home."
Statistics show higher relapse rates among former substance abusers who
do not re-enter the workforce or training soon after treatment. That
makes delivering job listings, details on educational opportunities, and
encouragement to WestCare residents an important extension of the
JobSight workforce network's mission to find jobs for people and people
for jobs, Stewart says.
"I believe that through this we are getting some good workers who will
do a good job and make money for companies," he says. "These people made
mistakes and are working to correct them, and people who do that
successfully can be some of the most productive workers because they
appreciate the job and realize the importance of doing a good job."
For those reasons, Stewart's biweekly visits to WestCare are a welcome
new component to the program, according to Jenifer Noland, regional vice
president of WestCare Kentucky. The Nevada-based, non-profit WestCare
has treatment centers in seven states and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
"We are pleased to have JobSight visiting our Pike County facility to
provide these important services that will assist our residents in
finding employment once they complete residential treatment," Noland
says. "Having a job is an important factor in leading a clean, drug-free
life."
Stewart says he uses the same approach in helping WestCare residents as
he does with jobseekers who visit the Pike County JobSight workforce
center located in the Pikeville Campus of Big Sandy Community and
Technical College.
"I help the guys get prepared to go to work, and then actually find
someplace for them to go to work," Stewart says. "To do that, I use
JobSight's curriculum that shows them how to put together a good resume
and fill out a job application."
Stewart also guides the men through the JobSight network's JobFit
on-line job matching service. The internet-based JobFit system matches
residents to the precise requirements of a specific job by comparing
profiles of their job skills to profiles of the skills of the
best-performing workers. A close match greatly improves the odds that
they will succeed on the job.
"I'll talk to them about how to do well in a job interview and how to
apply for jobs, and I'll take real applications they have completed back
to the Kentucky Office of Employment and Training," Stewart continues."It's a very comprehensive approach."
After those initial rounds of career counseling, Stewart personally
contacts many employers to lay the groundwork for job interviews for
residents who are nearing the end of their stay. For residents who
prefer to enroll in college or a training program rather than go
directly to work, Stewart contacts officials at local colleges or
vocational schools to check on admissions requirements and financial aid
available.
One of Stewart's WestCare residents is a 20-year-old from Hindman in
Knott County. The young man says he is not sure what his long-term plans
are, but he says he knows he wants to go back to college. He also says
he is only one of many WestCare participants who are particularly
appreciative of JobSight's hands-on approach to helping them work toward
once again becoming productive, law-abiding citizens.
"I think it's wonderful that (Stewart) is coming here and offering his
time to help us," the resident says. "Some people here don't know where
to begin, so it's great that he's here to help us figure out what we're
going to do."
Another resident-a 24-year-old from West Liberty in Morgan County-says
residents are often "blinded to what's going on back at home" on the job
front because of the length of WestCare's treatment program.
"But Jim comes in here and gives us good information about where we can
go back to work, where we stand, and where the companies we want to work
for stand," he says. "When you've been away like this, you lose focus,
but he's in here opening up our eyes and really showing us things that
can help us.
"It gives us hope, and we need that," he says.
Stewart says he tries to balance that sense of hope with some realism,
including instructing residents on ways to answer the tough questions
about their criminal records that will invariably arise in job
interviews.
"We work hard on those answers so they can turn a negative into a
positive,"
Stewart says. "A background check is going to turn everything up, so I
tell them to be upfront about their problems and to not whitewash
things.
"But they do have something positive to say, because they've done
something
about their problems," he says.
Helping people find current job leads, pursue job training, and secure
financial assistance to train for a career are key elements in the
JobSight
network's mission of finding jobs for people and people for jobs. The
Pike
County JobSight is part of the JobSight network of workforce centers
operated in 23 eastern Kentucky counties by the Eastern Kentucky
Concentrated Employment Program, Inc. (EKCEP). At JobSight's "one-stop"
workforce centers, job seekers and employers can access over a dozen
state
and federal employment and training programs and a variety of employer
services, all in a single location.
Before the residents leave WestCare, Stewart tells them to come to the
JobSight if they are unsuccessful in landing the job he helped them
apply
for. At the JobSight, Stewart can help them look into other options,
including exploring ways to train for a new career with support from
federal
Workforce Investment Act (WIA)-funded programs.
"Once they walk out this door, we could lose touch with them," Stewart
says. "But I'll offer the WIA to them, and ask them to come see me at the
JobSight. We keep that invitation open."
Brandi Davis, a counselor at WestCare, says she considers JobSight's
presence at the facility and Stewart's commitment to the residents'
success
invaluable.
"Jim can sometimes help them get their foot in the door in situations
where
they personally couldn't," Davis says. "One of the main components in
living
a sober, drug-free life is getting into something that's positive, and
Jim
being here is helping us do that for our residents."
Stewart says JobSight plans to continue its partnership with WestCare
into
2007 in order to help ensure all of the facility's residents have the
opportunity to make a clean start as productive members of the
workforce.
"They are behind the curve a bit, and they need help to catch up,"
Stewart
says. "We're helping them get up to speed, and letting them know that
they
can be members of society again and can break out of the cycle that got
them
here in the first place."
More information on the JobSight network can be found on-line at
www.jobsight.org
and www.ekcep.org. More information on WestCare can be
found at www.westcare.com.
Copyright © 2007 Michael Cornett, EKCEP, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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