![]() Crittenton Womens Union Cites Failings in States Ed System
March 12, 2008 Nearly half of the states 3.2 million workers lack the skills required by employers to obtain jobs with family-sustaining wages, according to a report released today from Crittenton Womens Union, a Boston-based nonprofit that helps low-income women attain economic independence. The report, Unlocking the Doors to Higher Education and Training for Massachusetts Working Poor Families, says Massachusetts must change its educational system to provide hundreds of thousands of low-income working adults more opportunity to gain the skills they need to secure family-supporting jobs in todays knowledge-based economy. It details significant problems in the states educational system that impede low-income working adultsspecifically those supporting themselves and their familiesfrom embarking on and paying for higher education. Across Massachusetts are families that are working hard to support themselves, but the breadwinners lack the educational levels they need to compete in todays economy, said Elisabeth D. Babcock, president and CEO of Crittenton Womens Union and one of the reports authors. Those who have the most to gain are women. Seventy-two percent of families living below the federal poverty line in our state are headed by single mothers. Women with an associates degree earn 47% more than those with a high school diploma, while for men the gain is 30%. With the state requiring a stronger workforce to remain economically competitive, we have to act now to give these workersboth men and womena better chance to obtain post-secondary education and develop skills they need. The report calls for more financial aid, better counseling and a more-coordinated education system to meet the needs of low-income working adults. It also notes that an increasing number of family-supporting jobs in the state require some post-secondary education. However, according to the report, Massachusetts has more than 1.4 million people between the ages of 25 and 54 who do not have an associates degree or higher level of educational attainment. The report focuses on the states 117,000 low-income working families, defined as those who earn less than 200% of the federal poverty income threshold (or $33,200 for a family of three in 2006). Despite having a working adult in the home, these families earn too little to make ends meet or gain economic security. For these workers, skills training provides the surest way to better jobs, but such education is often unaffordable and unmanageable for working adults. In addition, the report finds that the states basic educational offerings for adultsgeared to students without a high school diploma or GEDare poorly funded and do a poor job of preparing students to move directly into careers or into higher education courses, the main goals of many adult students. Recommendations for PolicymakersThe report makes recommendations in four key areas to state policymakers:
The Crittenton Womens Union has studied the cost of living across the state and developed the Massachusetts Family Economic Self-Sufficiency Standard, which indicates that, depending on where they live in the state, a family of three requires an income of between 266% to 350% of poverty level, or between $44,000 and $58,000 annually, to afford basic needs without public assistance. This means that in our state working poor adults with families not only cant make ends meet, but they also cant access programs that would help them get the education they need to lift them out of poverty, Babcock said. The report was written by Crittenton Womens Union, with support from the Working Poor Families Project, a national initiative supported by the Annie E. Casey, Ford, Joyce and Mott Foundations. The Working Poor Families Project examines state policies that affect low-income working families and recommends changes to strengthen those policies and create more economic opportunity. To view the full report, click here. |