Posted on March 1st, 2023 in
Events,
Local News,
Press Releases
Indianapolis – March 1, 2023 – This morning, Mayor Joe Hogsett, EmployIndy, and partners kicked off the summer hiring season by announcing the 2023 edition of the Project Indy summer jobs initiative at the Skateland roller skate rink. Project Indy is currently offering over 2,700 available positions from 108 local employers on its online platform at projectindy.net, which makes applying for jobs easier than ever.
“For decades, Skateland has been a bedrock westside institution, and we are glad to welcome it into the Project Indy family of employers,” said Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett. “Since 2016, Project Indy has been an accessible route to high-quality employment for thousands of young residents.”
Project Indy was launched in 2016 by Mayor Hogsett alongside EmployIndy, the Greater Indianapolis Progress Committee (GIPC), and the Marion County Commission on Youth (MCCOY). Since its launch, Project Indy has empowered nearly 15,000 young adults in Marion County by providing work experiences that build their employability skills and allow them to explore new career fields. During that time, nearly 300 employers have posted open positions on the portal.
Through Project Indy’s virtual platform that utilizes text messaging to recruit and onboard job seekers, youth ages 16-24 can get started by simply texting “Project Indy” to 317-659-9657. This easy-to-use online platform is a location-based tool that works to connect youth to nearby opportunities and includes an enhanced tool to filter by interest. Once registered, job seekers can easily apply to any of the hundreds of open positions by providing a few pieces of basic information.
By hiring in-school and out-of-school youth throughout Marion County, local employers can provide valuable job opportunities, soft-skill development, and job-readiness training. Additionally, the program offers employers, such as new Project Indy partner Skateland, the opportunity to create a talent pipeline for their business or industry and play an important role in training the future workforce.
“The majority of our staff are teenagers, still in school. Hiring them is an important part of their growth and helps them as they enter the workforce,” said Rodney Williams, General Manager at Skateland. “We’re always looking to hire new young people who we can train and we feel Project Indy is going to benefit us a lot in that effort.”
EmployIndy, which administers Project Indy, will continue promoting the virtual platform through face-to-face recruiting at Indianapolis-area high schools, targeted social media campaigns, and presence at local youth hiring fairs. In 2022, over 2,000 young people in Indianapolis were connected to job opportunities through Project Indy.
“Project Indy is one of many initiatives within EmployIndy that ensures both young adults and employers are prepared for the changing needs of today’s economy,” said EmployIndy President & CEO, Marie Mackintosh. “Through the online portal, young adults from all backgrounds have access to local employers. This helps them not only gain valuable work experience and develop their soft-skills but also works to build a stronger talent pipeline in Marion County.”
In 2018, EmployIndy, in partnership with Mayor Joe Hogsett's office and the Indy Chamber, launched Job Ready Indy, an online employability skills program focused on providing the soft skills needed to succeed in the workplace. When an individual completes one of the online courses, a Job Ready Indy badge will appear on their Project Indy profile – notifying an interested employer that they are deemed by EmployIndy and the Indy Chamber as someone who demonstrates the “job-ready” skills important to the workplace.
Employers interested in hiring youth can sign up to be a Project Indy partner here.
A toolkit with social media assets and other materials is available here.
To speak with a young adult who has benefited from Project Indy, please reach out to Austin Jenness at ajenness@nullemployindy.org or by calling (317) 605-2742.
When considering the more-influential businesses in Central Indiana, one is unlikely to leave Cummins—designer and manufacturer of engines and other powerful technologies with more than 9,000 locations worldwide—off the list. Cummins’ Technical Education for Communities (TEC) Manager, Rick Hudson, has an interesting take on just what Cummins means to Central Indiana: “We can’t be strong as a company if the communities we’re in aren’t strong.”
The Cummins’ TEC program, which has expanded to 26 locations since its inception in 2012, aims to enrich the skills and strength of young people in communities around the world. The program gathers a coalition from government, industry, and nonprofit organizations to work together to provide technical work-based learning at local schools. The program boasts a graduation rate of more than 80%, and more than 70% of those graduates are quickly placed into technician job placements.
Most program sites are abroad, but the latest TEC addition—Cummins’ fifth in the United States—is in Indianapolis. On January 23rd, several EmployIndy employees joined Cummins at Arsenal Tech High School for the local launch, at which EmployIndy’s Senior Director of Business Partnerships, Jay Styles, spoke.
“EmployIndy is the first workforce development board that has ever had a logo on our list of partners from day one,” Hudson said. While Cummins had been familiar with EmployIndy from other involvements, he added that one immediate value that came out of his year-plus correspondence with Styles was the labor market information she provided, which demonstrated the need for more automotive and diesel technicians in Marion County.
It was also essential, according to Hudson, that Arsenal Tech already had a program that emphasizes automotive technical education. “The curriculum was already good,” Hudson said. What TEC will do is supplement what is already in place with buy-in from a number of local employers who donate equipment and additional expertise, while also conveniently serving as possible employment landing spots for students who complete the program.
Cummins does want to hire some of the students that come out of TECs, but they intentionally limit themselves to taking no more than 20% of graduates. This encourages and even necessitates participation from a host of companies that Hudson admits will include—in Indianapolis—one of Cummins’ top competitors.
The impressive list of sponsors and partners with the Arsenal Tech program will include Allison Transmission, IndyGo, Pat O’Brien Toyota, Team Cruiser, the Automotive Apprenticeship Group, Jasper Engines, Ivy Tech, the Indiana Department of Workforce Development (DWD), and others. Hudson credited EmployIndy Business Development Manager, Wendy Parker, with providing the referrals for more than half of the businesses who signed on with their support.
For any employers who may come from a different industry but still possess an interest in developing a presence in high school and young adult spaces for the purpose of providing career education, work-based learning opportunities, and potentially building long-term employment pipelines, EmployIndy’s Talent Bound does just that. We are always looking for more invested partners, and you can reach out to a member of the Business Partnerships team to start the conversation, get your questions answered, and learn about next steps.
Posted on December 15th, 2022 in
Annual Report,
Local News,
Success Story
Dear Partners and Friends,
2022 has been a year of significant growth and transformation for EmployIndy. As the year comes to a close, we are especially grateful to our Board and to each of our local, statewide, and national partners for working with our team to make real our vision that all residents in Indianapolis will have the opportunity to achieve economic prosperity.
Creating equitable opportunities has never been more important than it is today as we work to address some of the significant challenges the pandemic left in its wake, as illuminated in our recent report, Indiana’s Evolving Labor Market, released in partnership with Ascend Indiana. In short, too few people in our community are gaining the credentials currently required by businesses with open positions across sectors, and we must be bold in our collective efforts to reverse this troubling trend.
As I look back on our work from July of 2021 to June of 2022, I am hopeful despite our current realities. I could not be prouder of the promising practices and strong outcomes of our growing education and employment programs. We had over 31,000 in-person visits at WorkOne Indy; provided nearly 23,000 career exploration experiences to K-12 Marion County students through Talent Bound; and engaged 4,677 individuals in work-based learning experiences. We also placed 1,489 individuals into good and promising jobs through Wednesdays@WorkOne and Rapid Re-Employment Response, which launched in the early days of the pandemic. All of this good work was only made possible through the engagement of 2,198 Indianapolis employers in talent development strategies and placement services; the partnership of more than 160 education, training, community-based, and service providers throughout our workforce ecosystem; the investment of over $20,216,434 in local programs and initiatives from federal, state, local, corporate, and philanthropic funds; and the dedicated EmployIndy team of 82 education and workforce professionals. In total, we served over 50,000 residents of Indianapolis, and of those who self-identified, 75% were people of color.
As we prepare to launch our new strategic plan in early 2023, EmployIndy remains focused on investing in our communities, households, and underrepresented residents. We will take what we have learned as practitioners and from our partners to build better systems that create more scalable and equitable outcomes for the people of our community. In fact, we are already engaging in systems change efforts and plan to accelerate this work in the coming years.
- Modern Apprenticeship, in partnership with the Richard M. Fairbanks Foundation and Ascend Indiana, is changing employer practices on minimum age requirements for employment both locally and nationally.
- Through the Accelerate ED initiative, EmployIndy and its partners have created a blueprint for a high-quality cybersecurity pathway beginning in high school and accelerating the attainment of an associate degree in year 13.
- The Indianapolis New Skills Ready Network, funded through JPMorgan Chase & Co, has partnered with state leaders to create a career advising framework that establishes standards, milestones, and strategies by K-12 grade band.
- With our partners, EmployIndy is tackling dominant narratives with the Walton Family Foundation and Wonder to change the story around traditional postsecondary choices as the only quality options for economic opportunity.
- Launched in 2022 as part of an Enhancing Opportunity in Indianapolis grant, the Good Wages Initiative will close the year with 60+ certified employers, representing 18 industries and nearly 25,000 workers, who have committed to increasing worker wages by $5M. As a Good Wages employer, EmployIndy’s commitment to more equitable hiring and employment practices has resulted in a staff that is 42% racially and ethnically diverse, with more work to do to mirror the community we serve.
In the new year, we will continue to work to close the opportunity gap by focusing on career-connected learning, investing in quality coaching and training, facilitating connections to good jobs, and ensuring the business community offers more good jobs across sectors.
Thank you for all of your contributions to the positive impact that EmployIndy has had, and will continue to have, across our community.
Happy Holidays and Best Wishes in 2023!
Kind Regards,
Marie Mackintosh, President & CEO
EmployIndy