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News Releases from Region 06

Rose State College in Oklahoma City Receives EPA Job-Training Grant

05/27/2015
Contact Information: 
Jennah Durant (R6Press@epa.gov)
214-665-2200.
Joe Hubbard

DALLAS - (May 27, 2015) - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that Rose State College in Oklahoma City, Okla., received one of 19 grants for Environmental Workforce Development and Job Training (EWDJT) grants. Rose State College received $192,300 to train 75 students in environmental jobs. Nationwide, EPA awarded $3.6 million in EWDJT grants.

"EPA's job training program advances economic development by creating job opportunities for workers to serve in their own communities," said Mathy Stanislaus, assistant administrator of EPA's Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response. "Many graduates-including ex-offenders and veterans-- secure meaningful employment that protects the environment and promotes economic development in some of our neediest communities."

Participants in the Rose State College program will receive training in a range of environmental topics, including hazardous waste and emergency response, water and liquid waste treatment system operations, wastewater treatment plant lab operations, and respiratory protection. Rose State College is focused on recruiting low-income minorities, women, and military veterans for the program. After training, Rose State will also place at least 56 of the graduates in environmental jobs.

The EWDJT program gives communities flexibility to deliver training that meets local labor market demands. Graduates develop a broad set of skills that improves their ability to secure, not just short term contractual work, but full-time, sustainable employment in the environmental field.

Since the program's inception in 1998, EPA has funded 256 job training grants exceeding $54 million. More than 13,900 individuals have completed training, and of those, more than 10,000 have secured employment in the environmental field with an average hourly starting wage of $14.18. This equates to a cumulative job placement rate of 72 percent.

These grants support training programs that recruit, train, and place unemployed and under-employed residents of waste-affected communities with the skills and certifications needed to secure employment in the environmental field. Projects are funded based on the comprehensiveness of the training curriculum, the likelihood that graduates will obtain employment, strong public-private partnerships, and diverse community-based organization and employer involvement.

Grantees announced to receive funding today, include:

> Zender Environmental Health and Research Group (Anchorage) Alaska
> Fresno Area Workforce Investment Board, Calif.
> City of Richmond, Calif.
> Denver Indian Center, Inc., Colo.
> West End Neighborhood House (Dover) Del.
> Florida State College at Jacksonville, Fla.
> OAI, Inc. (Chicago) Ill.
> Merrimack Valley Workforce Investment Board (Lawrence) Mass.
> St. Louis Community College, Mo.
> CLIMB Community Development Corporation (Biloxi) Miss.
> The Fortune Society, Inc. (Long Island City) N.Y.
> Rose State College (Midwest City) Okla.
> Oregon Tradeswomen (Portland) Ore.
> PathStone Corporation, P.R.
> Tarrant County College District, Texas
> Great Lakes Community Conservation Corps (Racine) Wisc.
> Milwaukee Area Workforce Investment Board, Wisc.
> Coalfield Development Corporation (Wayne County) W.Va.
> Groundwork Providence, R.I.

For more information on brownfields grants, including EWDJT grants, by state, please visit:
http://cfpub.epa.gov/bf_factsheets/index.cfm

For more information on EPA's brownfields program, please visit: http://www.epa.gov/brownfields

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