DW392182260A55
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Award Purpose
Quest DWG projects advance the department's promise to create high-quality jobs and a skilled workforce and reflect the administration's commitment to providing opportunities for all workers to overcome the employment, economic, and health effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The grants enable individuals adversely affected by the pandemic and the social and economic inequities that the pandemic exacerbated to enter, return to, or advance in high-quality jobs in growth industries such as infrastructure, environment and climate, the care economy, and other critical sectors. Quest DWGs also address business and industry needs for a resilient and skilled workforce.
Activities Performed
Employment and training activities include wraparound career and supportive services for eligible individuals seeking training in early childhood and K-12 education, including expanded registered apprenticeship, entrepreneurial, and microenterprise development training, to ensure that individuals entering the childcare industry have clear pathways for advancement, including a pathway to business ownership. Enhanced supportive services, including needs-related payments, access to credit remediation, legal aid, and mental health services, will support successful participant outcomes. Disaster relief employment activities will create opportunities for eligible participants to address the immediate need for expanded access to childcare for Wisconsin's working parents in childcare facilities offering, or willing to offer, nontraditional hours, which will offset some employer costs from extended hours of operation. Strategic partnership activities will include expanding small business development offerings to existing and new childcare service providers in marginalized communities, such as assistance with childcare licensing, certification, and subsidy reimbursement navigation. Community and potential participant outreach activities will include targeted outreach campaigns to reach priority populations of dislocated workers participating in rapid response activities, workers living in Wisconsin's lowest income communities, individuals with limited English language proficiency, and refugee populations. Business engagement activities will ensure that employers have the knowledge and resources necessary to offer employer-funded childcare as an employee benefit, receive education on developing inclusive workplaces for working parents and other marginalized populations, and attract and retain workers because of high-quality, affordable childcare. Childcare providers will also be offered assistance to navigate licensing successfully and certification requirements, maximize the use of childcare reimbursement subsidy programs, gain access to high-quality staff, provide clear pathways for workers to advance via registered apprenticeship and continuing education, and provide fair compensation.
Deliverables
778 planned participants enrolled.
Intended Beneficiary
Individuals from historically marginalized and low-income communities, including refugees and English language learners.
Subrecipient Activities
Local workforce development boards will enroll and train participants.
Quest DWG projects advance the department's promise to create high-quality jobs and a skilled workforce and reflect the administration's commitment to providing opportunities for all workers to overcome the employment, economic, and health effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The grants enable individuals adversely affected by the pandemic and the social and economic inequities that the pandemic exacerbated to enter, return to, or advance in high-quality jobs in growth industries such as infrastructure, environment and climate, the care economy, and other critical sectors. Quest DWGs also address business and industry needs for a resilient and skilled workforce.
Activities Performed
Employment and training activities include wraparound career and supportive services for eligible individuals seeking training in early childhood and K-12 education, including expanded registered apprenticeship, entrepreneurial, and microenterprise development training, to ensure that individuals entering the childcare industry have clear pathways for advancement, including a pathway to business ownership. Enhanced supportive services, including needs-related payments, access to credit remediation, legal aid, and mental health services, will support successful participant outcomes. Disaster relief employment activities will create opportunities for eligible participants to address the immediate need for expanded access to childcare for Wisconsin's working parents in childcare facilities offering, or willing to offer, nontraditional hours, which will offset some employer costs from extended hours of operation. Strategic partnership activities will include expanding small business development offerings to existing and new childcare service providers in marginalized communities, such as assistance with childcare licensing, certification, and subsidy reimbursement navigation. Community and potential participant outreach activities will include targeted outreach campaigns to reach priority populations of dislocated workers participating in rapid response activities, workers living in Wisconsin's lowest income communities, individuals with limited English language proficiency, and refugee populations. Business engagement activities will ensure that employers have the knowledge and resources necessary to offer employer-funded childcare as an employee benefit, receive education on developing inclusive workplaces for working parents and other marginalized populations, and attract and retain workers because of high-quality, affordable childcare. Childcare providers will also be offered assistance to navigate licensing successfully and certification requirements, maximize the use of childcare reimbursement subsidy programs, gain access to high-quality staff, provide clear pathways for workers to advance via registered apprenticeship and continuing education, and provide fair compensation.
Deliverables
778 planned participants enrolled.
Intended Beneficiary
Individuals from historically marginalized and low-income communities, including refugees and English language learners.
Subrecipient Activities
Local workforce development boards will enroll and train participants.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Wisconsin
United States
Geographic Scope
State-Wide
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the End Date has been extended from 09/30/24 to 09/30/25 and the total obligations have increased 10% from $13,650,567 to $15,000,000.
Wisconsin Department Of Workforce Development was awarded
COVID-19 Workforce Development High-Quality Jobs in Critical Sectors
Project Grant DW392182260A55
worth $15,000,000
from the Office of Workforce Investment in September 2022 with work to be completed primarily in Wisconsin United States.
The grant
has a duration of 3 years and
was awarded through assistance program 17.277 WIOA National Dislocated Worker Grants / WIA National Emergency Grants.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Quality Jobs, Equity, Strategy, and Training (QUEST) Disaster Recovery National Dislocated Worker Grants (DWGs).
Status
(Complete)
Last Modified 9/3/24
Period of Performance
9/26/22
Start Date
9/30/25
End Date
Funding Split
$15.0M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$15.0M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for DW392182260A55
Transaction History
Modifications to DW392182260A55
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
DW392182260A55
SAI Number
1630:1630:DW:24A60DW039218:1:3
Award ID URI
SAIEXEMPT
Awardee Classifications
State Government
Awarding Office
1630GM DOL (ETA) GRANTS MANAGEMENT
Funding Office
1630WS OFFICE OF WORKFORCE INVESTMENT
Awardee UEI
DCPVMWRT3DR4
Awardee CAGE
3LSF8
Performance District
WI-90
Senators
Tammy Baldwin
Ron Johnson
Ron Johnson
Modified: 9/3/24