Economic Security for All Grants. In 2019 the Governor’s office awarded $5.9 million in federal funds from Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act to implement and test four locally developed pilot models to comprehensively address poverty in target communities. Those target communities were Spokane, the South Kelso and Highlands neighborhoods in Cowlitz County, the Salishan/Eastside Tacoma communities in Pierce County, and the city of Connell in Franklin County. In 2022 the Legislature appropriated funding in the state operating budget to continue this program. The Economic Security for All (EcSA) program is a poverty reduction model that coordinates existing programs to increase their collective ability to help low-income people move toward self-sufficiency. At the local level EcSA is run by partnerships of community service providers, incorporating the perspectives of persons who have experienced living in poverty, and is convened and coordinated by local workforce development councils.
The EcSA program has a technical advisory committee, composed of representatives of state agencies, labor unions, nonprofits, and local implementation entities, that advises the ESD on programmatic decisions related to required elements, service delivery, program alignment, and poverty.
ESD is required to collect quarterly data on the number of participants in the program, the costs associated with career, training, and other support services provided, including but not limited to, child care, housing, transportation, and car repair, and progress made towards self-sufficiency. ESD is required to report to the Governor and the Legislature twice per year with an analysis of the program, a detailed summary of collected data, and associated recommendations for program delivery.
Local Workforce Development Councils. Federal law requires each state to establish a state workforce development board tasked with the development and continuous improvement of the state's workforce development system, among other responsibilities. In Washington this is fulfilled though local workforce development councils that lead local partnerships with community organizations and people experiencing poverty. Depending on local need, partnerships include housing insecurity programs, workforce development programs, local Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) service providers and other community-based organizations. The boards also manage subcontractors, to ensure that rules are followed and programs are aware of best practices.
The Legislative-Executive WorkFirst Poverty Reduction Oversight Task Force. The Legislative-Executive WorkFirst Poverty Reduction Oversight Task Force (LEWPRO) oversees the operation of the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Program and WorkFirst. The LEWPRO is additionally responsible for: developing and monitoring strategies to address adverse childhood experiences and reduce intergenerational poverty, in collaboration with the Intergenerational Poverty Advisory Committee; seeking input from various entities on best practices for poverty reduction; analyzing available data regarding intergenerational poverty; and recommending policies to the Governor and the Legislature to reduce intergenerational poverty and promote and encourage self-sufficiency. A poverty reduction steering committee (steering committee) made up of people reflecting the demographic and geographic experience of poverty advises the LEWPRO.
Measures of Poverty and Self Sufficiency. The United States Department of Health and Human Services establishes poverty guidelines that are used to determine financial eligibility for certain programs. Updated guidelines are available annually in mid-January. Currently 200 percent of the federal poverty level for a single person is $30,120 annually. For a family of four, it is $62,400 annually.
The University of Washington maintains a self-sufficiency calculator, which is an affordability and living wage economic security measure that serves as an alternative to the official poverty measure. The calculator defines the income working families need to meet a minimum yet adequate level, taking into account family composition, ages of children, and geographic differences in costs.
The Economic Security for All (EcSA) grant program is created in the Employment Security Department (ESD). The purpose of the program is to empower and incentivize communities to coordinate existing poverty reduction resources and benefits to make them easier to access, get them to the people who need them, and work as a coordinated system to help more people move out of poverty.
Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, ESD in consultation with the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS), the Department of Commerce (Commerce), the Health Care Authority (HCA), the Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF), the Workforce Training and Education Coordinating Board (WTECB), the steering committee, and other stakeholders as determined by ESD, shall make and oversee the implementation of EcSA grants. Grants must be made available to local communities to promote equity, economic inclusion, and a stable financial foundation for people experiencing poverty and people who demonstrate financial need, with a particular focus on people of color and people in rural counties including tribal nations.
EcSA grants are to be made available in communities throughout all regions of the state, including rural counties and urban communities, distributed utilizing a funding allocation model.
Recipients of the EcSA grants must:
ESD, in consultation with DSHS, Commerce, DCYF, HCA, WTECB, the steering committee, and other stakeholders as identified by ESD:
DSHS, in consultation with ESD, Commerce, DCYF, HCA, WTECB, the steering committee, LEWPRO, and other stakeholders as determined by DSHS, are to further develop measures and indicators of yearly progress toward poverty reduction, reducing income inequality, and achieving an equitable and inclusive economy, using the University of Washington self-sufficiency standard as a primary measure, as well as measures already underway in the DSHS technology advisory group on inclusive economic recovery, and apply those measures as needed to help promote a statewide economy that is inclusive of rural areas, racially equitable, and fully inclusive of people experiencing poverty, people of color, people with disabilities, unhoused people, and other key demographics that have historically been left behind by the state economy.
Members of the steering committee are to be reimbursed for travel expenses as well as child care and other expenses as needed for each day a member attends meetings of the EcSA grants, for up to 12 meetings per calendar year, as provided for in statute.
By December 1, 2024, and annually thereafter, ESD is to report to the Governor, the Legislature, the WTECB, and the LEWPRO Task Force on the EcSA grant program. The annual report must include an analysis of the program, a detailed summary of the quarterly data collected, demographics and geography of people served, services delivered, average length of participation, number of persons served by the grants maintaining self-sufficiency in the years following program exit, and associated recommendations for program delivery. The report must include an analysis of customer feedback and actions taken to respond, based upon a standardized customer feedback mechanism. The report shall be publicized and easily accessible to the public.
PRO: EcSA helps job seekers experiencing poverty and employers looking to employ them. This program allows local flexibility and funds existing gaps. Each participant is coached to set their own self-sufficiency goal. 85 percent of participants started with an annual income of $9,800 and now their median annual wage is over $44,000 per year. This program helps people in every corner of the state, helping those trying to help themselves. With the diminishing workforce it's imperative to support these efforts.
PRO: Amber Carter, Washington Workforce Association; Tracy Doriot, Doriot Construction; Caitlyn Jekel, Employment Security Department.