Retiring GLOW workforce leader honored by County Legislature

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 11 July 2025 at 11:29 am

Photo by Tom Rivers: Jay Lazarony, retiring director for the GLOW Workforce Development Board, receives a “Special Recognition Award” from County Legislator Fred Miller during a recent Legislature meeting.

ALBION – The leader of the GLOW Workforce Development Board has pushed to be bring in training funds to help residents develop skills for in-demand local careers.

Jay Lazarony led the GLOW organization the past eight years, and worked 20 years before that as a youth counselor for the Genesee County Job Development Bureau. He has retired, and has been praised for his efforts to connect GLOW residents to job training.

He also was one of the driving forces in the GLOW With Your Hands career exploration events that showcased careers in the trades and local manufacturing, and also in healthcare.

The Orleans County Legislature recently presented Lazarony with a “Special Recognition Award” for his career in workforce development.

Lazarony, in an interview today, said it has been a rewarding career “to provide people with a restart, an initial start or just a change in their work status.”

The GLOW WDB works with BOCES to connect residents to training. That training can make a huge difference for people in getting a new career or a step up at the jobs. GLOW has secured about $500,000 a year each of the past five years for job training in the four local rural counties.

“A small training could be the difference in them getting a new career with a family-sustaining income,” Lazarony said.

When he worked for the Genesee County Job Development Bureau, Lazarony said the office would ring a bell every time someone landed a job through the bureau’s help. That signified a new start, a chance at a family-sustaining career.

Lazarony said those jobs are available in the GLOW region, but more residents need training to be hired at these positions.

“I think there are great careers locally but there is a skill gap,” he said. “We have to get them trained first. We’re fighting for funding for training. It’s not that nobody wants to work. It’s just that they’re not up to speed yet.”

Lazarony praised the work of the job development agencies in each of the four counties. In Orleans, Kelly Kiebala is director of the Job Development Agency.

The overall GLOW Workforce Development Board has a new leader in Tracy VanVleck, the executive director who is based in Batavia.

Lazarony said she worked with him his final month in the position. He is confident she will be a good fit for the four counties.

“She will take it in a direction that is positive and very good for all of GLOW,” Lazarony said.