Schumer will ‘vehemently oppose’ push to shut down Job Corps
Trump administration wants to close 99 centers, including Iroquois, by end of June
Photo by Tom Rivers: A sign near Route 63 in Shelby directs people to the Iroquois Job Corps in Shelby, one of 99 in the country slated to shut down by June 30.
WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer called on local elected officials in communities with Job Corps to press their Congressional representatives in the House to keep the Job Corps program.
Schumer urged a legal and public campaign to keep the job-training sites open for at-risk youths. The centers have a capacity to serve about 50,000 students nationwide but have only been about half full, with the Job Corps faulting the Department of Labor for not doing needed background checks to allow new students since March.
U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer speaks with reporters today through Zoom video conference.
“Across Upstate NY the Trump administration’s cruel order to shut down Job Corps centers has caused students and teachers to scramble, and if this goes through, it will be our small businesses and local economies paying the price,” Schumer said in a video conferencing call with reporters today. “We must save Job Corps across Upstate NY. We want to help young people get jobs, to get the training they need for successful careers, and eliminating these centers will hurt those students as well as local employers like small businesses and hospitals in getting the skilled workers they need.”
The National Job Corps Association has filed an injunction in federal court in Manhattan, saying the federal Department of Labor can’t dismantle Job Corps, a program established and funded by Congress. A court hearing is scheduled for June 17 to determine whether a preliminary injunction will be issued, Reuters reported.
Schumer referenced that lawsuit in his comments with reporters today. He believes putting pressure on members of Congress, especially Republicans, can ensure the program continues.
“The courts have already put a pause on Trump’s initial attempts to kill Job Corps, and I will vehemently oppose his attempts to defund this program in the Senate because the people are on our side in saving Job Corps,” he said today.
There are five Job Corps centers in the state, including one in Orleans County in Shelby. The Iroquois Job Corps has a capacity for 225, but was down to 125 when the DOL announced the program was on pause. The site has about 100 employees. The center has an $8.9 million annual budget. Iroquois officials estimate the local center has a $17 million annual impact on the local economy.
Schumer said Job Corps is a much-needed job training program that launches people into careers in healthcare, construction, and other in-demand fields.
“For 60 years, the Iroquois Job Corps Center has trained hundreds of young adults annually to become the electricians, carpenters, medical assistants and more that our community needs,” Lynne Johnson, chairwoman of the Orleans County Legislature, said in a statement released by Schumer’s office. “The Center is also a vital employer, with 104 local workers, and has infused over 8.9 million dollars in federal funding into our region’s economy. Stopping student enrollments and threatening to close the Iroquois Job Corps Center not only risks the futures of over 12,000 students but also the workforce that drives our region’s economic growth. I’m proud to stand with Senator Schumer in calling for Job Corps student enrollments to resume immediately and keeping the Iroquois Job Corps Center open, so we can continue building a stronger, more prosperous community.”
On May 29, Department of Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer announced that 99 centers would go on “pause” due to what she said were low graduation rates and high incidents of violence. She said Job Corps is not cost-effective.
“Job Corps was created to help young adults build a pathway to a better life through education, training and community,” DOL Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer said in a statement. “However, a startling number of serious incident reports and our in-depth fiscal analysis reveal the program is no longer achieving the intended outcomes that students deserve.”
Schumer said the Job Corps have proven to do “great work” in empowering young people and preparing them for careers in the work force. The DOL skewed the statistics by using data from Covid when the centers faced restrictions in operating their programs, the National Job Corps Association said.
The move by the DOL would hurt every region of the state, Schumer said, highlighting Job Corps centers in Brooklyn, Glenmont near Albany, Iroquois in Medina, Cassadaga in Chautauqua County and Oneonta.
The DOL announcement, providing such short notice for students to leave, “created pure chaos” for those students, their families and the centers, Schumer said.
“It’s outrageous, and it’s probably illegal,” he said. “We will fight it every step of the way.”
Getting a few Republicans in the House to oppose the closing could keep Job Corps funded. The Iroquois center is in Claudia Tenney’s district while Cassadaga is in a distict served by Nick Langworthy.
“If we get 3 or 4 Republican congressman who say don’t cut the job corps, then they can’t cut it because they need those votes,” Schumer said.