Workforce strategies amid all-time low unemployment

Attraction and retention projects and partnerships aim to bolster child care and aging services

August headlines read, “Minnesota Unemployment Rate Holds at 1.8%, an All-Time Low”. That’s good news, right? Well, yes and no. Historically low unemployment means workers have more choices but also that there is fierce competition for job seekers. Meanwhile, the costs of living and doing business are rising, putting the squeeze on both households and employers.

Two critically important “caring professions” struggling under current conditions – child care and elder care – are costly to provide compared to what most families can afford to pay. Caring for our youngest and oldest community members are two sectors that were already struggling to attract and retain workers even before the pandemic and the current tight labor market.

The Northland Foundation along with many partners is doing our part to find short- and longer-term solutions.

Child Care Workforce Survey, Working Group & Pilot Project

The child care crisis was well-known in Minnesota even before COVID-19, but the pandemic created a massive strain on providers who battled with inconsistent attendance, closures due to COVID exposure, supply shortages and high costs, and staff burnout. Now the competition for workforce is putting added stress on this sector.

Data compiled by First Children’s Finance (July 2021) shows northeast Minnesota needs 4,567 more child care openings to accommodate families with children age six and under—or 57% more spaces than we currently have.

CHILD CARE CENTER DIRECTOR SURVEY

In June, the Northland Foundation partnered with Northspan to conduct a survey of licensed child care center owners and directors in the region.

Most (72%) of those who took the survey have a child care center in St. Louis County and included both for-profit and nonprofit operations. On average, respondents indicated they could operate at full capacity with a staff of 16. Many indicated they currently have two to five positions unfilled, including teachers, assistant teachers, and substitutes.

“The current business model of child care does not seem to be working. In order for us to pay our employees more, we have to raise our rates and parents are already struggling. We need funding to help us maintain our workforce and be a desirable employer.”  

Licensed Child Care Center Director – Survey Respondent

CHILD CARE TALENT PIPELINE WORK GROUP AND PILOT PROJECT

A Child Care Talent Pipeline Workgroup has formed and is tasked with pursuing strategies to help child care providers find and keep qualified talent. The group is facilitated by Northspan in partnership with Northland Foundation and counts center directors, higher education, economic development and business interests, and community organizations among its members.

In addition, the Northland Foundation is designing a Child Care Center Workforce Solution Pilot Project to launch this fall. The plan is to make flexible funding available to licensed child care centers to help with staff recruitment and retention to stabilize and grow program capacity. Participating pilot programs could receive additional supports and resources by attending specialized trainings and/or or peer learning opportunities.

“With the roll out of the new Child Care Talent Pipeline Work Group coupled with new Minnesota Department of Human Services Child Care Capacity Building efforts, the timing is excellent to pilot and test locally designed solutions to address workforce challenges impacting our region’s child care sector,” stated Zane Bail, Northland Foundation’s chief operating officer.

Aging Services Workforce Projects In Progress

Through our Integrated Rural Community Aging Program, a three-year initiative that will conclude at the end of 2022, the Northland Foundation has provided funding support for two regional workforce solution pilot projects. In spite of challenges and delays created by COVID, which hit just as they were getting underway in 2020, the Foundation’s two Regional Aging Services Workforce Partners have implemented exciting projects help increase the quantity and quality of paid caregivers in northeast Minnesota.

The Arrowhead Area Agency on Aging has been making great progress on projects to expand the direct care workforce.

  1. Hosted SCRUBS and Health Care Career Exploration camps, including one focused on Indigenous students, one virtual, and one in Hibbing, to give high school students a supportive, hands-on introduction to these careers.
  2. Soft-launched a robust website for the Arrowhead Regional Consortium of Healthcare Staff as a comprehensive hub for anyone looking into these careers, who are interested in advancing their careers with additional training and certifications, and for employers looking to hire. The site (here’s an introductory video) allows numerous regional and state partners to add resources such as scholarships, loan repayment programs, training, etc. as well as workforce events at any time.
  3. Launching a region-wide marketing program to raise awareness of the website tools and health care and aging services careers to help inform and attract more people to the field.
Indigenous students gained a hands-on feel for health care at the Fond du Lac Tribal and Community College SCRUBS Camp.

The Applied Learning Institute is working to increase the direct care workforce in the region by

  1. Improving secondary and post-secondary curriculum to align with industry standards in the healthcare sector.
  2. Expanding work-based learning opportunities for high school students in local healthcare facilities.
  3. Leading a process to co-create a vision for a regional approach to promote widespread awareness of local healthcare training programs.

Additionally, seven northeast Minnesota Community Planning and Care Coalitions, with technical support and funding also provided through the Foundation’s Integrated Regional Community Aging Program, have been hard at work in Aitkin County, Ely Area, Itasca Area/Northern St. Louis County, Koochiching County, North Shore Area, and Two Harbors driving quality of care initiatives that have:  

“Northland and our partners are doing what we can to support workforce attraction and retention in two areas where we have experience, funding, and traction: child care and aging services.”

Tony Sertich, Northland Foundation President

The Northland Foundation will continue seeking funding, collaborating with public, private and nonprofit sector partners, and testing new approaches to help ensure our youngest and oldest citizens can receive the care they need.

Business Services News


Recently Closed Loans

The Northland Foundation closed on one new loan since the July 1st, the start of our new fiscal year.

Dougherty Accounts is a bookkeeping and payroll business located in Duluth. Owner Katherine Dougherty received a loan from the Northland Foundation toward purchase of the building the business currently rents.

To learn more about the business loan tools we have available, please email our Business Services Director, Michael Colclough.

April through June 2022 Grant Awards

During April, May, and June, the Northland Foundation made 21 quarterly grants to nonprofit organizations, schools, and Native nations as well as 25 Tech Boost initiative grants made to small businesses which underwent technology audits.

The two largest grants were part of a special funding opportunity to support systems change work in the region, offered through a competitive application process. Two organizations received multi-year grants of $150,000: CHUM to help house and serve individuals that have experienced homelessness, and Northspan, to support implementation of the Welcoming Community program in northeast Minnesota sites.

The Northland Foundation also awarded nearly $90,000 to help increase child care access in the region, in partnership with the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development. Child care businesses in Ely, Duluth, Hibbing, and International Falls received grant funding.

In addition, the students serving on the Youth In Philanthropy Board awarded 11 grants totaling $6,965 in their final round of the school year, and six Maada’ookiing grants totaling $14,300 were awarded in June to Indigenous individuals in support of grassroots work to strengthen Indigenous community and support Tribal sovereignty.

Find details for all grants awarded between April and June including grantee name, location, and dollar amount at the links below.

State funding for Family, Friend, and Neighbor Care to support outreach to informal child care providers

The Minnesota Department of Human Services has awarded a $180,000 grant to the Northland Foundation for outreach, engagement, training and support for “informal” child care providers in the region. Grandparents, aunts, uncles, neighbors, and friends, often referred to as FFN providers, are a frequent choice of care for many families with infants and toddlers, in diverse cultural and ethnic communities, and for parents working non-standard-hour jobs. The growing child care shortage has also led to more families with young children relying on FFN child care.

The influx of state funding will help the Foundation and its local project partners across the region conduct outreach to FFN providers, offer “Play & Learn” training sessions, and connect providers to services and resources

“FFN caregivers play a critical role in supporting the healthy development and school readiness of young children,” states Zane Bail, Chief Operating Officer at the Northland Foundation. “We are thrilled to have this support for what we have called the Northland FFN Child Care Project, to offer more resources and supports for FFN providers.”


Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota two-year grant will strengthen early care and education

The Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota Foundation has awarded the Northland Foundation $200,000 over two years to advance racial and health equity in early care and education programs and services.

This funding will help increase the availability of and access to quality early care and education, especially for young children and families from underserved and under-resourced communities. The Northland Foundation will engage child care providers and others working with young children in culturally responsive and trauma-informed care trainings; provide mentoring opportunities for child care providers; expand workforce development strategies for child care; and offer programming for informal caregivers of young children.

Tony Sertich, President of the Northland Foundation states, “We greatly appreciate that the Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota Foundation has been such a steady partner in helping young children and families have access to quality early care and education opportunities in northeast Minnesota.”


Bush Foundation grant award supports Maada’ookiing expansion

A one-year, $100,000 grant from the Bush Foundation will help accelerate the work of Maada’ookiing (“distribution” in Ojibwe), an Indigenous-designed and -led effort to increase investment in Indigenous communities across northeast Minnesota. Maada’ookiing, which officially launched in May 2021, includes three areas of focus: grassroots grantmaking to strengthen and sustain Indigenous community, diversification of Tribal economies and support for Indigenous entrepreneurs, and support for Indigenous Education programs across the region.

“This new Bush Foundation funding will go a long way toward helping expand and deepen the work of Maada;ookiing, including grassroots projects as well as Indigenous entrepreneurship and Indigenous Education programs across the region,” said Erik Torch, Director of Grantmaking at the Northland Foundation.

To date, 44 Maada’ookiing grants totaling over $108,000 have been awarded to Indigenous individuals for a wide array of grassroots projects.

LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

From traditional, ancestral & contemporary lands of Ojibwe, Dakota, Northern Cheyenne & other Native people. See a more detailed acknowledgement of this land and its history.

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