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Indiana To Provide Free Community College Certificate Programs For In-Demand Fields

Last updated on Thursday, August 10, 2017

(UNDATED) - Governor Eric Holcomb recently signed into law Senate Bill 198, which provides free community college to students seeking a certificate in a “high-value” field.

This legislation, called the Workforce Ready Grant, will provide last-dollar tuition assistance to all students enrolled in a certificate program leading to a high-value field, regardless of financial need.

The Workforce Ready Grant is a product of a partnership between Governor Eric Holcomb, the Indiana Commission for Higher Education and the Indiana Department of Workforce Development, reports the The National Skills Coalition and IIWF. It was supported by the Indiana Skills2Compete Coalition, a bipartisan coalition of state legislators, education policymakers, and business, labor and community leaders seeking to close the state's skills gap. The state will provide $2 million a year for the grant program.

"High-value" fields have been defined by the state as those that have "high job placement, high completion rate, high wage and high demand." This grant builds on the energy of the state's You Can. Go Back. campaign, created last year to encourage more adults to return and complete degrees and credentials through direct outreach, support from Indiana colleges and $1,000 Adult Student Grants. Much of the Workforce Ready Grant's intention is also to help adults return to school and gain new skills. Earning a certificate in an in-demand industry not only helps businesses to fill crucial human capital needs, but also allows adults in low-skilled, low-wage jobs to enter into career pathways leading to family-sustaining wages.

The Indiana Skills2Compete Coalition and National Skills Coalition are strong proponents of policies that help to expand equitable access to middle-skill credentials and careers. Establishing last-dollar scholarships for certificates in in-demand fields, as Indiana's Workforce Ready Grant does, is one way that states can help adults with limited skills earn postsecondary credentials that lead to quality middle-skill jobs, while also ensuring that businesses have access to skilled, qualified workers.

Middle-skill jobs, which require education beyond high school but not a four-year degree, make up the largest part of America's and Indiana's labor market. Many key industries in Indiana are currently unable to find enough sufficiently trained workers to fill these jobs. Like many states, Indiana faces a growing middle-skill gap. In 2015, 58 percent of jobs in Indiana were middle-skill, but only 47 percent of the state's workers are trained to the middle-skill level.

As Indiana policymakers continue to consider ways to close the skill gap, we encourage them to take an expansive view of "high-value" fields, so as not to unnecessarily limit students' access to the diversity of community college pathways that lead to family-sustaining, middle-skill jobs.

We also encourage them to look at policies that will leverage the Workforce Ready Grant by further expanding adults' access to middle-skill training.

These include:

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