Yes to Job Corps
Yes to Job Corp, no to Trump’s attack on working class programs! Inspired by Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal work relief programs, the Job Corps has successfully and reliably provided jobs, training, and education to millions of young workers aged 16 to 24 throughout the country since its first campus opened its doors in 1965.
Job Corps in Connecticut has campuses in New Haven and Hartford. For decades, about 300 students graduate each year and go on to contribute skills and leadership to their communities.
Today, the largely African American and Latino students of Connecticut’s Job Corps programs are in the crosshairs of the Trump Administration’s shameless war on workers. For months, the Trump Administration has used loopholes and disingenuous legal theories to shutter this successful program.
Just a few short weeks ago, the program and its allies pushed back in federal court and won an injunction protecting the program. But, because of a super-majority of conservatives on the Supreme Court, it is not clear how long this injunction will hold.
The young people who are training at Connecticut’s Job Corps are not waiting to see what the Supreme Court will do. They recognize that public action is necessary to protect Job Corp. They have the support of federal, state and local elected officials and the community.
The Jobs and Unemployed Committee of the New Haven Peoples Center is circulating a petition in support of the 149 New Haven students whose future is threatened by possible funding cuts from the Trump administration.
Standing outside the New Haven Campus, next to Senator Richard Blumenthal, Nahjayiah Munoz, the foreman of the campus carpentry program, shared that she would not have gotten a career without Job Corp, adding “we learned everything we need to do safety-wise, because on the job site, there’s not a guarantee that you’re safe - [Job Corps] makes sure we will be safe.”
Troy Sanders, who became employed as plumbing apprentice through Job Corps, said, “Job Corps is helping me out a lot, to get a good trade. I know a lot of people that need Job Corps.”