Innovative Recruitment and Staffing Strategies by Employers Help Workers Over 50 Find, Thrive in Encore Careers
2009年11月17日 - 11:47PM
PRニュース・ワイアー (英語)
MetLife Foundation and Civic Ventures Honor Eight Nonprofit and
Public Sector Organizations with 2009 Encore Opportunity Awards SAN
FRANCISCO, Nov. 17 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- To honor
organizations that are making it easier for experienced workers to
transition into encore careers - paid jobs that offer meaning and
the chance to make a social impact - Civic Ventures and MetLife
Foundation today announced the winners of the 2009 Encore
Opportunity Awards: eight nonprofit and public sector organizations
that are tapping encore talent to serve the common good. "For those
in midlife and beyond, looking for a job these days is often a
do-it-yourself project made all the worse by exhaustion, isolation,
and high unemployment," said Phyllis N. Segal, vice president of
Civic Ventures, a think tank on boomers, work and social purpose.
"But some nonprofit and public sector organizations are hiring and
retaining people over 50 to meet community needs - and doing so in
an exemplary fashion." Spread across the country, the 2009 Encore
Opportunity Award winners are engaging people over 50 in creative
ways to protect public safety, build low-income housing, teach job
skills, preserve the environment, even save dying Native American
languages. A summary of the winners is below, and fuller
descriptions - along with insights about their strategies - are
included here. "This year's Encore Opportunity Award winners are
innovative, adaptable and smart - and clearly recognize the need to
take advantage of the windfall of talented older Americans," said
Dennis White, CEO and president of MetLife Foundation. "These
trailblazing employers can serve as a model for others to follow."
While layoffs and hiring freezes remain the norm in most
industries, experts still project talent shortages in some health
care, education, nonprofit and government jobs. Meanwhile, surveys
show that millions of boomers want to find encore careers where
they can give back and have an impact. The 2009 winners - which
exemplify how employers can help experienced workers find encore
careers - are: -- Alliance of Early Childhood Professionals
(Minneapolis) -- This nonprofit created a youth development program
that pays "elders" - Native Americans over 50 who know the Dakota
or Ojibwe languages - to work with children ages 16 months to 5
years old. The language immersion experience aims to pass along
native languages and a sense of culture. -- Civitan Foundation Inc.
(Phoenix) -- This organization designed its Caring Connections
program to engage encore workers as direct caregivers for its
programs serving people with disabilities of all ages. In its first
eight months, the project trained 50 older Americans and placed 20
in caregiver roles with clients. -- Executive Service Corps of
Chicago (Chicago) -- To fill the leadership transition challenges
experienced by many nonprofits, the Executive Service Corps
recruits, trains and places retired nonprofit executives in interim
director positions in Chicago-area nonprofits. -- Gwinnett County
Sheriff's Department (Lawrenceville, Ga.) -- This public safety
agency recruits and employs encore workers to fill jobs at all
levels. One-fourth of the department's civilian and sworn work
force is over 50, coming from previous careers in government,
retail and business. -- Habitat for Humanity of Lake-Sumter Florida
Inc. (Eustis, Fla.) -- To provide homes to people living in
substandard and overcrowded conditions, this Habitat for Humanity
affiliate has enlisted a multigenerational work force. Half of its
staff is over 50. -- National Center for Appropriate Technology
(Butte, Mont.) -- This organization helps people nationally -
through offices in Montana, Arkansas, California, Iowa, Louisiana
and Pennsylvania - use environmentally sound, energy-efficient
methods in farming. More than 40 percent of its employees are
50-plus, thanks to a recruitment strategy that seeks their skills
and experience, and a retention strategy offering flexible
schedules. -- Orleans Technical Institute a division of JEVS Human
Services (Philadelphia) -- This technical training school employs
retirees from the building trades as instructors to provide
training and individualized support to an "at-risk" student
population. More than half of the school's employees are 50-plus,
including full- and part-time instructors, support staff,
recruiters and counselors. -- Umbrella of the Capital District
(Schenectady, N.Y.) -- To help older adults and persons with
disabilities live independently in their own homes, this nonprofit
intentionally recruits 50-plus workers with the appropriate
technical skills. More than 130 "handypeople" are paid an hourly
stipend for light carpentry, lawn and garden maintenance, house
cleaning and transportation to appointments. In 2007, MetLife
Foundation and Civic Ventures first honored nonprofit and public
sector employers with what was then called the BreakThrough Awards.
The inaugural winners similarly exhibited successful strategies for
finding, hiring and maximizing workers over 50. About Civic
Ventures (http://www.encore.org/) Civic Ventures is a national
think tank on boomers, work and social purpose. About MetLife
Foundation MetLife Foundation was established in 1976 by MetLife to
carry on its long-standing tradition of corporate contributions and
community involvement. The Foundation has been involved in a
variety of aging-related initiatives addressing issues of
caregiving, intergenerational activities, mental fitness, health
and wellness programs and civic involvement. More information about
the Foundation is available at http://www.metlife.org/. Contacts:
For MetLife Foundation: For Civic Ventures: Ted Mitchell, (401)
827-3236 Elysha Rom-Povolo, (415) 901-0111 DATASOURCE: MetLife
Foundation CONTACT: Ted Mitchell for MetLife Foundation,
+1-401-827-3236, , or Elysha Rom-Povolo for Civic Ventures,
+1-415-901-0111, Web Site: http://www.metlife.org/
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