New federal funding to improve workplace literacy
Updated: August 27, 2009 10:52 AM
An Ottawa-funded cash injection into Literacy Victoria could make it easier for people with literacy difficulties to find and keep work.
A $308,000 package to run a two-year pilot project with Literacy Victoria aims to develop training programs to make the job market more accessible to people with low literacy. The money will go toward meetings and discussions with large-scale employers, such as Thrifty Foods, the Fairmont Empress Hotel and Victoria Shipyards, to adopt training programs specific to helping adult learners find a job and keep it.
“It’s really going to make it possible for people to get a job who have never been able to have a job or who have been fired,” said Ruth Derrick, Literacy Victoria’s executive director.
The fiunding is a slice of the federal government’s $36-million commitment to adult literacy and learning skills program.
Sue Gupta, a tutor with Literacy Victoria, says she sees the role improved literacy plays in people’s lives. Her students show signs of improved self-esteem, an important quality for work-seekers. But Gupta wants to see more money to fund one-on-one tutoring.
“It’s a start,” said Shawn Robins, chair of Literacy Victoria. “It’s a good investment in terms of testing out these ideas.”
ecardone@vicnews.com
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