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The goal of StanCAREERS is to ensure that Stanislaus County job seekers are ready to enter self-sustaining employment.

 
 

StanCAREERS

 

WHY THiS MATTERS

Connecting postsecondary graduates to good jobs is the ultimate goal of the cradle to career pipeline. Students who are employed within a year of graduation are on their way to achieving self-sufficiency. When a community’s workforce is fully engaged, the entire community is stronger.

PRiORiTY FOCUS

Understanding the income levels of Stanislaus County residents has been foundational to the work of StanCAREERS. The living wage in Stanislaus County for a single adult is $12.12/hour. For one adult and one child, the living wage is $26.14/hour. For the top 100 in-demand jobs, the median wage is $21.84/hour.


Median Income vs. Living Wage

SOURCE: US Census, American Community Survey 2018 five-year estimate, Stanislaus County.

SOURCE: US Census, American Community Survey 2018 five-year estimate, Stanislaus County.

 
SOURCE: MIT Living Wage Calculator, January 2020, Stanislaus County.

SOURCE: MIT Living Wage Calculator, January 2020, Stanislaus County.


Key insights/Challenges

Family composition matters when it comes to earning a living wage. The median income in Stanislaus County is 19% below the estimated living wage for a single parent with three children.

Two-thirds of Stanislaus County residents who live in poverty are employed, which means many individuals are working hard in one or more jobs and yet not earning a wage in which they can support themselves or their families.

Opportunities to upskill are unclear. We mapped career preparation programs in the county to build a searchable platform for job seekers to access training programs that can lead to higher wage jobs.


Poverty and the Labor Force

 
SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2018 Annual Average, Stanislaus County & US Census, American Community Survey 2018 five-year estimate, Stanislaus County.

SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2018 Annual Average, Stanislaus County & US Census, American Community Survey 2018 five-year estimate, Stanislaus County.

 

Team Leaders

 

Sara Redd

Assistant Director, Stanislaus County Workforce Development
redds@stanworkforce.com

Luke Hibbard

Director II, Digital Curriculum & Instructional Technology, Stanislaus County Office of Education
lhibbard@stancoe.org

Antony Little

Director III, Alternative Education
Little.A@monet.k12.ca.us

 

Kevin Fox

Director I, Career & Technical Education, Educational Options, Stanislaus County Office of Education
kfox@stancoe.org

 
 

At Bay Valley Tech, we feel that training local workers for high-paying, in-demand tech jobs is the best way to move families out of poverty. Software skills are now highly sought after in many Central Valley industries such as transportation, construction, food processing and agriculture.
— Phil Lan, President of Bay Valley Tech

Team Members

Bay Valley Tech • Boys and girls clubs of stanislaus county • Ceres Unified School District • California State University, Stanislaus • city of Modesto • E. & J. Gallo •Employment development department • Hughson Unified School District • Learning Quest • Modesto City Schools • Modesto Junior College • Opportunity Stanislaus • Patterson Joint unified school district • Stanislaus Community Foundation •Stanislaus County Office of Education • Stanislaus County Workforce Development • Stanislaus Partners in Education • Turlock Unified School District • Waterford Unified School District