Business

Jobs program gives newbies a sweet start

A year ago, Luis Vargas seemed stuck in the ranks of New York Cityā€™s 172,000 young adults who are not inšŸ…° school or working.

Now heā€™s a full-time pastry chef at fast-growing local restaurant run by EMM Group. Vargas has found his calling in the kšŸ”“itchen, baking decadent desserts like the chocolate brownie cake dished out at Meatpacking hotspot Catch NYC.

Vargas, who has a GED but no college education, broke free from low-paid, occasional hours at a fast-food chain thanks to job application and rĆ©sumĆ© assistance from the Lower East Side Employment Networkįƒ¦ (LESEN).

ā€œThe network showed me a lot of things I didnā€™t know before,ā€ said the 24-year-old Manhattan resident. ā€œIt changed my lišŸŒ fšŸ„€e.ā€

The Great Recession and its aftermath have exacerbated a decades-long youth employment crisišŸ½s, particularly ļ·ŗfor young minorities.

A young personā€™s first job is a crušŸ¬cial stepping-stone to financial health and to prominent rites of passage into adulthood, like renting or owning a home.

ā€œEarly work is a predictor for later work and higher income, so the lack can have [dire] consequencesšŸŒŒ,ā€ says Patrice Cromwell, directšŸ…ŗor of the economic development integration initiative at the Annie E. Casey Foundation.

But with the cityā€™s unemployment rate standing at 8.4 percent, young people like Vargas, with limited experience and education, are among the hardest hit. They face stagnant wages, a shift toward low-wage positions, and fierce competition from older skilled workāœ…ers, notes a May 2013 report from nonprofit organization JobsĀ­FirstNYC. In fact, 20 percent of New Yorkers between the ages of 18 and 24 are out of work or out of school.

LESEN is one of several small but innovative new programs helping young New Yorkers find wošŸŒørk. These programs reflect a new collaborative spirit between nonprofits and businesses, and a new focus onź§… smoothing the way for companies to hire young people.

ā€œTalent gets hardš’‰°er to find as we grow. LESEN makes it easier,ā€ said Todd Enany, director of operations at EMM Group, which has added 1šŸ·0 LESEN youths to its staff of 700.

Two of the most promising initiatives thašŸ¼t address the problem of youth joblessness:

The Lower East Side Employment Network

A partnership among several Lower East Side nonprofits including Henry Street Settlement, LESEN placed 54 people, including 19 youths, in jobs in its fź©²irst year and aims to double that figure this year.

Year Up NYC

Begun in 2006, this job-training and corporate ā™Žinternship program now sšŸ’¦erves 270 young adults and plans to aid 350 by 2015. Average earnings are $19 to $20 an hour; one grad landed a $65,000-a-year gig at Facebook