Withdrawn Democratic Presidential Challenger; CA Rep
Voted NO on workforce training by state block grants & industry partners.
Congressional Summary:
Supporting Knowledge and Investing in Lifelong Skills Act or SKILLS Act:
Reauthorizes appropriations workforce investment systems for job training and employment services.
Requires a plan describe:
strategies and services to more fully engage employers and meet their needs, as well as those to assist at-risk youth and out-of-school youth in acquiring education, skills, credentials, and employment experience;
how the state board will convene industry or sector partnerships that lead to collaborative planning;
how the state will use technology to facilitate access to services in remote areas;
state actions to foster partnerships with non-profit organizations that provide employment-related services; and
the methodology for determining one-stop partner program contributions for the cost of the infrastructure of one-stop centers.
Repeals title VI (Employment Opportunities for Individuals with Disabilities)
Opponent's Argument for voting No:National League of Cities op-ed, "H.R. 803 fails because it would:"
Undermine the local delivery system that has been the cornerstone of job training programs
Establish a program that is based on political boundaries (states) rather than on economic regions and local labor markets, or the naturally evolving areas in which workers find paying work
Eliminate a strong role for local elected officials but require that they continue to be fiscally liable for funds spent in their local areas
Change what was once a program targeted to those most in need--economically disadvantaged adults and youth and special population groups like veterans, migrant farm workers, and low income seniors--into a block grant to governors
Contribute to the emerging division between those American's who have the requisite skills to find employment and those who do not.
Reference: SKILLS Act;
Bill H.R. 803
; vote number 13-HV075
on Mar 15, 2013
Reform bankruptcy to protect jobs and retirement.
Swalwell co-sponsored Protecting Employees and Retirees in Business Bankruptcies Act
The Congress finds the following:
Business bankruptcies have increased sharply in recent years and remain at high levels. These bankruptcies include several of the largest business bankruptcy filings in history. As the use of bankruptcy has expanded, job preservation and retirement security are placed at greater risk.
Laws enacted to improve recoveries for employees and retirees and limit their losses in bankruptcy cases have not kept pace with the increasing and broader use of bankruptcy by businesses in all sectors of the economy. However, while protections for employees and retirees in bankruptcy cases have eroded, management compensation plans devised for those in charge of troubled businesses have become more prevalent and are escaping adequate scrutiny.
Changes in the law regarding these matters are urgently needed as bankruptcy is used to address increasingly more complex and diverse conditions affecting troubled businesses and industries.