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Mark Butler

Thursday, January 26, 2012

GA Workforce Panel: Collaboration Key

The panel met at Chattahoochee Technical College to discuss workforce development, training and WIA funding in Georgia.

Collaboration was the theme of a panel discussion today centered on workforce development at Chattahoochee Technical College's North Metro Campus in Acworth. Despite Georgia’s unemployment rate of 9.7 percent, employers are looking for workers, and that’s where collaboration comes into play, moderator Ron Banta said. The question is how to get workers into the jobs. One thing the state is doing is to offer its Work Ready program just to those who are unemployed as a way for them to gain skills needed to move forward, said Tricia Pridemore, the executive director of the Governor's Office of Workforce Development. This year, 16,500 skilled jobs are expected to become available, Pridemore said. “This will be a good way to put Georgia back to …

Pam J

10:04 am on Saturday, January 28, 2012

And we don't need to discriminate because of age. I went through the Cobb Works program to get some training to help me in my job search, and although she won't admit it if asked, the lady that I talked to about which training course I was going to take said that since I was 58 years old, my options were limited. So limited in that I wasn't approved for anything.   more ›

More Jobs for Cobb, Douglas in 2011

Both counties had more residents working in December, though the unemployment rate rose in Cobb and was flat in Douglas.

Good news today for Powder Springs and Lithia Springs: Employment ended 2011 on the rise in Cobb and Douglas counties even though the unemployment rate crept higher in December in Cobb and was flat in Douglas. About 7,400 more Cobb residents were working at the end of December than had jobs in December 2010, according to preliminary figures the state Department of Labor reported today. A total of 340,810 people in the county ended 2011 employed, while 31,464 people 16 and older were seeking jobs. That means 305 more people were working in December than in November even though the county’s jobless rate rose to 8.5 percent from 8.4 percent in November because the workforce grew. But the more important comparison is to a year ago, and the …

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