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Program Reporting Changes and Requirements for the WIA Quarterly and Annual Reports ETA 9090 / 9091

Program Reporting Changes and Requirements for the WIA Quarterly and Annual Reports ETA 9090 / 9091. Agenda. Overview Highlights What’s New in ETA 9090 / 9091 Common Measures Key Concepts & Considerations. 2. Agenda (con’t). ETA 9090 Reporting Instructions ETA 9091 Reporting Instructions

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Program Reporting Changes and Requirements for the WIA Quarterly and Annual Reports ETA 9090 / 9091

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  1. Program Reporting Changes and Requirements for the WIA Quarterly and Annual Reports ETA 9090 / 9091

  2. Agenda • Overview • Highlights • What’s New in ETA 9090 / 9091 • Common Measures Key Concepts & Considerations 2

  3. Agenda (con’t) • ETA 9090 Reporting Instructions • ETA 9091 Reporting Instructions • Quiz - time permitting

  4. Overview

  5. Background • Common Performance Measures Policy for ETA’s Performance Accountability System -TEGL 17-05 • Common Measures Policy - TEGL 28-04, April 15, 2004 • Revised Reporting Instructions for PY05 & PY06 • 1st (2nd?) Quarter PY05results

  6. Recent Revisions to Common Measures Policy • TEGL 17-05 Rescinds and replaces: • TEGL 28-04 • TEGL 7-99 core performance measures • Customer Satisfaction measures in TEGL 6-00 and TEGL 6-00 Ch. 1

  7. Current Reporting Requirements • TEGL 28-04 • Common Measures • Participation & Exit • Implementation began 7/1/05 • Revised Reporting Instructions • WI/A Quarterly Report (ETA 9090) • WIA Annual Report (ETA 9091)

  8. Illustration: Participation and Exit Eligible and Receives Service End of 90-Day Period Last Service Participation No Services Participation Date Exit Date

  9. Key changes in TEGL 17-05 • Program Participation • Adult Earnings Measure • Literacy and Numeracy Gain • Testing Interval • CM definition of Certificate replaces Credential beginning July 1, 2006

  10. Program Participation • Participant includes: • Those who receive services remotely or through electronic technologies • Individuals that use self-directed tools for job search – Does not apply to WIA Youth program • No longer exclude self-directed job search that does not result in referral to a job

  11. (PY 2006) AVERAGE EARNINGS • Definition: For those employed in the 1st, 2ndand 3rd quarter after exit, average six month earnings in the 2ndand 3rd quarter after exit • Calculation: Of those employed in the 1st 2ndand 3rd quarters after exit… Earnings from the 2nd and 3rd quarter after exit Number who exit during the quarter

  12. Literacy Numeracy • Based on date of first youth service • No longer tied to date of participation • Testing Interval • Youth participants may be included for up to 3 years if they remain Basic Skills Deficient

  13. 1st (2nd?) Quarter PY05 results • Failure to report • Inaccurate data • More work to be done

  14. 1st Quarter PY05 observations • Total Adults (self services only) > Total Adult Participants • Should be smaller number • Total Youth (14-21) Participants and Exiters • Should equal sum of Younger Youth and Older Youth • Should equal sum of In-School and Out-of-School • Current Quarter (most recent) roughly equal to ¼ Cumulative 4-Quarter

  15. Highlights

  16. What's New in the WIA Quarterly Report - ETA 9090

  17. Performance Measures • Uses Common Measures concepts • Participant • Exit • Common Measures Definitions • Adult, DW, NEG • Entered Employment • Employment Retention • Earnings Increase (PY05) • Average Earnings (PY06) • Youth (14-21) • Placement in Employment or Education • Attainment of Degree or Certificate • Literacy and Numeracy Gains • (opt. PY05, req. PY06)

  18. More changes • Total Participants / Total Exiters breakouts • WIA Adults (self services only) • NEG • Received Training Services • Breakout for Total Participants only • In-School / Out-of-School • Rolling four quarters • Customer Satisfaction not reported

  19. What's New in the WIA Annual Report ETA 9091

  20. Performance Measures • Uses Common Measures concepts • Participant • Exit • Common Measures Definitions • Adult, DW • Entered Employment • Employment Retention • Earnings Increase (PY05) • Average Earnings (PY06)

  21. Tables • Additional table H 1 for Youth • Common Measures • Placement in Employment or Education • Attainment of Degree or Certificate • Literacy or Numeracy Gains • Table M • Total Participants and Total Exiters breakouts • WIA Adult (self services only) • In-school/out-of-school • Table O • Additional lines for 3 Youth Common Measures

  22. Common Measures Key Concepts & Considerations 22

  23. Who’s reported in participant counts? All individuals who have been determined eligible and receive a service, including self-service and informational activities, in either a physical location (One-Stop career center or affiliate site) or remotely through electronic technologies

  24. Who’s included in WIA performance measures calculations? All participants who receive a core, intensive, or training service who exit the program are to be included in the performance measures calculations, except that WIA Section 136 excludesWIA adult and dislocated worker program participants who only receive self-service or informational activities

  25. What are Self-Service and Informational Activities? Core services that are made available and accessible to the general public; that are designed to inform and educate individuals about the labor market, their employment strengths and weaknesses, and the range of services appropriate to their situation; and that do not require significant staff involvement with the individual in terms of resources or time. Ref. 20 CFR 666.140(a)(2)

  26. ETA’s Interpretation of Self-Service and Informational Activities • Self-Service = participants serve themselves in accessing workforce investment system information in either a physical location or remotely through electronic technologies • Informational activities = may include self-services and staff assisted core services that are designed to inform and educate a participant about the labor market and to enable a participant to identify his or her individual employment strengths, weaknesses, and the range of services appropriate for the individual.

  27. Significant Staff Involvement • Any assistance provided by staff beyond the informational activities regardless of the length of time involved in providing such assistance • Includes a staff member’s assessment of a participant’s skills, education, or career objectives in order to assist participants in any of the following: • Decide on appropriate next steps in search of employment, training, and related services • Assess their personal barriers to employment • Access other related services necessary to enhance their employability and individual employment related needs.

  28. Informational Activities • When a staff member provides a participant with readily available information that does not require an assessment of the participant’s skills, education, or career objectives, the participant is a recipient of informational activities. This includes: • Labor market trends • Unemployment rate information • Businesses that are hiring or reducing workforce • Info on high growth industries • Info on demand occupations

  29. Participant vs. WIA Performance

  30. Core Intensive Training Participants Self-Service Info. Activities

  31. Self-Service Info. Activities Intensive Training Core Core WIA PERF CALC Self-Service Significant Staff Involve

  32. Scenarios The following scenarios could occur in the delivery of services. While these scenarios do not cover every situation states and local workforce investment areas may encounter, they can be used to determine the level of staff involvement that will trigger a period of participation and a participant’s inclusion in WIA performance measures calculations.

  33. Scenario 1 An individual comes into the One-Stop Career Center believing that he can access all government services. He asks for directions to the Motor Vehicle Administration. The receptionist gives the information and the individual leaves. This person is not a participant and will not appear in any counts for performance measures. The information that he sought did not directly relate to the services provided by the One-Stop Career Center or the workforce investment system

  34. Scenario 2 An individual comes into the One-Stop Career Center and accesses the computers in the self-service area, using a system user account identification. The self-service area is jointly funded by WIA and Wagner-Peyser Act funds. She takes some notes, scribbles the notes on a sheet of paper near the computer, and leaves the facility.

  35. This person may be a participant but it is difficult to determine the nature of the information that the individual has accessed or written down, as there had been no staff interaction with this individual. In this case the individual is a participant because she used her system user account identification to access a saved job search on the state’s Internet job bank system and copied employer contact information. This participant’s self- referral activity was captured by the state’s datasystem and a service transaction was recorded. Because the state job bank is funded by both WIA and the Wagner-Peyser Act, this individual is included in the WIA and Wagner-Peyser Act participant counts, but not included in the WIA performance measures calculation because the participant received only self-services. This person is included in the Wagner-Peyser Act performance calculations.

  36. Scenario 3 An individual accesses job listings from his home computer and uses the resume writer software that is on the local One-Stop Web site. The Web site is jointly funded by the Wagner-Peyser Act and WIA. The individual sends his resume in response to a job listing. This person is a participant as he has used workforce investment system information and services to assist his job search. This individual is included in Wagner-Peyser Act and WIA participant counts, but not included in the WIA performance measures calculation because the participant received only self-services. This person is counted in the Wagner-Peyser Act performance calculations.

  37. Scenario 4 An individual accesses job listings from a computer at the local library and uses her account identification that she established with the workforce investment system to log on to the computer. The individual sends her resume in response to a job listing for which she believes she will be a suitable candidate. This person is a participant as she has used workforce investment system services to assist her job search. This individual is included as a Wagner-Peyser Act and WIA participant, but not included in the WIA performance measures calculation because the participant received only self-services. This person is counted in the Wagner-Peyser Act performance calculations.

  38. Scenario 5 An individual has figured out how to access workforce investment system information from his cell phone that includes a personal data assistant. He thinks that he has found the job of his dreams on the state job bank and posts his resume with the employer. This person is a participant as he has used workforce investment system services to assist his job search. This individual is included as a Wagner-Peyser Act and WIA participant, but not included in the WIA performance calculations because the individual received only self-services. This person is counted in the Wagner-Peyser Act performance calculations

  39. Scenario 6 An individual arrives at the One-Stop Career Center and, familiar with computers, she decides to go to the self-service section and search the job listings. Later, she wants to review occupational trends information. She pulls up some information, but is not quite sure how the trends were calculated. She questions the staff about the statistics and asks where she might find additional information on the need for workers in this field. The staff member answers the question and directs the individual to the Career Voyages, another self-service Web site where more information and other helpful links are available.

  40. Scenario 6 con’t. This person is a participant as she has used workforce investment system information and self-service electronic toolsjointly funded by WIA and Wagner-Peyser Act funds to assist her job search. This individual is included as a Wagner-Peyser Act and WIA participant, but not included in the WIA performance calculations because the participant received only self-service and informational activities. This individual did not receive services requiring significant staff involvement because the staff person provided readily available information and instructions about tools and services in the research room without having to assess the individual’s skills, education, or career objectives. This person is counted in the Wagner-Peyser Act performance calculations.

  41. Scenario 7 An individual arrives at a One-Stop Career Center looking for information on the availability of jobs in a specific field. The staff member asks the individual several questions to determine the individual’s previous work experience, education, and training experience in the specific industry and occupation. The staff member assists the individual to search for employment on a resource room computer and provides him with the local occupational and economic trend information.

  42. Scenario 7 con’t. This person is a participant as he has used workforce investment system staff-assisted service to assist his job search. This individual is included as a Wagner-Peyser Act and WIA participant, and must be included in the WIA performance measures calculation because the participant received more than self-service and informational activities. The staff member performed an assessment of the participant’s work readiness for employment in the local area and assisted in the participant’s job search.This person is also counted in the Wagner-Peyser Act performance calculations.

  43. Scenario 8 An individual arrives at the One-Stop Career Center and wants to know the various services that are available at the One-Stop Career Center. The One-Stop Career Center specialist gives the individual an orientation to the One-Stop Career Center and advises the individual of what services are available. The staff member sets the individual up at a computer and shows him how to use the equipment and to access the job search tools. Later, the individual participates in an assessment interview and begins to develop an employment plan.

  44. Scenario 8 con’t. This individual is a participant as she has used workforce investment system services to assist her job search. This individual is included as a Wagner-Peyser Act and WIA participant. She is included in the WIA performance measures calculations because her assessment interview and the development of an employment plan required significant staff involvement. This individual should also be included in the Wagner-Peyser Act performance calculations.

  45. Workforce Investment Act Quarterly Report:General Reporting Instructions and ETA Form 9090

  46. ETA 9090 Reporting Instructions General Instructions • Aggregate Performance data • Determine levels of participation and accomplishments • Time Periods • Most recent quarter • Most recent four quarter period

  47. Covered Programs • WIA Adult • WIA Dislocated Worker Program • WIA Youth Program • National Emergency Grant

  48. National Emergency Grants • Separate Breakout on ETA 9090 • Total Participant • Total Exiters • Entered Employment Rate • Employment Retention Rate • Six Months Earnings Increase

  49. Covered Programs (con’t) • Statewide activities • Include activities that involve enrollment of individuals • Exclude activities that do not involve enrollment of Individuals • Indirect services (e.g. research or evaluation) • Highly specialized services (incumbent worker training)

  50. Due Date

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