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Queens Chronicle Job Placement and Job Training Assistance Program
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Job seeker Tristan Delgado (from l.) talks with Business Leaders of Tomorrow recruiters Howard Bean and Rachel Gordon at the
organization’s career center in Jamaica. Photo by Christina Santucci
Jamaica Job Center Offers Retraining
By Ivan Pereira Friday,
November 21, 2008 10:24 AM ESTThe souring economy has seen many Queens residents
lose their longtime jobs and prospective employees afraid and nervous to enter the working world, according to Rachel Gordon,
executive director of the nonprofit Business Leaders of Tomorrow.
Next week, her organization will be giving both
groups of displaced workers from all over the borough a chance to get back on their feet with a special open house at its
Jamaica career center.
Business Leaders of Tomorrow: The Career Development Center, at 131−08 Liberty Ave.,
will take rÉsumÉs and walk−in visits next Monday through Wednesday for job retraining and placement for
unemployed or underemployed persons above 18.
“It brings some kind of hope to the people that someone cares,
that someone is thinking about what is going on,” Gordon said.The center, funded by the city, specializes redirecting applicants to organizations where they can get training
for job certificates and licenses, such as a commercial driver’s license, certified nurses assistant training, and computer
office assistant training. Gordon said these positions are still popular in today’s job market and inexperienced workers
would greatly benefit in the long run from the training.
The courses, some of which last as little as eight weeks,
are offered by a variety of city organizations and non−profits, including Queensborough Community College, Brooklyn−based
training center Opportunities for a Better Tomorrow and Manhattan−based Nontraditional Employment for Women, which helps
women get certified training for construction jobs, according to Gordon.
The executive director added that these
organizations have been helping workers get licenses for years and welcome new applicants.
The center also provides
a helping hand to those who spent several years in the workforce and who have years of knowledge in their working class field.
This is very beneficial for clients, according to Gordon, because it not only gives them a job, but helps them avoid abandoning
the skills they have amassed.
“We are able to send them to a job developer of a career that they have been
working for a long period of time,” she said.
Since opening the center in January, Gordon said the center
registered more than 350 clients and 250 of them received retraining services. With the economic crisis growing, the executive
director said she fears that her office could be in danger of closing due to city budget cuts.
Nevertheless, she
said she and her staff remain committed to helping the growing number of displaced workers who come knocking on their door.
For more information on Business Leaders of Tomorrow and the open houses, visit www.blotlec.org or call 718−297−6849.
Reach reporter Ivan Pereira by e−mail at ipereira@timesledger.com or by phone at 718−229−0300, Ext. 146.
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