My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
ORANGE COUNTY CONSERVATION CORPS (4)
Clerk
>
Contracts / Agreements
>
O
>
ORANGE COUNTY CONSERVATION CORPS (4)
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
7/21/2020 9:39:33 AM
Creation date
7/21/2020 8:30:40 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Contracts
Company Name
ORANGE COUNTY CONSERVATION CORPS
Contract #
A-2020-142
Agency
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
Council Approval Date
7/7/2020
Expiration Date
6/30/2021
Insurance Exp Date
1/1/1900
Destruction Year
2025
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
95
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
4. Assessment (1 page max) <br />Due to COVID-19, OCCC is following the guidelines of the CDC. Please refer to attached OCCC <br />COVID-19 Policies and Procedures which are subject to change. <br />OCCC programs explicitly meet the needs of youth with significant barriers including low- <br />income barriers, gang involvement, drug use, and domestic violence. Once a Santa Ana resident <br />youth (or homeless youth) enters facilities, the screening, assessment and linkages process takes <br />place with full-time Santa Ana WIOA Program Specialist Mr. Darin Garcia as follows: <br />1. Prospective participant completes and submits the OCCC application. The Program <br />Specialist determines eligibility for the Santa Ana WIOA Youth Program. <br />2. Topics discussed during the assessment process are as follows: eligibility requirements <br />for program services; what each youth expects upon arrival; an overview of the program <br />mission; expected resultsloutcomes (employment, obtaining credentials, higher education <br />attainment) and a description of both the youth's and case managers' responsibilities. <br />3. During the assessment process, the Program Specialist has the opportunity to discuss <br />important issues in detail and identify youth's individual goals. Program Specialist <br />conducts an interview using an OCCC 5-page questionnaire (attached in W-additional <br />attachments section of RFP) to assesses over 50-points upon entry into programs. <br />4. Once the youth is deemed eligible to be enrolled in the WIOA youth program, <br />registration in CalJobs and selective services is verified. If youth is not enrolled in <br />CalJobs or selective services, Program Specialist assists in registration as necessary. The <br />youth completes an Individual Service Strategy (ISS); which allows the youth to identify <br />their interests and goals, skills and abilities and personal characteristics. Youth then <br />administered the Test for Adult Basic Education (TABE) pre -test in literacy and <br />numeracy skills. <br />According to the 2012 Anaheim Youth Services Assessment the term "at risk" is widely used <br />when referring to youth who may be at risk of `litclong disadvantage". The assessment found <br />,,youth are at risk clue to a number of challenges that have the potential to keep them from <br />achieving success in their lives. The top four risk outcomes identified through this assessment <br />process, including poverty, gang activity, school dropout, and drug use". OCCC recruits and <br />serves to these barriers. OCCC is the type of program needed to help youth overcome these <br />barriers. OCCC hires homeless youth; OCCC hires youth living in deep poverty; OCCC is <br />felony -friendly. OCCC provides a safe haven from gang activity and gang -pressure. OCCC <br />supports youth living with severe mental health, disabilities, addiction(s) and abuse, dual <br />diagnosis, and other conditions; OCCC graduates youth who have dropped out of traditional K- <br />12 educational tracks. OCCC ret?ame barriers as potential strengths, building one's resistance. <br />OCCC supports youth seeking to escape domestic violence. While OCCC recruitment efforts <br />target all youth of Santa Ana, the majority of youth entering programs continue to live in Santa <br />Ana's lowest income, socio-economically restricted neighborhoods, with active gang <br />recruitment, and drug abuse. OCCC recruits and serves youth with the most significant barriers, <br />meeting or exceeding the out -of -school recruitment numbers every year over the past 13 years <br />for the Santa Ana WIOA Youth Program. <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.