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TALLER SAN JOSE 2 - 2002
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TALLER SAN JOSE 2 - 2002
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Last modified
1/3/2012 1:57:35 PM
Creation date
1/14/2004 8:36:00 AM
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Contracts
Company Name
Taller San Jose
Contract #
A-2002-094
Agency
Community Development
Council Approval Date
10/6/2003
Expiration Date
9/30/2003
Insurance Exp Date
6/30/2004
Destruction Year
2008
Notes
Amended by A-2003-211
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Main Purpose of Program <br />Taller San Jose (St. Joseph's Workshop) has one focused mission - toprovide <br />continuing education and job-training to young adults (18-28) who seek a productive <br />and self-reliant future. <br /> <br />Taller San Jose was established in 1995, by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange, in <br />response to the high crime rate among Santa Ana's youth and the lack of resources <br />available to youth who had either dropped out of school or been incarcerated. The <br />majority of youth involved in job-training at Taller San Jose (75%) have been or are <br />currently involved in gangs, crime and drags. Taller San Jose is a highly focused, goal- <br />oriented program that challenges its students to build a foundation for future <br />sustainability. <br /> <br />Taller San Jose Tech (TSJ Tech) is a mission based entrepreneurial venture of Taller <br />San Jose. TSJ Tech recruits young people with no marketable job skills and prepares <br />them to work everyday, on-time, responsibly, drug free, and as team members. Program <br />elements incorporate workplace skills and industry specific job-training with paid work <br />experience, mentoring, job placement, and easy access to Taller San Jose's educational <br />and life skills programs. The goal ofTSJ Tech is to assist unemployed youth (18-28) to <br />become economically self-sufficient in a relatively short period of time through intensive <br />hands-on job training coupled with employability and social development. <br /> <br />Young people in Santa Ana, who have not completed high school, who have no defined <br />job skills, and who have criminal records face a number of significant obstacles. Taller <br />San Jose Tech has identified seven barriers to advancement faced by its target population: <br /> <br />1. Out-of-school youth do not view themselves as "learners" and are both <br /> reluctant to return to school and ill-prepared to enroll in community college. <br /> <br />2. <br /> <br />Because they have no job skills to offer an employer, out-of-school youth tend <br />t~ enter the job market at minimum wage and stay there without the ability to <br />advance their employment status. <br /> <br />3. Many young men are unemployed and yet have financial responsibility for the <br /> children they have parented. <br /> <br />4. Although they are unskilled and inexperienced, young males are often viewed <br /> by their extended family as primary breadwinners. <br /> <br />5. Young males in Santa Ana are exposed to the drug culture on a daily basis. <br /> <br />6. A number of young males are unable to pay their mounting fines related to <br /> probation or to past legal infractions. <br /> <br />_ 2 <br /> <br /> <br />
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