How San Antonio’s ambitious workforce experiment wants to jumpstart hiring

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How San Antonio’s ambitious workforce experiment wants to jumpstart hiring
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“There’s nothing better than a well-trained employee who lives close and who understands the community we’re serving,” said Dr. Lyssa Ochoa.

Dr. Lyssa Ochoa has opened eight San Antonio Vascular and Endovascular Clinics in medically underserved neighborhoods. She's hoping San Antonio's Ready to Work program will help her find the staff she needs.The San Antonio Report and San Antonio Woman Magazine have partnered to create a series of three in-depth articles looking at the STEM ecosystem in San Antonio.

Ochoa had a front-row seat to the city’s glaring health inequities in the years she worked at a large medical practice. It compelled her to split off and form a clinic of her own, offering comprehensive vascular care to the city’s most underserved and diabetes-prone communities. Ochoa doesn’t want just anyone with a certificate, though. She wants someone who is motivated to learn, someone who understands the importance of that redlining map, someone who, with that knowledge, will go to greatIdeally, Ochoa would like to hire from one of San Antonio’s historically underserved communities, someone who might be especially passionate about helping their neighbors.

Dr. Lyssa Ochoa examines a patient at one of the San Antonio Vascular and Endovascular Clinics she runs.is said to be the first of its kind in the country. It aims to take thousands of residents stuck in low-wage jobs and give them training for in-demand, high-paying careers. A former line cook could learn to become an IT specialist, or a rideshare driver could finish

City voters overwhelmingly approved a broad outline of SA Ready to Work and a sales tax to fund it in November 2020. Since enrollment opened in May, more than 5,400 people have signed up. “We’re going to try to make sure the people who live in those communities are aware that this program is here to help,” said Michael Ramsey, executive director of San Antonio’s Workforce Development Office, which is running the program.

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