From impromptu negotiations down the hall to discussions on the subway to the Capitol, sometimes, something as simple as having offices next door to one another can make all the difference in Congress these days.
As colleagues on the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, we’ve had our share of disagreements on policy, but as next door neighbors on the first floor of the Russell Senate Office Building, we’ve taken advantage of our proximity and our unique ability to work together and reach a bipartisan, bicameral deal to reauthorize and improve our federal workforce development systems for the first time in almost two decades.
The Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, which passed the Senate June 25 (and the House on July 9), is the product of years of work and months of bicameral discussions with six of our colleagues, Republicans and Democrats from both the House and Senate.
The bill, which now heads to the president’s desk, will bring our federal workforce development and job training systems into the 21st century at a time when our economy needs it most.
Each year, federal workforce development programs serve roughly 20 million Americans, one in eight men and women of working age, but in 2014, we’re still training those workers with programs written in the 1990s. That’s no way to prepare someone for a job with Boeing in Washington state or Siemens in Georgia.