AID Youth Employment Act
AID Youth Employment Act
Plain Language Summary
# AID Youth Employment Act Summary **What the Bill Would Do** The AID Youth Employment Act (S 1211) would create or expand employment and training programs aimed at helping young people from disadvantaged backgrounds find jobs and develop work skills. Based on its subject areas, the bill appears to focus on youth who face particular barriers to employment, including those in foster care, experiencing homelessness, involved with the juvenile justice system, or from low-income communities. The legislation would likely fund training programs, job placement services, and wage support to help these young people enter the workforce. **Who It Affects and Key Focus Areas** The bill targets vulnerable youth populations, including foster youth, homeless young people, Native American communities, and those at risk of gang involvement or criminal justice involvement. It also appears to address minority employment disparities.
The program would support temporary and part-time work opportunities as stepping stones to stable employment, with attention to fair wages and working conditions for young workers. **Current Status** As of now, S 1211 is in committee, meaning it has been introduced but has not yet advanced to a full Senate vote. The bill was sponsored by Senator Richard J. Durbin (D-Illinois). No further action has been taken on the legislation at this time.
Latest Action
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. (text: CR S1926-1930)