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Partnerships in Employment Brief: Guidance on How to Obtain Data on the Use of Subminimum Wages Within a State to Inform Systems Change Activities
All Institute for Community Inclusion Publications
  • Evelyn Doxey, Disability Rights Tennessee
  • Leslie Jaehning, Disability Law Center of Alaska
  • Elise McMillan, Vanderbilt Kennedy Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities
  • Kristin Vandagriff, Alaska Governor's Council on Disabilities and Special Education
  • Jean Winsor, University of Massachusetts Boston
Document Type
Occasional Paper
Publication Date
2-1-2017
Abstract

In October 2011, the Administration on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities awarded grants to lead agencies in six states: California, Iowa, Mississippi, Missouri, New York, and Wisconsin. Two additional states, Alaska and Tennessee, received grants in October 2012. These states proposed activities to spur improved employment and postsecondary outcomes for youth with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD). Until the end of September 2016 the Institute for Community Inclusion and the National Association of State Directors of Developmental Disabilities Services provided training and technical assistance (TA) to the eight state projects through the Partnerships in Employment (PIE) Training and TA Center.

PIE project work is framed by the High-Performing States Transition Model, which contains 8 key elements: collaboration, leadership, state goals and policy, funding and contracting, staff training, service innovation, performance management and quality assurance, and youth leadership development and family engagement. This document is one in a series of PIE Project Fact Sheets that chronicle how PIE grantee states are making change under the elements of the High-Performing States Transition Model.

This document represents the efforts of several PIE grantees to identify and change the use of subminimum wages in their states by examining data on the use of subminimum wages authorized by individual state governments and by the Federal Government. It is the first of two documents that both share information about how to access and use data on federal certificates and, if applicable, state subminimum wage authorizations. Please see the companion brief Influencing changes in state policy and practice with data on subminimum wages.

Community Engaged/Serving
No, this is not community-engaged.
Citation Information
Evelyn Doxey, Leslie Jaehning, Elise McMillan, Kristin Vandagriff, et al.. "Partnerships in Employment Brief: Guidance on How to Obtain Data on the Use of Subminimum Wages Within a State to Inform Systems Change Activities" (2017)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jean-winsor/27/