NEWS

Articles, reports, and KCCF newsletters with information relevant to Hawaiʻi Island workforce development.

Report Diana Hahn Report Diana Hahn

Hawaiʻi Workforce Funders Collaborative: From Crisis to Coalition: A 2026 Roadmap for Hawaiʻi’s Generational Workforce Commitment

Building on HWFC’s 2025 report, From Crisis to Opportunity: Building Hawaiʻi’s Workforce Resilience, this report reviews progress made to date and introduces the Hawaiʻi Generational Workforce Commitment — a cross-sector shared goal that by 2045, all people of Hawaiʻi will have a path to a career that enables them to learn, work, and thrive in Hawaiʻi and contribute to a vibrant economy grounded in community values. To support immediate action, the report also offers policy recommendations, systemic enablers, immediate next steps by sector, and a five-year roadmap to build towards collective commitments that will set the foundation for Hawaiʻi move to achieve this generational goal.

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Civil Beat: Girls Are Losing Out In Hawai‘i’s Push To Train Kids For High-Paying Jobs

From civilbeat.org:

The number of students enrolled in CTE pathways has exploded in Hawaiʻi in recent years, amid debates about how to help students secure high-paying jobs after graduation and combat the state’s high cost of living. Nearly two-thirds of the class of 2023 participated in a high school CTE program. 

But the programs aren’t serving boys and girls equally across the state. 

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Hawaiʻi Workforce Funders Collaborative: From Crisis to Opportunity: Building Hawaiʻi’s Workforce Resilience

From the report:

Of the 170,000 youth entering Hawaiʻi’s workforce over the next decade, nearly 30% will face a lack of viable opportunities to build a sustainable future here. The consequences of inaction are clear: continued loss of local talent, stagnant economic growth, and an inability to meet the evolving needs of Hawaiʻi’s communities.

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News Article Diana Hahn News Article Diana Hahn

Civil Beat: Struggling To Survive: Hawaiʻi Residents Take On Debt, Think About Leaving

From civilbeat.org:

The federal poverty level for a family of four in Hawaiʻi is just under $36,000. What Aloha United Way’s ALICE Initiative refers to as the household survival budget — enough to cover basic necessities such as housing, child care, food, transportation, health care, taxes and smartphones — is more than that for a single adult and $107,795 for a family of four. 

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