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Tiffany Davis of Detroit, fourth from left, speaks during a roundtable in Detroit urging the Trump administration and Congress to reverse a federal freeze for Job Corps they say is impacting young ...
A district court issued an order that prohibits the U.S. Department of Labor from closing Job Corps centers across the ...
The Montgomery Job Corps Center will remain open, at least for now, thanks to a ruling by a federal district court this week.
“Job Corps, which you know has bipartisan support in Congress, trains young, low-income people, and helps them find good-paying jobs and provides housing for a population that might otherwise be ...
A federal judge has granted a preliminary injunction to stop the U.S. Department of Labor from shutting down Job Corps, a residential program for low-income youth, until a lawsuit against the move ...
Job Corps program alumni and faculty are anxious about the looming end date as they scramble to provide assistance to students who have also relied on Job Corps for free housing and food.
A federal court has stopped the Department of Labor's attempt to shut down Job Corps centers, which the administration claimed suffered from violence and security issues and was not cost-effective.
Operations are back to normal at the Clearfield Job Corps program, at least for now, after a judge's ruling halting plans to shutter it and 98 other programs around the country.
Job Corps, established as part of the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, is a free residential education and job training program for low-income people between 16 and 24 years of age.
A U.S. judge on Wednesday temporarily stopped the Trump administration from moving ahead with an effort to eliminate the Job Corps, the largest U.S. job training program for low-income youth.
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