Updated
Updated · FOX 17 West Michigan News · Jun 16
Teens With Disabilities Struggle for Summer Jobs as 1948-Era Hiring Data Show Weakest Market
Updated
Updated · FOX 17 West Michigan News · Jun 16

Teens With Disabilities Struggle for Summer Jobs as 1948-Era Hiring Data Show Weakest Market

1 articles · Updated · FOX 17 West Michigan News · Jun 16

Summary

  • 16-year-old Cale Peters, a Michigan teen with Down syndrome, has been turned down or ignored after applying to restaurants and ice cream shops for his first summer job.
  • Last summer was the weakest teen hiring market since 1948, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data analyzed by Challenger, Gray & Christmas, making an already difficult search even harder for disabled applicants.
  • Disability advocates say that first job is especially important for teens with developmental disabilities because it shapes later work experience, yet employers often lack understanding of needed accommodations.
  • Be Cafe in Ada and Disability Advocates of Kent County are trying to widen access through jobs, training and community-employment support as families keep searching for openings.

Insights

With teen hiring at a historic low, how can businesses adapt to include workers with disabilities and gain a competitive edge?
As nations debate disability hiring quotas, could this policy fix the US job market or create new problems for employers?
A first job is a 'blueprint for life.' How can society redesign this blueprint to ensure it includes everyone?