2/18/2020 9:12:50 AM
Deputy Commissioner Hamse Warfa
One of the most important things we do in workforce development at the Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED) is develop partnerships. Millions of dollars of taxpayer dollars flow from DEED to nonprofit partners in workforce development across Minnesota every year. These organizations work hard to help get Minnesotans into our workforce.
Making sure we’re great partners to these nonprofits is an important priority of ours at DEED, which is why we’re revamping our process for grants administration under the Walz/Flanagan Administration. We’ve heard from many partners that DEED has been too onerous in our grants management, and that the process is too complex.
We listened and are working to make improvements.
Last year, we announced several changes to our RFP process that resulted in a record amount of outreach and community engagement from DEED, and the selection of competitive grant winners five months faster than ever before.
Today, we’re announcing a new series of changes to how we support our grantees throughout the life of a grant. Our goal is to provide the right level of accountability that ensures taxpayer dollars are spent wisely, while empowering our partners to spend more time delivering on their work plans and less time filling out unnecessary paper work.
And importantly, we’re cleaning up our requirements to ensure that we don’t apply federal guidelines to grants that come from state money.
The process improvements we’re making are founded on improving efficiency, agility, and clarity in how we provide support services to grantees. While many of these changes are quite detailed, we want to share them all here to ensure transparency to all grantees.
We want our partners to spend more time delivering services and less time filling out unnecessary paperwork. Therefore:
Different partners need different support services, based on their experience in managing a state grant. And we should be nimble enough to use state policy for state grants, and federal policy for federal grants. Therefore:
We want to make sure our process and policy decisions are crystal clear, and grantees have plenty of time to review them. Therefore:
We hope these changes answer the call you gave to us to clean up and improve our grant support services.
So, what’s next in our effort to reform how DEED administers grants to our partners?
We’ll soon shift our attention to performance measurement. We believe true accountability in grant-making should not focus on documentation, but on outcomes. So we’ve been working with several local and national experts on performance measurement for workforce development, and are excited to share what we’re learning in the coming months.
Stay tuned here for more.
- Deputy Commissioner Hamse Warfa