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Indiana Offering Free Virtual Career Counseling For 5,000 Hoosiers

Indiana Offering Free Virtual Career Counseling For 5,000 Hoosiers
Justin Hicks
Indiana Offering Free Virtual Career Counseling For 5,000 Hoosiers

As thousands of Hoosiers still struggle with unemployment in the wake of  COVID-19, the state is offering free online career counseling funded by the federal CARES Act.

The Governor’s Workforce Cabinet and Ivy Tech are spending $1.2 million from their CARES Act allocation for up to 5,000 Hoosiers to receive virtual job counseling. Participants will have access to coaching via online video calls, phone calls, or texts and can receive help for up to four months. State officials hope the counseling will guide displaced workers to training in a new career path or provide career advancement for those still employed.

Caroline Dowd-Higgins, vice president of career coaching and employer connections at Ivy Tech, says this approach is geared towards getting people into long-term careers, not a patchwork of part-time jobs.

“At the end of the day, people want livelihoods,” she said. “They want a career that they’re excited about going to work and one that honors them financially.”

Participation in the counseling sessions does count towards work search requirements to receive unemployment benefits.

Contact reporter Justin at  jhicks@wvpe.org or follow him on Twitter at @Hicks_JustinM.

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Justin Hicks is a workforce reporter for IPB News based at WVPE in Elkhart. He comes to Indiana by way of New York. He has a master's degree from the Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute at New York University and earned a Bachelor of Music Degree from Appalachian State University where he played trumpet. He first learned about Elkhart, Indiana, because of the stamp on his brass instrument indicating where it was produced. Justin was born and raised in Mt. Olive, North Carolina. He currently lives in South Bend with his dog, Charlotte.
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