Workforce Innovation Opportunity Act (WIOA) Youth Funding Grant

City of Boston

Funding Amount

Approximately US $12,000

Deadline

Rolling / Open

Grant Type

foundation

Overview

Workforce Innovation Opportunity Act (WIOA) Youth Funding Grant

Status: ACTIVE
Funder: City of Boston
Amount: Approximately US $12,000
Last Updated: March 26, 2026

Summary

Overview

City of Boston Office of Workforce Development The Office of Workforce Development (OWD) works toward the full participation of all Boston residents in the city’s economic vitality and future. It connects low-income residents with job training and employment opportunities. It also promotes lifelong literacy and educational pathways. OWD focuses on competitive workforce development initiatives and policies. These initiatives aim to put Boston’s youth and adults on career paths toward economic security. OWD stresses the importance of collaboration with the City’s workforce development and education initiatives. The emphasis is on empowering Bostonians to fulfill their educational and employment aspirations. Workforce Innovation Opportunity Act (WIOA) Youth Funding The Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) is a U.S. Department of Labor program to serve youth who face education, training, and employment barriers. Grant Description WIOA Youth funding is a US Department of Labor formulary grant for youth facing education, training, and employment barriers. Information and resources on WIOA Youth are available on the Department of Labor’s website. The Office of Workforce Development (OWD) manages WIOA Youth funding in partnership with the Boston MassHire Workforce Board and its Youth Council, and under the supervision of the Massachusetts Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development. Under this Request for Grant Applications (RFGA), organizations will be eligible for up to three years of funding on this schedule: FY26, the open and competitive year during which applications may be submitted by all eligible entities, FY27, the first year of refunding open only to awardees from the previous year, and FY28, the second year of potential refunding. Overview OWD envisions an integrated and coordinated system of services that stabilizes marginalized youth and transitions them towards career-oriented education, training, and employment. For FY27, consistent with WIOA federal guidelines, we will prioritize programs and services that place out-of-school youth ages 18-24 on a pathway toward post-secondary attainment or career-level employment. Our systemwide goals are also as follows: Youth are on a pathway to and through post-secondary education or training; Youth have access to evidence-based services designed to eliminate barriers to employment and training; Youth have access to timely, high-quality, and specialized services representing the required 14 program elements stipulated by WIOA, particularly stabilization services; OWD and providers have meaningful and high-quality data to improve services and outcomes for youth; We invest time, money, and staff resources in building a coordinated system with connections both between organizations and linkages to broader networks of economic opportunity. With our system-wide goals in mind, five key principles guided the selection of FY26-funded programs: Programs are framed around a multi-step intervention model; Programs have well-defined and robust transition processes to the post-program step; Program policies and protocols are evidence-based and appropriate for the population; Youth are on a pathway to the attainment of post-secondary credentials needed for employment in high-demand occupations; Programs leverage multiple internal and external partnerships to ensure the integration of high-quality, youth-focused services. Under WIOA regulations, "low-income " is defined to include youth living in a high-poverty area, homeless individuals, foster children, or recipients of SNAP, SSI, or income-based public assistance. A high-poverty area is defined as a Census tract, a set of contiguous Census tracts, an Indian Reservation, tribal land, or a Native Alaskan Village or county that has a poverty rate of at least 25% as set every five years using the American Community Survey 5-Year data. Our definition of homelessness encompasses both youth who meet the standard established by the McKinney-Vento Act as well as youth experiencing housing instability, couch-surfing, or other forms of instability outside the Act’s definition. Priority Target Populations Within the above eligibility requirements under WIOA, the Boston Private Industry Council and Office of Workforce Development have determined the following priority target populations under this RFGA: Out-of-school youth between the ages of 18-24 years old. Court-involved; homeless or runaway; in foster care or aged out of the foster care system; pregnant or parenting; youth living with a disability; young men of color; documented immigrant youth. Low-income youth who are: identified as having foundational skills needed or English Language Learners, residing in Boston Housing Authority (BHA) facilities or utilizing a housing voucher, in post-secondary schools with a GPA less than 2.0, living in a single-parent household, truant, residing in a high-poverty area, or failed the MCAS in the most recent round. Individuals with disabilities who need pre-employment transition services, including job exploration, work-based learning experiences, workplace readiness training, self-advocacy instruction, counseling on enrollment opportunities in comprehensive transition or post-secondary education programs, and instruction in self-advocacy to maximize opportunities for competitive, integrated employment. Out-of-School Youth Eligibility Resident of BostonU.S. Right to Work DocumentationSelective Service registration for malesNot attending any school (as defined under State law)Not younger than 18 or older than age 24 at time of enrollment. Because age eligibility is based on age at enrollment, participants may continue to receive services beyond the age of 24 once they are enrolled in the program; and One or more of the following: A school dropout; a recipient of a secondary school diploma or its recognized equivalent who is a low-income individual and is either basic skills deficient or an English language learner; an offender; a homeless individual, a homeless child or youth, or a runaway; in foster care or has aged out of the foster care system, a child eligible for assistance under sec. 477 of the Social Security Act; pregnant or parenting; an individual with a disability; and a low-income individual who requires additional assistance to enter or complete an educational program or to secure or hold employment.

Eligibility

You can learn more about this opportunity by visiting the funder's website. FY27 Refunding year applicants must be one of the organizations already awarded funding in the FY26 round. If you were not awarded funding in the FY26 round, your organization is not eligible to apply for the FY27 Refunding Round of WIOA Youth Funding.

Focus Areas & Funding Uses

Fields of Work

youth-programsworkforce-development

Categories

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