Targeting Areas with High Unemployment, Hiring Halls Will Bring
More Public- and Private-Sector Job Opportunities Directly to Communities
Announcement Comes as City Celebrates Breaking All-Time High Jobs Record for Eighth Time Since Start of Administration, Unemployment Down Across All Demographics
Part of Adams Administration’s “Jobs Week,” Highlighting City’s Effort to Ensure Opportunity Reaches Every Borough, Block, and Neighborhood, and Working-Class Families Have Access to Good-Paying Jobs
New York City Mayor Eric Adams and New York City Department of Small Business Services (SBS) Commissioner Dynishal Gross today continued “Jobs Week ” by announcing a $2 million investment to expand the “Jobs NYC” model, which uses hiring halls and community partnerships to bring job opportunities and trainings to communities facing high unemployment. Today's announcement comes as the city, last week, celebrated breaking the all-time high jobs record for the eighth time and unemployment going down across all demographics since the start of the Adams administration. This week, the Adams administration is celebrating Jobs Week, highlighting the city’s efforts to ensure job opportunities reach every borough, block, and neighborhood and advancing Mayor Adams’ 2025 State of the City commitment to make New York City the best, more affordable place to raise a family. To find job opportunities, free training, and employment resources, New Yorkers can visit the Jobs NYC website.
“In three years, our administration has re-energized our economy — delivering a record number of jobs and small businesses and recovering all the jobs lost during the pandemic. However, our success must be measured by our ability to help those most in need receive the workforce training and job opportunities to participate in our shared economic prosperity,” said Mayor Adams. “‘Jobs NYC’ is a hands-on model — going directly to neighborhoods battling with high unemployment and bringing opportunity to their front doors. Together, we can make sure our rising tide lifts all boats and every New Yorker, regardless of their zip code, has the skills and resources to find a good-paying job.”
“Since the start of the Adams administration, SBS has provided over 71,000 New Yorkers with training and connections to jobs in high-growth, in-demand sectors through our Workforce1 system,” said SBS Commissioner Gross. “‘Jobs NYC’ and the hiring halls have supercharged our efforts, and this new investment will open even more doors to New Yorkers across the five boroughs.”
The Jobs NYC model helps bring job opportunities and trainings directly to communities experiencing high unemployment, including through in-person hiring halls. Hiring halls focus on bringing public- and private-sector job opportunities and career services to economically-disadvantaged communities on a monthly basis in each borough. First laid out in Mayor Adams’ Fiscal Year 2026 Preliminary Budget, this new $2 million investment will go towards identifying venues, liaising with the local community to identify interested employers, and advertising locally within communities experiencing high unemployment. Additionally, new features are being added to the Jobs NYC website, including a centralized regional jobs board —“My Next Move”— career exploration tool, and streamlined landing page that will make it easier for users to find good-paying careers in their community. The upgrades to the website were led by the New York City Mayor’s Office of Economic Opportunity, Mayor's Office of Technology and Innovation, and Mayor’s Office of Talent and Workforce Development (NYC Talent) and developed in partnership with Occupational Information Network, the New York State Department of Labor, and the National Labor Exchange. Thanks to efforts like Jobs NYC, the city has celebrated an over 20 percent reduction in Black and Latino unemployment since the start of the Adams administration. Additionally, the Jobs NYC campaign led to job-seeking New Yorkers being connected to employment, free training, and workforce development resources over a nine-month sprint.
The Adams administration has also launched and advanced transformative projects in all five boroughs to support job creation, including projects ranging from the Kingsbridge Armory in the Bronx, to the Brooklyn Army Terminal and Brooklyn Marine Terminal in Brooklyn, to SPARC Kips Bay in Manhattan, to Willets Point in Queens, to the North Shore Action Plan on Staten Island. Cumulatively, these projects will create tens of thousands of permanent and temporary construction jobs, generate more than $100 billion in long-term economic impact for the city, and cultivate good-paying, 21st-century job opportunities.
Additionally, last year, NYC Talent announced the city delivered more than 15,000 apprenticeship opportunities to New Yorkers in less than three years — more than halfway to the administration’s moonshot goal of creating 30,000 apprenticeships by 2030, as announced in Mayor Adams’ 2023 State of the City address.
Further, last summer, NYC Talent announced expanded workforce services for New Yorkers with disabilities and celebrated a hiring milestone for this community. To build on creating jobs for underserved communities, SBS announced earlier this week, that over 1,900 New Yorkers with disabilities, 3,200 veterans and their spouses, and 1,000 “new” New Yorkers were connected to jobs through its Workforce1 system. Finally, last summer, Mayor Adams announced the city’s first-ever community hiring effort, which leverages more than $1.2 billion in city contracts to create job opportunities for underserved New Yorkers. Community hiring allows the city to use its purchasing power, set hiring goals across city procurement contracts, and build on the success of existing project labor agreements and agency-specific hiring programs.
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