Approach

Accelerating Opportunity: The Heckscher Foundation Challenge

In 2023, the Foundation issued a bold challenge to New York’s workforce training ecosystem: we would fund training programs if employers committed in writing to hire low-income out-of-school / out-of-work youth upon completion, based on objective criteria.

This wasn’t business as usual. We required more than vague promises or advisory board participation. We asked for full-time job offers, conditioned on meaningful skill attainment. And we got them.

Ninety-six proposals came in from high schools, community colleges, and nonprofits across New York state. Alongside those proposals came 234 letters from employers, ranging from tech startups to construction firms, pledging real jobs for real skills. We ultimately funded 20 partnerships with $7.6 million in grants. The bet was simple: if we changed what we asked of employers, they’d show up differently.

This model hasn’t just worked. It has thrived!

Of the over 1,000 low-income, out-of-school or out-of-work youth who completed training across our grantees, 50% secured full-time employment in the industries trained, at an average cost per participant well below industry studies.  Organizations focused on the culinary industry like the Door, Drive Change and Hot Bread Kitchen forged deep relationships with culinary employers. Construction, building maintenance and green economy partners hired from Commonpoint Queens, Henry Street Settlement and St. Nicks Alliance. In the IT space, NPower’s placements soared, with 66% of their youth now employed in the field. We’re also seeing high retention: at one grantee, 95% of placed youth stayed in their jobs for at least three months.

Employers in the Heckscher Challenge weren’t passive end-users of training; they were architects of it. They shaped curricula, hosted on-site classes, and trained their own teams to better support young hires. Some even taught courses themselves.

It has worked because the relationships weren’t transactional. They were strategic.

This is what the future of workforce development must look like. Not just public dollars chasing ephemeral job placements, but deeply invested employers creating tangible career paths, side-by-side with education and nonprofit partners.

Our call to action is simple: if you’re an employer who believes in hiring based on skills step up. Don’t wait to be asked. Define what you need. Partner with a local training provider. Commit to hire.

The Heckscher Foundation for Children will continue to support and amplify these models. In fact, in June 2025, we launched a third year of funding for the most promising grantees to deepen and sustain their employer partnerships. The Bottom Line. Training without hiring isn’t workforce development. It’s wishful thinking. We’ve seen what’s possible when employers take ownership of the pipeline; not just the outcome.

The 20 grantees are listed here:

Commonpoint Queens

Commonpoint Queens partnered with Building Skills New York – a nonprofit construction workforce development organization connecting underemployed and unemployed New Yorkers to construction training and job opportunities in NYC –...

Covenant House New York

Covenant House New York created a direct pipeline to full-time employment for homeless youth in office administration, customer service and facility maintenance. Covenant House’s Delta program (see news about it...

CUNY Borough of Manhattan Community College (BMCC)

To meet the growing demand for addiction counselors, BMCC’s Health Education Department worked with Phoenix House, a nonprofit drug and alcohol rehabilitation organization, to create a Credentialed Recovery Support Specialist...

CUNY Queensborough Community College

Queensborough Community College (QCC) and the New York State Wireless Association are partnering to bridge the digital divide by providing training and full-time employment in the telecommunications industry. Successful completers...

Drive Change

The United States has one of the highest incarceration rates in the world, and young people released from detention face severe obstacles to sustainable employment and re-entry. According to one...

East Side House

East Side House has partnered with New York Presbyterian Hospital to prepare young adults in the South Bronx for careers in the healthcare industry, including as patient care technicians, Certified...

Henry Street Settlement

With our catalytic support, Henry Street Settlement created a partnership with Stacks+Joules to prepare low-income New York City residents for jobs in the booming building-automation and energy-efficiency sector. Through the...

Hot Bread Kitchen

The Heckscher Foundation helped Hot Bread Kitchen expand its proven workforce development model to serve young people facing barriers to employment. Through this initiative, Hot Bread Kitchen teaches foundational culinary...

Jewish Community Center of Staten Island

The Jewish Community Center (JCC) of Staten Island is providing young adults, including those who are attending part- or full-time college, high school, a non-degree program, or not attending any...

NPower

NPower’s IT training and job placement program – Tech Fundamentals – provides young adults with skills training needed to advance tech career and wage growth with employer partners. NPower noticed...

Reel Works

We supported Reel Works’s workforce-pathways initiative, MediaMKRS, in creating its Career Accelerator track, which helps young adults from underserved backgrounds build technical and professional skills for careers in film, television...

Say Yes Buffalo Scholarship

The Heckscher Foundation supported Say Yes Buffalo’s youth-apprenticeship initiative delivered in partnership with CareerWise Greater Buffalo. It places graduating high-school seniors or recent graduates into structured, paid work-based learning with...

St. Nicks Alliance

Our funding helped St. Nicks Alliance scale its Building Maintenance training track for youth and young adults. This program provides young people with certifications in high-demand building-operations and maintenance credentials...

SUNY Cobleskill

SUNY Cobleskill partnered with Memorial Sloan Kettering and Rockland Community College to establish a Rockland County-based histotechnician training program to address a nationwide shortage of certified histotechnicians. Histotechnicians prepare human...

SUNY Delhi

The SUNY Delhi Mechatronics program worked alongside its employer partner, John Bean Technologies Corporation (JBT), to upgrade and revise its curriculum for the Mechatronics Design Associates level degree program and...

SUNY Genesee Community College

Genesee Community College has created a Computer Numerical Control (CNC) certification training program to meet the growing demand for skilled CNC operators and programmers in upstate New York. CNC professionals...

The Door

The Heckscher Foundation supported The Door’s expansion of its culinary-workforce pathway equipping New York City residents ages 16-24 with the skills and experience needed to secure meaningful employment in the...

Wildcat Service Corporation

Wildcat Service Corporation partnered with the Apex Clean Energy Institute (ACEI) in Brooklyn to recruit, train and connect under-employed and unemployed Black and Latino Brooklyn residents (ages 18-25) to careers...