SIGN ON LETTER | Support of Opportunity Youth and Economic Development
April 23, 2025
Dear Members of the 89th Texas Legislature:
Members of the 89th Texas Legislature have introduced several promising initiatives aimed at boosting workforce productivity and driving economic development across the state. Key bipartisan bills currently advancing through the legislature focus on strengthening public education, expanding career and technical training opportunities, and enhancing transparency and strategic planning. These efforts are essential to equipping Texas youth for success and empowering them to contribute meaningfully to the state’s future
THE URGENT NEED
Nearly half a million young Texans between ages 16-24 are neither in school nor employed. At 13.1%, our youth disconnection rate significantly exceeds the national average of 10.9%.
Governor Abbott has declared expanding career training an emergency item for this legislative session, and for good reason. By 2030, more than 60% of Texas jobs will require post-secondary education or training. Yet less than 40% of Texas students attain these credentials within six years of high school graduation. This growing skills gap threatens our economic prosperity and leaves countless young Texans without pathways to self-sufficiency. The Texas Workforce Innovation Council’s “Accelerating Alignment: Texas Workforce System Strategic Plan” also identified Opportunity Youth as a key population to ensuring future economic success.
THE ECONOMIC IMPACT
The cost of youth disconnection affects all Texans. By age 28, those who experienced prolonged disconnection from work and education earn approximately $16,000 less annually than their peers. Many qualify for public benefits and struggle to meet basic needs, creating additional costs for our state. Almost half lack health insurance, and many are already parents—potentially perpetuating cycles of economic hardship that extend to the next generation.
COMMON-SENSE SOLUTIONS
Prevent Disconnection:
- SB 570 (Bettencourt) – Requires schools to establish attendance policies aimed at preventing chronic absenteeism and truancy.
- SB 991 (Bettencourt), HB 213 (Gonzales) – Enables early identification of chronically absent students to facilitate appropriate supports
Educate and Prepare
- SB 1728 (Perry)/HB 3882 (Lalani) – Enhances career and technical education opportunities for at-risk youth to facilitate successful transition into the workforce
Increase Transparency and Strategic Planning
- SB 1143 (Blanco)/HB 3173 (Talarico) – Enhances accountability by tracking and reporting federal workforce development fund allocation for disconnected young adults and requires local strategic plans for Opportunity Youth
WHY YOUR SUPPORT MATTERS
Texas has always led the nation in job creation and economic growth. To maintain our competitive edge and fulfill our commitment to all Texans, we cannot afford to leave half a million young people on the sidelines.
We respectfully urge you to vote YES on these critical, common-sense bills.
Sincerely,
CHILDREN AT RISK
The Undersigned Texas Opportunity Youth & Young Adults (OYYA) Advocates
Signed by (As of April 22, 2025):
READ MORE FROM C@R
The Power of Immigrants that Texas Does Not Seem to Want to Understand
By Linda Corchado & Bob Sanborn The data is clear. A third of Texas’ nearly 8 million children are immigrants or the children of immigrants. In our cities, like Houston, the number is about half of our children. If children are our future then our path forward...
CHILDREN AT RISK Hosts The Future of Children Summit
The 2023 Future of Children Summit was introduced by Dr Robert Sanborn, President & CEO at CHILDREN AT RISK with Welcome Remarks The summit was broken down into seven sections that lasted 11 minutes followed by a brief Q&A led by Dr Bob and the speaker....
CHILDREN AT RISK and Texas Family Leadership Council Host Second Annual Motherhood Summit
Last month, the Texas Family Leadership Council and CHILDREN AT RISK hosted the second annual Motherhood Summit. The summit explored some of the most pressing issues facing Texas mothers and how these issues affect not just themselves, but their children and families...
Growing Up In Houston: Assessing the Quality of Life of Our Children
Data must be the catalyst for any conversation regarding the well-being of our children. However, data alone is not sufficient. We must also overlay context to better understand the complexities of the many issues facing our children. Growing Up in Houston aims to do just that.
CHILDREN AT RISK and Texas Family Leadership Council Host Third Annual State of Black Children in Texas
On Thursday, February 16, the Texas Family Leadership Council and CHILDREN AT RISK hosted the third annual State of Black Children in Texas summit. The summit explored the challenges Black children face growing up in Texas and how to best support them at all stages of...
C@R Testifies to Senate Finance Committee on Education
Stay Informed
Sign up for our Early Education Statewide newsletter for updates during the legislative session, our latest research, policy analysis, and ways you can take action!