Grand Village Receives Workforce Grant To Help Recruit and Retain Caregivers for Seniors
Ecumen-managed Grand Village, a senior living and care center community in Grand Rapids, Minn., has received a $25,000 Workforce Solutions Grant from the LeadingAge Minnesota Foundation to help recruit new employees to senior care and to retain them after they are hired.
While demand for senior care in the Grand Rapids area is increasing, the available workforce is shrinking. The Northeast region of Minnesota has the highest vacancy rate of nurses and nursing assistants in the state.
Grand Village is using the grant money to create a “peer mentor” program for newly hired nursing assistants to support them during their first 90 days of employment. Experienced employees will help train and guide them in a structured approach to becoming familiar with their new jobs. Also, becoming a mentor is a new path for established employees to grow their careers and compensation.
“We’ve found that most turnover in senior care happens in the first 90 days of employment,” said Kyle Hedlund, Executive Director at Grand Village. “One way we can stay ahead of issues that might prompt new hires to leave is by having experienced peers guide new employees through the adjustment process. Many of our new hires are younger, and research shows that members of the millennial generation are more likely to stay at a job where they have developed friendships and a support network at work.”
The grant from LeadingAge Minnesota, the state’s largest association of aging services providers, was awarded through a program funded by the Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies (MACP), a foundation that takes a strong interest in workforce issues in rural Minnesota. MCAP supported the $1 million Workforce Solutions Grant program to improve the experience of care for older adults by funding emerging and proven workforce strategies that increase the quality, quantity and capacity of the caregiving workforce.
Grand Village is a non-profit skilled nursing community providing short-term and rehabilitation care, long-term care and memory care. It was founded in 1896 by Itasca County and continues to be owned by the county and managed by Ecumen.
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Ecumen Bethany Community in Alexandria, Minn., has received a $25,000 Workforce Solutions Grant from the LeadingAge Minnesota Foundation to help recruit new employees to senior care and to retain them after they are hired.
While demand for senior care in the Alexandria area is increasing, the available workforce is shrinking. Ecumen Bethany Community is using the grant money to develop a multi-faceted education and training program that includes mentoring and community outreach. Bethany is creating a “peer mentor” program for newly hired nursing assistants to support them during their first 90 days of employment. Experienced employees will help train and guide them in a structured approach to becoming familiar with their new jobs. Also, becoming a mentor is a new path for established employees to grow their careers and compensation.
“We’ve found that most turnover in senior care happens in the first 90 days of employment,” said Matthew Fischer, Executive Director at Ecumen Bethany. “Having experienced peers guide new employees through the adjustment process is one way we can stay ahead of issues that might prompt new hires to leave.”
Additionally, Bethany is partnering with Alexandria Community and Technical College to create a program that will help educate younger adults on the benefits and rewards of a career in senior. “We believe we can recruit more young employees simply by giving them a better sense of what a senior care career is really like,” Fisher said. “There are a lot of negative stereotypes that we can overcome with accurate information and testimonials from current employees.” He said Bethany will be creating a video aimed at high school and college students to highlight senior care opportunities and the rewards of the work, as well as scholarships available to enhance employees’ careers.
LeadingAge Minnesota, the state’s largest association of aging services providers, was awarded the grant through a program funded by the Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies (MACP), a foundation that takes a strong interest in workforce issues in rural Minnesota. MCAP supported the $1 million Workforce Solutions Grant program to improve the experience of care for older adults by funding emerging and proven workforce strategies that increase the quality, quantity and capacity of the caregiving workforce.
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