Summer youth employment is cost-effective way to create jobs

STRAIGHT PATH: Helder Ferreira, superintendent of construction for Pawtucket Central Falls Development, holds a level while Samuel Andrade works on a door in a Central Falls home. / PBN PHOTO/ TRACY JENKINS
STRAIGHT PATH: Helder Ferreira, superintendent of construction for Pawtucket Central Falls Development, holds a level while Samuel Andrade works on a door in a Central Falls home. / PBN PHOTO/ TRACY JENKINS

Last year Providence Business News documented the shortfall in state adult job-training programs against the need – for example, in fiscal 2014, while the state averaged 47,468 unemployed people in the labor force, 1,045 received career services (including resume writing assistance) and 862 became employed as a result of a R.I. Department of Labor and

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