It’s a hot June day and Pennsylvania Human Services Secretary Teresa Miller is in a dark blue suit facing a flaming metal-and-masonry hearth in a Homewood parking lot. A group of culinary trainees from Hazelwood’s Community Kitchen are showing her how they make pizza in the oven, which was built by apprentice welders and masons.
Both of the non-profit organizations in this joint demonstration — Culinary Kitchen and the Trade Institute of Pittsburgh — provide tuition-free, 12- week workforce training to those facing employment challenges such as conviction records, lack of education or training, substance abuse, and/or family financial challenges. Both are funded by federal dollars and revenue generated through sales of goods and services performed by program trainees. And both, in Miller’s view, are “changing lives one person at a time and providing a really valuable service to the Commonwealth by helping the individuals that we serve to gain living wage jobs and, ultimately, transition off of public assistance.”
Community Kitchen occupies Hazelwood’s former G.C. Murphy Company store on Second Avenue, a few blocks from where the hulking exoskeleton of Jones & Laughlin Steel Mill 19 is being redeveloped into a light industrial and office complex.
Inside its new kitchens, culinary trainees help fulfill contracts for catering and school lunches. There’s also a pay-what-you-can “showcase lunch” for the public every Thursday, and a dinner series featuring guest chefs from local restaurants. Someday there will be a full-service café, which will resemble the country’s first enterprise of this type, Washington’s DC Central Kitchen, founded in 1989.
Community Kitchen founder and Executive Director Jen Flanagan saw a local need for its services in 2013.
“Food service is an industry with low barriers to entry, meaning no advanced degree is required, there are openings at various skill levels, there are a range of shifts, which can accommodate people with kids or other life situations; and it’s an industry in which merit- based advancement is often how people get promoted. You show up, you work hard, you can get a promotion.”
As a partner in the commonwealth’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, half of the $10,000 per- student cost for training is covered by federal funds and the rest is covered by Community Kitchen, a nonprofit. Cost is calculated to include staff time, earning materials (including culinary knife kits, shoes, and bus passes) and follow-up services like job placement and retention counseling.
“We know the outcomes for these programs are pretty amazing,” Miller said.
According to Community Kitchen, their training program has a 92 percent placement rate for graduates upon completion and an 85 percent job retention rate after 12 months.
“Those are the tangible benefits for the state,” she continues, “We really want to see these programs expand, because they’re doing a great job of getting people to work.”
Job growth in the food preparation and serving industries could increase about 12 percent nationwide by 2027, according to the Pittsburgh-based workforce development organization Partner4Work. Community Kitchen graduates have the potential to take their training and use it to score one of almost 15 million jobs.