When Life Leaves You Displaced

>>4-29-13 photoWhile women in North Carolina have made tremendous gains as workers in the economy, >>about 40 percent of women aged 16 and older are not in the labor force . There are many possible reasons, including difficulty finding a job, choosing to pursue higher education, and the need to provide care for children or loved ones.

However, not being part of the labor force can mean financial trouble when life unexpectedly changes. A divorce, a spouse’s death, disability or unemployment can force a person onto the job market. But for those who have been working in the home, perhaps for years or even their entire adult lives, a lack of marketable skills can make finding a living-wage job nearly impossible.

Many women have traveled this path before, and they created a network to help those who came after them. The Displaced Homemaker Movement was born in the 1970s, when divorce became more common and women who were once homemakers needed to find jobs. Today, there is a nationwide network of more than 1,000 displaced homemaker programs that focus on education, vocational skills, job training and counseling, health and more.

In North Carolina, the >>NC Council for Women  funds >>35 displaced homemaker programs across the state. The program’s goal is help former homemakers—mostly women but also some men—train for and get jobs that enable them to be economically self-sufficient.

And in many cases, that means training them for jobs that aren’t typically held by women, because traditionally male-dominated occupations pay better.

“Some of the programs we work with that are training women in the Displaced Homemaker Program are looking at training them into those non-traditional jobs – construction, mechanics,” said Beth Briggs, executive director of the NC Council for Women. “These are jobs that might pay $15 an hour as opposed to jobs that pay $7 or $8 an hour.”

Participants in a Displaced Homemaker Program may also get training in computer skills, financial literacy, resume building and interviewing. The programs may even provide funds to help pay for trainings, tuition, books or certification fees.

>>Laurie Shields  co-founded the Displaced Homemaker Network after her husband died when she was 50 years old and she had no way to support herself. Her decision to organize other women and to advocate for better opportunities has made a difference in thousands of lives for the past four decades.




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  1. Becky Mock

    The NC Council for Women will dissolve if Senate Bill 664 is passed. The Council and sexual assault program will be folded into the Domestic Violence Commission. SENATE BILL 664
    Short Title: Consolidate DV Commission/Council for Women. (Public)
    Sponsors: Senators Cook, Rabin, and Jackson (Primary Sponsors).
    Referred to: Rules and Operations of the Senate.
    April 4, 2013
    Please read it….and take action. Call your Senators and Representatives and let them know how important these programs are and consolidation will most likely reduce funding for local programs. Nothing good for women’s services will come of this….
    A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT TO IMPROVE SERVICES TO VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND
    SEXUAL ASSAULT AND SERVICES TO DISPLACED HOMEMAKERS BY CONSOLIDATING THE NORTH CAROLINA COUNCIL FOR WOMEN AND THE DOMESTIC VIOLENCE COMMISSION INTO ONE COMMISSION.


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