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Effective date: February 1, 2024 - TBD
Anyone interested in being considered for the WIOA Title I Dislocated Worker Program must be allowed to apply.1 All applicants must receive an eligibility determination.2 While WIOA is not an entitlement program,3 this only means that funding for WIOA programs is not unlimited. Local WDBs must offer services to all eligible applicants when funding is available.
Individuals are eligible for the WIOA Title I Dislocated Worker Program if they:
States and local WDBs may not add eligibility criteria, including, but not limited to, criteria related to income or county or state of residence.6
Any costs associated with providing WIOA Title I services to ineligible individuals may be disallowed.7
Dislocated worker status is fixed at the time of eligibility determination; therefore, individuals remain eligible for the WIOA Title I Dislocated Worker Program even if there are changes in the circumstances that were used as the basis to originally establish the status (e.g., the anticipated layoff or termination does not take place).
The individual meets the following:
The individual meets one of the following:
The individual is separating or has separated from the U.S. Armed Forces with a discharge that is anything other than dishonorable AND has received a DD-214 or other documentation (e.g., separation orders) showing separation or imminent separation.
Note: It is appropriate to provide services to imminently separating service members, if their discharge is expected to be anything other than dishonorable. Separating service members are required to participate in the Transition Assistance Program (TAP) to ensure they are prepared for civilian employment. During the TAP program, separating service members and their spouses are encouraged to contact job centers. 15
The individual was self-employed (includes employment as a farmer, rancher, fisher, or independent contractor or consultant), but has become unemployed because of general economic conditions or because of a natural disaster.
The individual has been doing unpaid work in the home and meets one of the following:
The spouse of a member of the U.S. Armed Forces on active duty who meets one of the following: