Title 29 › Chapter CHAPTER 32— - WORKFORCE INNOVATION AND OPPORTUNITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES › Part Part D— - National Programs › § 3224
Requires the Secretary of Labor to run continuous evaluations of the employment and training programs funded under this law. Evaluations must happen through grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements and must include an independent review at least once every 4 years. Reviews must look at cost and overall effectiveness, employment outcomes compared to people who did not take part, accountability measures, how services are delivered and coordinated, effects on communities and businesses, impacts on related programs, whether different groups’ needs are met, and other relevant factors. Evaluations must use strong research methods, including randomized control groups. At least one multisite randomized control-group study had to be done by the end of fiscal year 2019, and similar analyses must be part of the 4-year independent reviews. The evaluator must give a draft and a final report to the Secretary. The Secretary must send the draft to specific House and Senate committees within 30 days and the final report within 60 days, and post the final report on the Department of Labor website within 30 days after sending it. Entities doing the work can publish their results unless the Secretary denies permission within 90 days. The Secretary must coordinate these evaluations with State evaluations and may evaluate other federal employment programs. Every 2 years the Secretary must publish a 5-year research plan and send it to Congress and other agencies. The plan guides research priorities and must consider existing research, interstate usefulness, efficiency, and policy relevance. The Secretary will fund studies and multistate projects on topics like program impact and best practices; disconnected youth; how workforce systems meet business needs (including small business); nontraditional occupations and supports; ways to measure total compensation; job training for public housing residents; services for low-income older workers; ways to credit prior learning; career advancement for low-wage health and child care workers; and strategies to promote equal pay and women’s participation in high-wage jobs. Grants over $100,000 must be competitively awarded (with limited exceptions); no award may go to the same organization more than 3 years without competition; applications over $500,000 are peer-reviewed; priority goes to experts. Up to 10 percent of certain funds may be used for demonstration and pilot projects for dislocated workers, administered by the Assistant Secretary for Employment and Training.
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Labor — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
29 U.S.C. § 3224
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73