Title 29 › Chapter 32— WORKFORCE INNOVATION AND OPPORTUNITY › Subchapter I— WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES › Part A— System Alignment › Subpart 1— state provisions › § 3112
The Governor must send a single, unified State plan to the Secretary of Labor to get federal money for the core workforce programs. The plan must be a 4-year strategy that explains the State’s goals and how it will prepare a skilled workforce. It must analyze the State’s economy (including in-demand industries and employer needs), the current workforce (including people with barriers to work), and existing training and education activities. The plan must describe how the State will align the core programs and other resources to meet those goals, how the State board and lead agencies will carry out the work, and how services will be coordinated with schools, community colleges, economic development, and other programs. It must also describe State policies and systems (like annual program assessments, fund distribution methods, data-sharing and privacy safeguards, priority for veterans, accessibility for people with disabilities), and provide assurances about conflict-of-interest rules, public access to board meetings and plan input, fiscal controls, monitoring, that funds will be used only for allowed activities, and certain adult education requirements. The initial plan submitted after July 22, 2014, must be in 120 days before the start of the second full program year after that date, and later plans must be sent 120 days before the end of each 4-year period. The Secretary of Labor forwards parts of the plan to the federal agencies that run each program. The plan must be approved by both the Secretary of Labor and the Secretary of Education, and the Rehabilitation Services portion must be approved by the Rehabilitation Services Commissioner. A plan is approved automatically after 90 days unless the Secretaries send a written notice saying it is inconsistent. At the halfway point (the first 2-year period) the State board must review the plan and the Governor must submit needed changes, which also must be approved; the Governor may also submit changes at other times.
Full Legal Text
Labor — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
29 U.S.C. § 3112
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60