Walker is right. Even PolitiFact thinks so.
“Jobs are not the problem,” Walker continued. “Connecting people to those jobs with the skills they need and, more importantly, getting people off of the couch and off the dependence who are able and into those jobs, making it more effective, a bigger incentive for them to get back to work is really the difference.”
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For a statement that is accurate but needs clarification, our rating is Mostly True.
LOL:)))
“The state itself doesn’t vouch for the accuracy of all the listings.”
“2. Thousands of jobs are outside of Wisconsin.”
Gov. Scott Walker broke his promise to create 250,000 jobs, but as he seeks re-election, he argues there are plenty of jobs for people in Wisconsin who are willing to work.
“We don’t hear about this often enough, but we have a website called JobCenterOfWisconsin.com,” Walker said at a campaign stop near Milwaukee on Sept. 20, 2014.
“You know how many jobs were listed on that website last week?” the governor asked.
“More than 70,000 jobs.”
There were gasps from the audience.
“Jobs are not the problem,” Walker continued. “Connecting people to those jobs with the skills they need and, more importantly, getting people off of the couch and off the dependence who are able and into those jobs, making it more effective, a bigger incentive for them to get back to work is really the difference.”
Walker has since repeated the claim, including during his first debate with Democratic challenger Mary Burke on Oct. 10, 2014.
Do his numbers add up?
The website
JobCenterOfWisconsin.com is run by the state Department of Workforce Development, whose secretary is appointed by Walker. The department describes the site as a no-cost employment exchange that links employers and job seekers.
Its popularity appears to have grown dramatically in the weeks leading up to the Nov. 4, 2014 election.
The home page shows a running tally of the number of job openings listed on the site.
In releasing a jobs plan on Sept. 16, 2014, Walker said there were more than 60,000 job openings on the site. By the morning of Oct. 17, the running tally on the site’s home page was just under 80,000.
That’s an increase of roughly one-third in a month.
Moreover, a plus-sign (+) next to the running tally indicates that even more jobs are available.
The database
We asked the Department of Workforce Development to provide us a spreadsheet showing all of the job openings on the website. We received it Oct. 9, 2014.
There were more than 79,000 job listings on the main part of the spreadsheet, including about 74,000 that had been posted within the past six months. Those are the ones that power the running tally on the website’s home page.
There were more than 65,000 listings on the second part of the spreadsheet. More on those in a minute.
Those figures obviously are well above the more than 70,000 that Walker claimed.
But whether there were that many jobs actually available is less clear:
1. The state itself doesn’t vouch for the accuracy of all the listings.
Of the 79,000 primary listings on the site, about 41,000 are reviewed by state employees and are set to automatically expire after 90 days, the workforce development department told us. The other 38,000 primary listings come from two national “partners” and the department relies on those firms to update their listings.
Regarding the other 65,000 listings — which are not specifically counted on the home page of the website — the state told us it advises job seekers to beware when searching those listings that they come from multiple sources and can include duplicates. Those sources include Career Builder and Craigslist.
2. Thousands of jobs are outside of Wisconsin.
Walker made his claim in the context of jobs in Wisconsin, even if he didn’t specifically say that all 70,000 job openings were within the state’s borders.
According to One Wisconsin Now, a liberal advocacy group, about 13,000 of the job listings were for openings not in Wisconsin but in neighboring states, a figure the Department of Workforce Development did not dispute. Our own check found, for example, roughly 1,100 listings in Dubuque, Iowa, and roughly 950 each in Rockford, Ill., and Duluth, Minn.
Finally, although Walker’s claim didn’t address the quality of jobs listed on the website, it’s worth noting that many are on the low end of the pay scale.
Among the most common job titles advertised were cashier, certified nursing assistant, registered nurse and restaurant crew. Two of the three employers with the most job listings were McDonald’s and the Kwik Trip convenience store chain.
Our rating
Walker said “more than 70,000” job openings are listed on a state jobs website, JobCenterofWisconsin.com.
The raw number of job listings exceeds that figure. But not all of the listings are verified by the state and thousands of the jobs are outside of Wisconsin.
For a statement that is accurate but needs clarification, our rating is Mostly True.
I wonder if wages, as in minimum, are a cogent to this discussion?
“bigger incentive for them to get back to work is really the difference.”
Hmmm….
Tell me again the context that this was brought up during the debate?