Trump team halts troubled $2 billion Job Corps program
Brace yourself: the Department of Labor just dropped a bombshell by announcing a “phased pause” of the nearly $2 billion Job Corps program, a federal job training initiative mired in scandal and financial ruin.
According to the Daily Wire, Thursday’s decision to terminate contracts with private operators of 99 out of 131 facilities by June 30 marks a seismic shift for a program meant to help vulnerable youth but failing spectacularly on nearly every front.
Since its inception in 1964, Job Corps has aimed to serve 16- to 24-year-olds—think runaways, ex-convicts, and those in poverty—by offering housing, GEDs, and trade training on residential campuses while paying participants a stipend.
Decades of Dysfunction Finally Addressed
Yet, beneath the noble mission, the program has festered with fraud and mismanagement for decades, with contractors gaming the system for bonuses by fudging job-placement stats and turning a blind eye to campus crime.
Reports of over 500 sexual assaults in the last three years, including a horrific rape at a facility near Albany, New York, paint a grim picture of safety failures that no amount of spin can whitewash.
Adding insult to injury, violent assaults tally over 4,600, and drug incidents hit 8,000 in the same period—numbers likely understated since only the worst cases get reported.
Financial Failure Meets Moral Crisis
The financials are just as ugly: Job Corps operates at a $140 million deficit in 2024, projected to balloon to $213 million next year while spending up to $764,000 per graduate who often earns a measly $17,000 annually.
Only two in five participants even graduate, with a third vanishing and another third expelled for serious misconduct, begging the question: Why are taxpayers footing a bill steeper than Harvard’s for fast-food job outcomes?
“Our nation’s vulnerable young adults deserve better,” the Labor Department declared, and frankly, it’s hard to argue when the program’s return on investment is barely above the poverty line.
Shocking Incidents Reveal Deep Flaws
Consider the Glenmont Job Corps incident last year, where a 16-year-old girl identifying as a transgender boy was roomed with a 23-year-old man who allegedly raped her—yet another failure of basic oversight.
Then there’s the culture: campuses dominated by gang activity, with participants telling The Daily Wire the environment often corrupts good kids rather than reforms troubled ones. Turns out, actions—or inaction—have consequences.
Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer noted, “Job Corps was created to help young adults build a pathway to a better life,” but added that “serious incident reports” and fiscal woes show it’s failing students. If that’s not a wake-up call, what is?
Policy and Politics Collide
Critics point out that free GEDs and vocational training exist through public schools and unions, suggesting many join Job Corps for the $1,200 stipend and free room and board rather than a genuine opportunity.
Meanwhile, Democrats have pushed laws to make expulsions harder, seemingly prioritizing numbers over safety, while the Labor Department now scrambles to cover travel costs and connect displaced students to other programs by June 30.
With government-run campuses unaffected and 25,000 students impacted, this pause—while painful—might just be the reset needed to stop throwing good money after bad. Let’s hope the next chapter prioritizes real results over feel-good rhetoric.




