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  For Immediate Release   Contact:  Michael Dodge
June 15, 2007 (202) 225-3501
 
Campbellsville Woman Testifies Before Congressional Committee
Virginia Flanagan highlights benefits of Trade Adjustment Assistance in Rural Kentucky
 
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WASHINGTON, DC -June 14, 2007 – Virginia Flanagan, director of the Campbellsville University Technology Training Center from 1999-2006, traveled to Washington Thursday to offer testimony before a full hearing of the U.S. House Ways and Means Committee. The hearing, the first in a series of hearings on promoting U.S. workers' competitiveness, focused on the Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) program
 
            Flanagan, accompanied by current CUTTC Director Carol Sullivan, shared her perspective on how TAA has worked in Campbellsville and how it can be improved in the future. She was invited to testify by U.S. Rep. Ron Lewis, a member of the committee.
 
“Campbellsville’s economic recovery provides a remarkable example of how one community can be resourceful in the face of economic hard times and develop partnerships to elevate regional employment and quality of life,” said Lewis. “Ginny’s testimony on her community’s experience has provided our committee with useful guidance on future TAA discussions.”
 
Lewis led a roundtable discussion with numerous state and local leaders in Campbellsville in May 2004 to examine how Taylor County retrained workers and created over 3,700 new jobs following the close of the Fruit of the Loom factory. U.S. Rep. Wally Herger (R-CA), a colleague on the Ways and Means Committee, attended the 2004 roundtable and recalled his impressions during Thursday’s hearing.
 
"In Campbellsville, Kentucky, I witnessed first hand the application of Trade Adjustment Assistance in a public/private effort to stimulate a healthy environment for jobs,” said Herger. “This winning combination of local leaders, businesses, educators and federal officials improved the local economy well beyond where it had started."
 
                The TAA program is designed to assist manufacturing workers, with temporary income support and employment training opportunities, after trade-related job loss. TAA funds were used to create the Technology Training Center at Campbellsville University, helping hundreds of local workers gain new skills to better compete in a changing global economy, ultimately attracting 13 new companies and thousands of new jobs to the region.
 
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