"The Cherokee Nation has always prioritized the housing needs for our Cherokee communities, and this program is just another example of how we're providing better resources to accommodate those needs," Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr.
says.
The Tulsa World reports the tribe is one of the first to be approved for the Department of Housing and Urban Development's Section 184 Skilled Workers Demonstration Program, which aims to help hard-to-fill or hard-to-recruit jobs in fields such as law enforcement, healthcare, education, contracting, housing, and the culinary arts.
The Cherokee Nation will use Section 184 funding to construct rental units that will be provided to skilled workers in multiple professional fields, including teachers, doctors, nurses, medical technicians, emergency responders, mental health counselors, and medical residents.
"This demonstration program has the opportunity to make a big impact on our Cherokee communities that need assistance in recruiting skilled and essential workers," Hoskin says.
The program will first roll out in Ochelata, where there are more than 30 hard-to-fill positions identified with nearly 15 that have been unfilled for some time.
If successful, the program will expand to other locations to ease the housing demands in multiple communities and provide better resources to the Human Resources teams building the Cherokee
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