Landscape
Texas is home to our largest employee base in the United States. With many companies like ours recognizing Texas as a great place to do business, the state is currently experiencing a skilled-labor shortage, specifically in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. This local challenge will persist: Although 85% of living-wage jobs in Dallas County require education beyond a high school degree, as of 2017, 73% of Texas’ students were not able to receive postsecondary credentials within six years, largely due to financial obstacles.
Our approach
To help young people access educational and skills training opportunities, we began advising and funding data-driven nonprofits, including the Commit Partnership and Tarrant To & Through (T3) Partnership, coalitions of school systems, higher education institutions, local and state governments, foundations, employers and workforce agencies, among others.
While these organizations work to address compounding issues that impact student success and graduation rates, our commitments are deliberately focused on initiatives where we have expertise and insights to add the greatest value. In 2023, we committed:
- $1.5 million to The Commit Partnership's Opportunity 2040 Plan Phase 1 to support a comprehensive 18-year investment plan to help improve the long-term financial health of 150,000 current students by 2040.
- $750,000 to the T3 Pathways to Careers (P2C) platform to provide a virtual college-to-career resource to help parents and students understand what's needed to pursue industry-based credentials, degrees, certifications and job opportunities.
We also promote policies at the local, state and federal levels that align with our goals. Since 2022, we have been a vocal champion of Texas's House Bill 8 legislation that creates a new funding model that incentivizes community colleges in Texas to ensure that more students complete certificates and other credentials or transfer to a four-year university to complete their undergraduate degree.
Our impact in action
Halfway through the first year, Commit2Dallas's Opportunity 2040 Plan has already met 87% of its year 1 goal: to help an additional 7,700 students reach educational benchmarks that put them on a pathway to well-paying jobs. This work is touching Dallas County families like the Donjuans, whose oldest daughter Annahi will graduate from the University of North Texas at Dallas this spring. "I'm the first on both sides of my family … to obtain higher education," says Annahi. "I decided to attend college in order to start saving and serve as a role model for my siblings."
We are seeing a similar impact from our T3 P2C commitment. Over the next six months, T3 will integrate its platform with the registration process for all Fort Worth Independent School District middle school students, which will give approximately 15,000 students valuable information about educational opportunities at various high schools and careers they can pursue as an adult.