Teens lack jobs despite stimulus package

With résumé in hand, Cameron Hinojosa heads into the Family Clothes store looking for work Tuesday in Fresno, Calif. Students who were looking for summer jobs were supposed to receive money from a federal stimulus package of more than .2 billion, but it yielded few new opportunities for teens looking for work.

? The Obama administration’s economic stimulus program to find jobs for thousands of teenagers this summer couldn’t overcome one of the bleakest job markets in more than 60 years that had desperate adults competing for the same work.

Almost one-quarter of the 279,169 youths in the $1.2 billion jobs program didn’t get jobs, as more adults sought the same low-wage positions at hamburger stands and community pools, according to an Associated Press review.

Congressional auditors warned Wednesday that the government’s plans to measure the success of the federal program are so haphazard that they “may reveal little about what the program achieved.” The new report from the Government Accountability Office said many government officials, employers and participants believe the program was successful.

Vice President Joe Biden said the Workforce Investment Act summer program helped keep teens off the streets while reinvigorating the country’s summer youth employment program.

But the program didn’t prevent youth unemployment rates from soaring to 18.5 percent in July, the highest rate measured among 16- to 24-year-olds in that month since 1948.

“The summer program was basically half-disaster,” said Andrew Sum, director of the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University in Boston. “It was too little, too late and too poorly constructed to have any lasting effect on our youngest workers.”