Employment program for people with disabilities to fall short of needed funds, delaying help
Workers, including one man in a wheelchair, discuss a project they are working on in Houston, Texas. (Getty Images)
A state program to help people with disabilities find employment is running short of funds, the state labor department reported Monday, leading to a waiting list for people seeking the agencyβs services.
The Department of Workforce Development will seek $4.6 million from the state Legislature to fully fund the Division of Vocational Rehabilitation in the 2026 fiscal year.
The division serves about 19,000 people at any one time and enrolls about 1,000 new participants each month who have disabilities and are looking for work opportunities, said Haley McCoy, director of communications at DWD.
The unemployment rate for people with disabilities is about twice that for the general population, said Melanie Cairns, managing attorney for Disability Rights Wisconsin.
βThe Division of Vocational Rehabilitation provides vital support and services that people with disabilities need in order to work and to find better work,β Cairns said.
Those services include assessment of a personβs current job skills and discussions about the individualβs work goal and what services and supports they need to pursue that goal, Cairns said. Those can include grants for training in a specific occupation or skills, job coaching and other forms of support.
Federal funds cover 78.7% of the programβs cost, with the state required to pitch in 21.3% to match that. The additional state appropriation DWD is seeking would unlock the corresponding additional federal money.
The 2025-27 state budget appropriated $21.3 million in state funds for the 2026 fiscal year β $2.4 million less than the state spent in 2025 and $4.6 million less than what the state had projected it would need, according to DWD.
Unless the shortfall is made up, the agency will have to put potential new participants on a waiting list, according to DWD. McCoy said about 2,000 people are currently awaiting an employment plan through the division and would be put on the waiting list as a consequence.
DWD has scheduled a virtual public hearing for Thursday, Nov. 13, at 2 p.m., to explain the need for the waiting list and seek comment from the public about that prospect.
βWe want to find a solution to continue to provide employment services for anyone with disabilities who wants to find a job,β said DWD Secretary-designee Amy Pechacek in a statement Monday. βWe welcome the public to participate in this public hearing and are working with all stakeholders to address this issue.β