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Halima Hassan

MFIP Facilitator II (job/employment Counselor) at EMERGE Community Development

Halima Hassan has been working as an MFIP Facilitator II at Emerge Community Development since June 2013. Prior to this, Halima worked as an Interpreter at Garden & Associates from February 2012 to December 2013. Halima also served as an Administrative Assistant at UNICEF ESARO from October 2007 to December 2009, and as a Supply Assistant at UNICEF ESARO in Kenya from June 2005 to October 2007. Halima has experience in various types of interpretation, including over the phone, hospital and clinics, home visits, and schools in Minnesota.

Location

St. Paul, United States

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EMERGE Community Development

Mission: Our mission is to reveal the potential in people and communities through skill building, employment, and economic opportunity. Vision: We envision a world where all people have the opportunity to emerge and thrive. History: EMERGE was established as a division of Pillsbury United Communities in 1995 and spun-off as an independent entity in 2007. In 2015, we opened the EMERGE Career and Technology Center (ECTC) in North Minneapolis and merged with non-profit partner Momentum Enterprises, bringing three additional social enterprise businesses into our portfolio. In March 2017, we opened Cedar-Riverside Opportunity Center in partnership with the city, county, local colleges, and other partners. Today we operate a broad spectrum of workforce development and social enterprise businesses in the Twin Cities with the intertwined goals of better jobs, better lives, and better communities. In 2017, EMERGE served 2,979 people: 662 gained jobs, 305 participated in career training, 499 people accessed financial education and services, and 162 formerly homeless individuals and families received services to directly support them in gaining or maintain housing. We offer adult and youth workforce services, combined with a range of other services tailored to the specific needs of the participant. In 2017, 94% of those we served identified as people of color with the largest groups served African American (55%) and African, primarily Somali (25%). Our participants are 84% low-income with 76% under the poverty line. About 35% are overcoming a criminal background; 26% have no high school diploma/GED; 21% speak a primary language other than English, and 13% indicate immigrant/refugee status.


Employees

51-200

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