Program Manager, Learning and Development Specialist
Hope the Mission's frontline workforce operates in one of the most demanding environments in human services. Every shift, staff navigate trauma, de-escalation, and complex behavioral health needs in shelters serving people in crisis. How well staff are prepared for that environment determines how safe those spaces are, how long employees stay, and how effectively Hope the Mission delivers on its mission. The Program Manager, Learning and Development Specialist is the person responsible for that preparation.
Reporting to the Director of Development, the Program Manager designs, develops, and delivers training across the Hope the Mission workforce. This includes facilitating onboarding and ongoing staff development, providing shelter-specific training in trauma-informed care, de-escalation, crisis intervention, emergency procedures, and safety protocols, developing management training, creating instructional materials, tracking training completion and outcomes, and coordinating training logistics. The Program Manager collaborates with shelter managers and frontline staff to tailor content to the realities of shelter operations and works with external training vendors and subject matter experts as needed. Travel to program sites is required up to 50% of the time. This is a grant-funded position.
Staff who are undertrained don't just struggle. They leave, they make mistakes, and they sometimes cause harm. Hope the Mission's ability to retain a capable frontline workforce and deliver consistent, quality services depends in part on whether people feel equipped to do the job they were hired to do. The Program Manager builds that capacity, one training at a time, in the rooms where the work actually happens.
Responsibilities
Qualifications
Skills
Mandatory Requirements
Physical, Demands, Environmental Conditions, Equipment
The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of the job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential job functions. The employee is required to: walk and climb stairs; stand, bend, squat, climb, kneel, and twist on an intermittent or sometimes continuous basis; grasp, push, pull objects such as files, file cabinet drawers, and reach overhead; handle, finger, grasp and feel objects and equipment; reach with hands and arms; be mobile by moving oneself from place to place quickly and easily; repeat various motions with the wrists, hands, and fingers; be able to perform visual activities for (including, but not limited to) administrative and clerical tasks; ability to lift up to 25 lbs.; communicate, receive and exchange ideas, information by means of the spoken and written word; drive vehicles in and around Los Angeles County; be able to enter various buildings that may require climbing stairs; be periodically subjected to outside environmental conditions. The employee may work in proximity to service animals and emotional support animals; use a desktop and/or laptop computer; various office machines. Complete all required forms in personal writing.
Work Environment
The employee may be in contact with individuals and families in crisis who may be ill, using alcohol and drugs, and who may not be attentive to basic personal hygiene, health and safety practices. The employee may experience a number of unpleasant sensory demands associated with the participants' use of alcohol and drugs, and lack of personal hygiene. The employee must be ready to respond quickly and effectively to many types of situations, including crisis situations and potentially hostile situations. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate in an office setting. Sometimes work may become stressful when working under pressure or in crisis intervention.
EEO: HTM (Hope the Mission) provides equal employment opportunities (EEO) to all employees and applicants for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, disability or genetics. In addition to federal law requirements, HTM complies with applicable state and local laws governing nondiscrimination in employment in every location in which the company has facilities. This policy applies to all terms and conditions of employment, including recruiting, placement, promotion, recall, transfer, leaves of absence, compensation and training.
HTM will consider qualified applicants with a criminal history pursuant to the California Fair Chance Act. You do not need to disclose your criminal history or participate in a background check until a conditional job offer is made to you. After making a conditional offer and running a background check, if HTM is concerned about a conviction that is directly related to the job, you will be given the chance to explain the circumstances surrounding the conviction, provide mitigating evidence, or challenge the accuracy of the background report. Find out more about the Fair Chance Act by visiting the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing's Fair Chance Act webpage.
Full-time, exempt position.
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