loader image
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
57.4 F
McAllen
- Advertisement -

VIDA is Awarded $3M to Train 725 Participants in Nursing Pathways

Translate to Spanish or other 102 languages!

School, City, State, and other officials are pictured at the presentation.This grant project will provide VIDA with the opportunity to train and upskill 725 participants in high demand nursing occupations and ultimately secure employment at a partner hospital. Courtesy Image
School, City, State, and other officials are pictured at the presentation.This grant project will provide VIDA with the opportunity to train and upskill 725 participants in high demand nursing occupations and ultimately secure employment at a partner hospital. Courtesy Image

Mega Doctor News

- Advertisement -

Valley Initiative for Development and Advancement (VIDA) is honored to be a recipient of The Nursing Expansion Grant from U.S. Department of Labor to continue enhancing professional pathways to nursing and addressing the labor shortage nursing professionals face in the care economy across the Texas-Mexico border. This grant project will provide VIDA with the opportunity to train and upskill 725 participants in high demand nursing occupations and ultimately secure employment at a partner hospital. VIDA is grateful to The U.S. Department of Labor for recognizing the value in education to build and sustain a competitive nursing workforce in our community.

“We are immensely thankful to U.S. Department of Labor, for selecting VIDA as one of 25 organizations nationwide, and the only one in Texas, to be awarded this $3 Million Nursing Expansion Grant. It is our continued priority to maximize human capital and promote economic mobility through relevant workforce training among our underserved demographic, especially in the healthcare industry. For this grant project, VIDA is partnering with 13 local area hospitals, 3 higher education training institutions, various community-based organizations, and both regional workforce development boards. The key to our proposed innovative strategy for addressing the allied health and nursing labor shortage across the Rio Grande Valley is partnerships, collaboration, and accountability. These funds will be utilized to implement virtual reality technology for nursing clinicals, increase the number of nursing instructors at partner training institutions, provide customized wraparound student support services to ensure program completion, and ultimate job placement at one of 13 partner hospitals” said Felida Villarreal, VIDA’s President & CEO.

About Valley Initiative for Development and Advancement

- Advertisement -

For nearly 28 years, VIDA has helped more than 6,000 economically disadvantaged valley residents successfully complete career training programs in target demand occupations and achieve self-sufficiency. Last year, VIDA served 534 participants with an average persistence rate of 94% and an average annual salary upon graduation of over $48,000! This is a true representation of human capital investment and aligning workforce skills with local industry demand. 

To learn more about VIDA, please visit www.vidacareers.org or call (956) 903-1900.

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

- Advertisement -

More Articles

STHS Edinburg Named to Forbes’ 2026 Top Hospitals List

South Texas Health System (STHS) Edinburg has been named to the 2026 Forbes list of America's Top Hospitals. The facility is one of only 253 of the more than 5,400 eligible hospitals nationwide to earn a 5-star rating, including only 13 in Texas.

MD Anderson Unveils Breakthroughs in Blood Cancer Treatment

Researchers from The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center presented groundbreaking research at the 67th American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting and Exposition.

DHR Health Awarded Large Employer of the Year by Texas Workforce Commission

Workforce Solutions Lower Rio Grande Valley (WFS) proudly announced that its nominee, DHR Health, has been awarded the Large Employer of the Year Award at the 28th Annual Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) Conference.

ACIP: Parents to Decide on Hepatitis B Vaccine for Infants

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) today voted 8 to 3 to recommend individual-based decision-making for parents deciding whether to give the hepatitis B vaccine, including the birth dose, to infants born to women who test negative for the virus.
- Advertisement -
×