“The program helped me reach my goal of working at ECU Health,” said Kara Dozier, a hostess with the Food and Nutrition Services team, of the NC Works program.
Dozier enrolled in the NC Works program in October of 2024 and served as its first participant at ECU Health.
NC Works is an initiative throughout North Carolina for young adults ages 18 to 24 who are interested in exploring health care careers. The program brings together various statewide agencies including the Department of Commerce, Public Instruction and the NC community college system to create opportunities for young jobseekers to find employment. ECU Health is one of many work sites across the state for the NC Works program.
Kara said she’d always wanted to work in the hospital setting. “I have family who work in the hospital and had heard great things about ECU Health,” she said.
When she was at a job fair at the Greenville Convention Center, she saw an ECU Health table. “I thought, let me go over there and see what this is about, and Ms. Toyta told me about the program. She wanted me to give her my resume.”
Toyta Kee, a talent pipeline consultant at ECU Health, said the program makes a lasting impact on participants.
“It’s like an internship model,” she explained. “This program plants the seeds that will affect generation after generation.”
Kee emphasized that ECU Health’s broad spectrum of career opportunities makes it the perfect environment for introducing young people to the health care field.
“There are so many opportunities for participants to further their education. They didn’t think they could work in health care because they didn’t want to be a doctor or nurse. Here at ECU Health, they can get the exposure and education to many other jobs, and they receive guidance and mentorship as they learn about health care roles,” Kee said. “It warms my heart to serve as the navigator to help them have a successful life, to be a blessing to themselves and their families.”
In addition to helping young adults gain valuable skills, the program also creates a pipeline of talent that potentially leads to participants becoming members of the ECU Health team.
That’s just what happened for Dozier.
During her time in the program, Dozier worked in production, the call center and Food and Nutrition. She felt supported by her team and Kee, and before the program ended, her colleagues and supervisors from each department advised her to apply for a full-time role.
“I decided to stay as a hostess in Food and Nutrition,” she said. “I love the people I work with, and it has a good vibe.”
“We are so appreciative to the Food and Nutrition Service department for their unwavering support of this program,” Kee added.
Dozier is now in school at Pitt Community College, wrapping up a degree in business administration. “This is my last semester,” she said. “I hope to stay with ECU Health and do work that’s aligned with my degree.”
“Eleanor Roosevelt said, ‘The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams,’ and I believe in dreams,” Kee said. “This experience opens doors for people who might otherwise have socioeconomic barriers, and that’s what’s rewarding to my heart.”
To learn more about the NC Works program, contact Toyta Kee at [email protected], or visit the NCWorks website.