Building an Educated Workforce and Empowering People To Dream

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NORTHAMPTON, MA / ACCESSWIRE / December 16, 2024 / Regions Bank

This Regions customer and community partner is helping thousands write their next chapter. Meet its visionary leader here.

By Kim Borges

Jenny Walker can immediately spot the signs.

People who say they've forgotten their glasses when they're asked to read aloud. Or who always order without looking at the menu.

One in every five Americans struggles with literacy; and 54 percent of people read at below a sixth-grade level.

"Imagine being at a first grade reading level and having second-grade student as a child," said Walker. "That's what gets me out of bed in the morning and what keeps me up at night."

Literacy is an issue offering anyone valid cause for concern given lower reading rates are estimated to cost the U.S. $200 billion in safety and health issues and two-plus trillion dollars in lost productivity each year.

Walker has been on a personal mission to advance literacy from her early public school teaching days to her current role as executive director of the Texarkana-based nonprofit and Regions Bank customer Literacy Texas. But she's the first to tell you no one can do this work alone.

That's why Walker and her team collaborate with 300-plus fellow nonprofits and government agencies across the Lone Star State, including the Literacy County of Bowie and Miller Counties and 100 Families, two Regions Bank community partners. Walker formerly led the first nonprofit and helped establish the second.

Our great network of community partners and corporate partners like Regions Bank offer the support we need. And there's a really big need in Texas for the work we're doing.

"Our organization serves as a backbone of support," explained Walker of Literacy Texas's role connecting and equipping adult and family literacy programs through resources, training, networking and advocacy. "Our great network of community partners and corporate partners like Regions Bank offer the support we need. And there's a really big need in Texas for the work we're doing."

How big?

"Texas is at a 28 percent level one for reading, and 40 percent of our population reads on a third-grade level," said Walker. "That means people can put together short passages of text, but struggle with completing basic forms like job applications, medical history forms and back to school packets for their children."

Just eight months into the job, Walker is already implementing her vision to address those struggles.