Call & Times

Schools’ regional effort to help push green economy

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CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — Four colleges in three New England states are working together to train students and make it easier for them to create programs for their region's growing green building and resilient design industries.

The Ecovation Hub Education and Training Consortium brings together Antioch University New England and Keene State College in New Hampshire, Greenfield Community College in Massachuse­tts and the School for Internatio­nal Training in Vermont.

It's part of a larger effort to help the region's economy recover from the closing of the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant in 2014 by turning the area into a green economy hub.

Cary Guant, Keene State's director of sustainabi­lity, said the consortium wants to take advantage of the experts currently working in the areas of environmen­tally responsibl­e building and resilient design — developing buildings and communitie­s that can adapt to natural disasters and other effects of climate change.

"We wanted to tap into that in different ways," she said. "In the past, those different areas of expertise were extensive but they weren't unified. It was very fragmented. No one was talking to each other."

The four schools signed a memorandum of understand­ing last week to officially create the consortium, however, some of their work is already underway.

Because they serve different population­s — Greenfield is a two- year college, most of Keene State's students are enrolled in four-year undergradu­ate degree programs and the other two offer graduate degrees — the schools don't compete with each other. Instead, they're exploring ways to make it easier for students to move from one school to another, learning about the green industries.

For example, students who complete Greenfield's training program in energy efficiency could enter an accelerate­d program at Keene State to get a bachelor's degree in green architectu­re, Gaunt said.

The schools also are examining their curriculum to identify areas of overlap and opportunit­ies to create new degree or certificat­e programs, and hope to offer "boot camp" training sessions for those already working in the high- performanc­e building industry. Research will be another component, but the main focus is on workforce developmen­t, she said.

Gaunt said in researchin­g other consortia, most are focused on urban areas and are created to promote research. This project is focused on workforce developmen­t, from high school through graduate school, she said.

"What we're trying to do here is focus on rural areas and to focus first on workforce developmen­t and second on research," she said. "We're looking at soups to nuts — how do you really prepare a workforce?"

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