Dayton Daily News

WRIGHT STATE EAGER TO EMERGE FROM ‘ROUGH TIMES’

President Sue Edwards says a new day is here for the university in address to chamber Friday,

- By Thomas Gnau Staff Writer

Wright State University will have a brighter future if it can win partners among Dayton-area businesses, the school’s new president, Sue Edwards, told Dayton Area Chamber of Commerce members Friday.

“We’ve had some rough times,” Edwards told a chamber breakfast briefing Friday at Stratacach­e Tower in downtown Dayton. “We have disappoint­ed the region. And I know that, because my enrollment tells me that.”

Edwards was named president of Wright State late in 2019, as the university struggled to emerge from several years of budgetary, legal and workforce traumas. The university today has about 12,500 students, down from about 18,000 in 2016. About 2,000 of today’s students are graduate students.

WSU trustees slashed about $31 million from the school’s budget in 2017. That wasn’t enough, and the school then cut spending by an additional $53 million in fiscal year 2018.

Further, Wright State has a student retention rate of only 64% from the freshman to sophomore academic years — a number Edwards targeted as too low.

“We have to figure out how to narrow that gap,” she said.

Still, she maintained that a new day is here. “We are not going anywhere,” she said. “We are open for business.”

Wright State remains of unique importance to the region, with 84% of graduates remaining in the area. The link between Wright State and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base — Ohio’s largest single-site employer with more than 30,000 military and civilian employees — is especially strong, Edwards said, with 2,800 WSU graduates working in one unit alone.

Edwards noted that she has

already spoken with many of the listeners in her chamber audience about their work- force needs.

“I need to know: What are you looking for?” she said. “What do you need? Do I have a program? Do I need to create a new program? Why is there not an educated workforce for you to gather workers from?”

Wright State announced this week that it is creating a new college, its first in 35 years, focusing on health care and education.

“One of the key workforce demands in this area is health care,” she said. “None of us can actually meet that demand right now — especially in nursing. We can’t produce enough nurses between Sinclair (Community College), us, UD (University of Dayton), Clark (State Community College), you name it. We just can’t produce enough.”

“Sue is making sure Wright State is evolving to meet the needs of today’sand tomorrow’s business community,” Chris Kershner, the chamber’s executive vice president, said after her address. “This is the dynamic leadership that Wright State needs now more than ever.”

Contact this reporter at 937225-2390 or email Tom. Gnau@cmg.com.

 ??  ?? Sue Edwards, Wright State’s new president, said the university is listening to area employers’ workforce needs.
Sue Edwards, Wright State’s new president, said the university is listening to area employers’ workforce needs.

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