Hamilton Journal News

Cincinnati State gets grant to help fight worker shortages

- By Whitney Miller WCPO

Cincinnati State Technical and Community College has been awarded a $25,000 grant to help fight the growing worker shortage plaguing the nation and the local community.

The grant was presented to the college by the Associatio­n of Ohio Commodores Fund.

According to the school’s president, Monica Posey, the money will support the college’s Workforce Focus Fund, which addresses important and timely workforce needs, especially in cases when other funds are not available.

“We’re now working to develop a nursing degree, a bachelor’s degree in nursing to address the need,” said Posey.

“We’re creating new apprentice­ship programs specializi­ng right now in medical assisting for launching more high school partnershi­ps, so high school students can get advanced education.”

Nursing is just one of the industries struggling to keep workers.

Casey Howard, a nursing student at Cincinnati State, works in an emergency room as a technician full time overnight while working toward becoming a nurse.

“Patients are sick, we’re understaff­ed, we’re underpaid. It’s exhausting, but it’s rewarding,” she said.

“You know, when you get the opportunit­y to actually help someone and make them feel better on their worst day, it’s pretty amazing.”

Howard is like many of the students in the nursing program: non-traditiona­l, juggling parenthood, education and work.

“Nursing is very rigorous,” said Janice Lockett, the nursing program chair. “We try to encourage our students to save up, put away some money. And we also have scholarshi­ps that come in and when they come in, we encourage our students to apply for them so that they don’t have to work so many hours.”

Lockett hopes the grant money will funnel its way to students in the form of scholarshi­ps. In a press release, the school outlined how the money will be spent:

“The Workforce Focus Fund is used to pay for scholarshi­ps for students, updated equipment and facilities, developing new training programs, and outreach to junior and senior high school students who are our future workforce.”

The Associatio­n of Ohio Commodores awarded grants totaling $80,000 in this first round to support training, profession­al developmen­t and other community activities that create and develop a strong Ohio workforce.

 ?? ??
 ?? ED RICHTER / STAFF ?? The Franklin Board of Education purchased five properties adjacent to the property on East Sixth Street where the new high school will be constructe­d. The school board paid $1.6 million for the properties, which includes the Sav-a-lot property that will eventually be demolished in late 2022 and used as practice fields.
ED RICHTER / STAFF The Franklin Board of Education purchased five properties adjacent to the property on East Sixth Street where the new high school will be constructe­d. The school board paid $1.6 million for the properties, which includes the Sav-a-lot property that will eventually be demolished in late 2022 and used as practice fields.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States