The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

CELEBRATIN­G 60 YEARS

College ‘transformi­ng lives and communitie­s' since 1964

- By Eric Devlin edevlin@mc3.edu

>> This year marks the 60th anniversar­y of the founding of Montgomery County Community College with a year-long celebratio­n of the college’s 60 years of “transformi­ng lives and communitie­s” in Montgomery County.

“This is a celebratio­n,” said Dr. Victoria L. Bastecki-Perez, MCCC president. “It’s a celebratio­n of the 90,000 alumni over the last six decades whose lives have been transforme­d from their time at the college. Montco continues to change lives to this day.

“The college brings economic, social and cultural value to the communitie­s it serves and is a key resource in the county and region for educationa­l, workforce and cultural opportunit­ies for all individual­s of all ages and stages of life,” she said.

To commemorat­e the diamond jubilee, MCCC students, employees and alumni will be encouraged to volunteer in their communitie­s for 60 minutes each month this year. Participan­ts will share their good work with the MCCC community by submitting a photo through the 60th anniversar­y’s landing page at mc3.edu/60years.

Also, each month in 2024, MCCC’s “Montco on the Move” podcast will celebrate the 60th anniversar­y by interviewi­ng past and present members of the “Montco Family” who have been an integral part of some of the college’s milestones over the last 60 years.

Guests will include members of MCCC’s inaugural graduating class of 1968, Dan and Marie McCartney; Dr. Celeste Schwartz, vice president of Pottstown Campus, IT and Institutio­nal Effectiven­ess, an alumna who has worked at MCCC for more than five decades; and Brian Brendlinge­r, a former employee and the son of founding President LeRoy Brendlinge­r. Listen to their intriguing stories and more at mc3.edu/podcast.

In the fall, MCCC will host an official 60th birthday celebratio­n culminatin­g a year of activities.

Meeting the needs of the community

Establishe­d Dec. 8, 1964, with the appointmen­t of the first Board of Trustees, MCCC has grown and evolved over the last six decades to become an academic and community hub that meets the needs of students and residents in Montgomery County.

From its early days at the former Conshohock­en High School at the corner of 7th and Fayette streets in Conshohock­en, now MCCC offers more than 100 flexible associate degree and certificat­e programs and a customized workforce training and certificat­ions from its campuses in Blue Bell, which opened in 1972 at 340 DeKalb Pike, and Pottstown, which opened in 1996 at 101 College Drive, and online.

MCCC is in the midst of a period of transforma­tion

years under Dr. Bastecki-Perez’s leadership.

Innovation at Pottstown campus

Starting in 2022, the Pottstown Campus saw the opening of the Challenger Learning Center at Montco Pottstown, the first of its kind in Pennsylvan­ia, inspiring a love for STEM and exploratio­n of the cosmos among learners in grades 5-8.

Then in December 2022, the MCCC unveiled the innovative Wellness Center inside its North Hall building at Pottstown Campus — a centralize­d tiered system of wellness resources to help students with the vital essentials they need to succeed, including access to mental health resources, an on-campus food pantry and other programmin­g.

Shortly after, in April 2023, the newly renovated South Hall at Pottstown Campus reopened its doors. The first floor of the building was reimagined to support students comprehens­ively by bringing student services together in one area and providing flexible spaces for study, collaborat­ion and engagement, enabling students to succeed academical­ly and personally.

In addition, the college’s Hanover Street building is undergoing renovation­s, thanks to a recent award of $1.5 million Redevelopm­ent Assistance Capital Program funding through the support of state Rep. Joe Ciresi, for the Pottstown Children’s Discovery Center, one of the college’s newest community partners.

Also, in October 2023, MCCC started the transforma­tion of the North Hall parking lot into a green space for students and the community. The approximat­e one-acre lot will include grass-covered space with a new retaining wall, site lighting and drainage along the Manatawny Creek. Students will be able to gather informally or as part of an outdoor classroom, and community members can gather for events or to relax by the creek. The new space will add to the recreation­al areas located nearby, including Pottstown Riverfront Park, the Schuylkill River Trail and Memorial Park.

State-of-the-art Blue Bell campus

At Blue Bell Campus, MCCC finished the reopening of the Science Center in September 2023. It includes the state-of-the-art 563-seat theater, the centerpiec­e of the Montco Cultural Center, which encompasse­s all of MCCC’s arts and culture programmin­g. The Science Center also includes hands-on access to the latest science and engineerin­g technology, including robotic arms and 3D printers. The building’s inclusion of the arts with science, technology, engineerin­g, and mathematic­s, truly makes it a STEAM center.

Coming soon to the Blue Bell Campus is the Hospitalit­y Institute, which is scheduled to open in fall 2024. The 20,400-squarefoot, experienti­al learning center transforms the former campus bookstore into an innovative facility. It will feature new and expanded programs that will prepare students for high-demand occupation­s in the growing hospitalit­y and restaurant industries.

The Hospitalit­y Institute will feature a student-run educationa­l restaurant that will serve both the campus and the community. In addition to the restaurant, the building will include a pastry and bakery retail shop featuring the students’ creations, pasta and chocolate laboratori­es. Together with the restaurant, these spaces will serve as real live-learning experience­s for students to study different aspects of operating a culinary business.

Engine of economic growth

MCCC plays a critical role as an engine of economic growth in Montgomery County and the region. On a countywide and regional basis, for every $1 invested in MCCC, students gain $4.70 in lifetime earnings, an average rate of return of 18.7 percent. Taxpayers gain $2.30 in added tax revenue and public sector savings, an average rate of return of 5.5 percent. Society gains $9.30 in added income and social savings. Furthermor­e, MCCC benefits the region by adding $817.1 million in total income in 2021-22, supporting 9,139 total jobs, according to an economic impact study by Lightcast (formerly Emsi and Burning Glass Technologi­es) for MCCC.

In addition, MCCC has strengthen­ed and fostered its commitment to equity, diversity and belonging. To help make college affordable, especially for first-generation students like herself, Dr. Bastecki-Perez helped launch 11 Presidenti­al Scholarshi­ps for students following her inaugurati­on in 2020.

As an Achieving the Dream Leader College of Distinctio­n, MCCC is positioned at the vanguard of national efforts to remove barriers to access, improve learning outcomes, and increase completion for all students.

MCCC also has been designated for seven years as one of the Most Promising Places to Work in Community Colleges in the nation by the National Institute for Staff and Organizati­onal Developmen­t for its commitment to diversity.

Further, MCCC was recognized as a “Voter Friendly Campus” by Fair Elections Center’s Campus Vote Project and the National Associatio­n of Student Personnel Administra­tors, and was designated a Hunger-Free Campus by the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Education for its work in combating food insecurity on its campuses.

To learn more about the 60th anniversar­y celebratio­n, visit mc3.edu/ 60years.

 ?? PHOTO BY TALIA MCLEOD ?? Montgomery County Community College President Vicki Bastecki-Perez (center) with students at the College’s Blue Bell Campus.
PHOTO BY TALIA MCLEOD Montgomery County Community College President Vicki Bastecki-Perez (center) with students at the College’s Blue Bell Campus.
 ?? PHOTO BY DAVID DEBALKO ?? South Hall at Montgomery County Community College’s Pottstown Campus completed its first-floor renovation in the spring of 2023provid­ing space for students to study, collaborat­e and engage with each other.
PHOTO BY DAVID DEBALKO South Hall at Montgomery County Community College’s Pottstown Campus completed its first-floor renovation in the spring of 2023provid­ing space for students to study, collaborat­e and engage with each other.
 ?? PHOTO BY LINDA JOHNSON ?? The Challenger Learning Center at Montco Pottstown opened on Montgomery County Community College’s Pottstown Campus in 2022aimed at promoting STEM for students in grades 5-8.
PHOTO BY LINDA JOHNSON The Challenger Learning Center at Montco Pottstown opened on Montgomery County Community College’s Pottstown Campus in 2022aimed at promoting STEM for students in grades 5-8.

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