The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

TRAIN OHIO CELEBRATED

LCCC marks program’s first year

- By Kevin Martin

Lorain County Community College held a celebratio­n and open house at the Desich SMART Microsyste­ms Center on May 23 to mark the conclusion of the first year of the TRAIN Ohio program.

Launched in August 2016, the Training Recruitmen­t Accelerati­on Innovation Network of Ohio brings together students and local industry partners. Students complete internship­s while earning an associates degree in mechatroni­cs technology which focuses on micro electrical mechanical systems under the earn and learn model.

“It is really an opportunit­y for students to know they are going to be connected to employers, earn some money to help pay for their degree, because we don’t want students to graduate with a lot of debt, and make sure

“This community has a sense about it that there is so much potential.”

— Brynt Parmeter, of NextFlex Hybrid Electronic­s Manufactur­ing and Innovation Institute

we’re training people for the jobs employers have,” said Terri Burgess Sandu, LCCC’s director of Talent and Business Innovation.

The program, Burgess Sandu explained, offers an opportunit­y for Lorain County to become invested in the innovation economy and transition from traditiona­l production manufactur­ing toward new industries such as microelect­ronics. LCCC is a part of Ohio TechNet, a network of 11 Ohio community colleges using a similar model in creating a curriculum which correspond­s directly

to the needs of industry.

Brynt Parmeter, director of workforce developmen­t, education and training at San Jose, Calif.-based Next Flex, said after developing the proposal with LCCC that the program could be replicated across the country by business and industry in developing talent.

“This community has a sense about it that there is so much potential. There’s actually more innovation and creative potential here than there is in Silicon Valley,” Parmeter said.

Burgess Sandu said the idea for the partnershi­p began in 2015 when officials from a number of companies in the microelect­ronics industry were visiting the region. Then in January

2016, six companies signed on and agreed to partner with LCCC, including Wooster’s RBB and Elyria’s SMART Microsyste­ms.

“We know we have to not only have the right content, but we have to deliver it,” Burgess Sandu said. “We know we need new ways of partnering with industry to get students excited about these careers, to make sure they are connected to those careers early on and to make sure that we are doing everything we can to build wealth in our community.”

 ?? ERIC BONZAR — THE MORNING JOURNAL ?? Brynt Parmeter, director of workforce developmen­t for San Jose, California-based NextFlex Hybrid Electronic­s Manufactur­ing and Innovation Institute, speaks to attendees during the Training Recruitmen­t Accelerati­on Innovation Network (TRAIN) of Ohio’s...
ERIC BONZAR — THE MORNING JOURNAL Brynt Parmeter, director of workforce developmen­t for San Jose, California-based NextFlex Hybrid Electronic­s Manufactur­ing and Innovation Institute, speaks to attendees during the Training Recruitmen­t Accelerati­on Innovation Network (TRAIN) of Ohio’s...

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