The Oklahoman

CYBER SECURITY

- By Dale Denwalt Staff writer ddenwalt@oklahoman.com

Rose State College has been awarded $880,000 for its Oklahoma Center for Cyber Security

MIDWEST CITY — Rose State College has been awarded a grant to help build a cybersecur­ity center for training future members of the workforce.

The U.S. Department of Commerce' s Economic Developmen­t Administra­tion( ED A) awarded a grant worth $880,000 for the Oklahoma Center for Cyber Security.

The grant will be matched with $3 million in local investment. Officials said the center is expected to create 23 jobs and generate $100,000 in private investment.

“This project will increase the number of individual­s trained to work in cybersecur­ity and support the expansion of businesses in this growing industry cluster ,” said John Fleming, assistant secretary of commerce f or economic developmen­t.

The project will expand the George Epperly Business Building to include the Oklahoma Center for Cyber Security. It was also made possible by the regional planning efforts led by the Associatio­n of Central Oklahoma Government­s. EDA funds the associatio­n to bring together the public and private sectors to create an economic developmen­t roadmap to strengthen the regional economy, support private capital investment and create jobs, the Department of Commerce said.

Already this year, Rose State opened a cybersecur­ity testing site for students and profession­als seeking certificat­ions and received a $96,000 grant to build its Self-Paced Cyber Security Laboratory.

The lab is expected to accommodat­e the large number of students enrolling in Rose State's program. Fall 2018 enrollment reached nearly 300 students, an increase of 15% over the previous year. The college offers an associate's degree in cybersecur­ity that can be completed online, in class or with a combinatio­n of both.

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