Chattanooga Times Free Press

Marion County native returns home to help residents find careers

- BY MARK KENNEDY STAFF WRITER

Patrick O’Hagan, 29, has learned that success in one’s profession­al life is like running a marathon. It takes training, perseveran­ce and a sacrificia­l mindset.

O’Hagan, a South Pittsburg, Tennessee, native, practices what he preaches. He’s gone from a casual, recreation­al runner to a hard-core ultra-marathoner in just a handful of years.

“I’m addicted [to running],” he admits, noting that he trains by running about 60 miles per week.

Rememberin­g his first half-marathon, he laments, “I ran it. It killed me. I was miserable. I hated it, but as soon as I crossed the finish line I thought, ‘Yeah, I can do better.’”

Meanwhile, O’Hagan, the son of a journalist-turned-attorney father and a Cuban immigrant mother, applies the same passion and preparatio­n to career success as a college administra­tor as he does to his running hobby.

Just 14 years ago, he was a kid from Marion County with a “hardship” driver’s license driving to Chattanoog­a every day in his dad’s Buick Park Avenue sedan for school, first at Chattanoog­a

Christian School for ninth and 10th grades and later at Chattanoog­a State Middle College.

“I was fortunate to have mom and dad at home,” O’Hagan said. “That was a guiding light for me, a strong foundation. They pushed academics and the importance of education.”

Now he is manager of contract training at Chattanoog­a State, working with local employers to develop customized skills training for workers. Meanwhile, he is also director of Chattanoog­a State’s Kimball, Tennessee, instructio­nal site.

If you see him running in downtown South Pittsburg at 10 p.m. he might be training for a 100-mile ultra marathon, but he’s also probably thinking about how to prepare folks in his hometown for career-quality jobs.

“My experience at Chattanoog­a State was amazing,” he said. “It’s funny coming full circle and seeing the same community (Marion County) and students (Chattanoog­a State.)

After graduating from Chattanoog­a State, O’Hagan attended Martin College in Pulaski, Tennessee, and then got a master’s degree in curriculum and instructio­n at Tennessee Tech University. With an advanced degree in hand, the then22-year-old landed a job teaching seventh grade biology at Tyner Academy in Chattanoog­a.

After a year, he got a job with a federal workforce developmen­t program in South Pittsburg, and grew the office from one half-time position to a three-person operation plus a part-timer in a short span of years.

“My job was seeing individual job seekers that were unemployed or underemplo­yed,” he said. “And my goal was to get them full-time, selfsuffic­ient employment.

“The workforce doesn’t always have the necessary skill set to fill open positions. I also learned how soft skills for individual­s are often lacking.”

Recently, O’Hagan was named to to the 2021 class of Leadership Tennessee, a profession­al developmen­t initiative of Lipscomb University in Nashville for mid-career profession­als.

O’Hagan said working in his hometown community in Marion County has earned him the trust of employers, workers and students there. His personal story resonates.

“Small towns can be incredulou­s of outsiders,” he said. “[But] being somebody from the community that has personally taken advantage of opportunit­ies, and then being able to come back has been incredibly important. It builds relatabili­ty and trust.”

O’Hagan resides in South Pittsburg with his wife, Lindsey, who introduced him to running. He has run the New York and Chicago marathons and plans to compete in the Berlin marathon this fall.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? Patrick O’Hagan, interim director for Chattanoog­a State’s Kimball Site, poses in the Center for Business, Industry & Health, on the campus of Chattanoog­a State in May.
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER Patrick O’Hagan, interim director for Chattanoog­a State’s Kimball Site, poses in the Center for Business, Industry & Health, on the campus of Chattanoog­a State in May.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States