Dayton Daily News

CSU gets $3.6M for workforce training center in Dayton

ARPA funds will help make courses more relevant to job market.

- By London Bishop Staff Writer

Central State University will establish a Workforce Training and Business Developmen­t Center at its Dayton Campus after a multimilli­on-dollar investment from the federal government.

The U.S. Department of Commerce awarded the university $3.6 million in ARPA funds to “tackle workforce shortages” exacerbate­d by the pandemic.

The money will fund shortterm workshops and undergradu­ate programs in advanced materials, advanced manufactur­ing, informatio­n technology and advanced data management. The university will acquire state-of-the-art equipment and software, and hire instructor­s to make its fouryear courses more relevant to the current job market.

Students will also be able to get certificat­es and credential­s to increase their skills and help them retain their current jobs, even if they are not seeking four-year degrees, Provost

F. Erik Brooks said.

“Universiti­es such as Central State must use our knowledge, our skills, our expertise to solve contempora­ry problems facing the communitie­s where we are found. We must venture out of our ivory towers and go into the towns and cities where we are situated and we must provide practical solutions to improve the lives of those in our communitie­s,” Brooks said.

Workshops can be as short as five days, or as long as three months, but students will walk away with the qualificat­ions to gain employment in manufactur­ing, IT or other industries, CSU officials said.

Central State’s Dayton Campus, at 840 Germantown Street, is in a sector of the city that is the most lacking in economic opportunit­y, said Morakinyo Kuti, associate provost for research and project director.

“Underrepre­sented individual­s, particular­ly African Americans, have borne a disproport­ionate share of negative COVID-19 health, economic, and educationa­l outcomes,” CSU President Jack Thomas said Thursday. “These disparitie­s have further widened the socioecono­mic gap that exists between African Americans and the majority population. Central State’s Workforce Training and Business Developmen­t Center will provide employment-related training and educationa­l programs to increase the ability of underrepre­sented individual­s to gain meaningful employment.”

Central State has contribute­d an additional $896,848 towards the center’s creation. A Department of Commerce statement indicates that the venture is expected to help fill 300 jobs and generate $1 million in private investment from companies looking to hire workers.

“There’s a demand from employers for people with skills for jobs that are vacant,” Kuti said.

The university is projecting a 50 percent spike in fall 2022 enrollment, going roughly from 2,000 to 3,000 students physically attending at the Wilberforc­e campus, and a similar jump for online classes, going from 4,000 students to 7,000.

“Ohio has a proud history of leading the country in manufactur­ing innovation,” said U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown. “Thanks to the American Rescue Plan, this investment at Central State will help create hundreds of jobs and prepare the workers Ohio needs to compete. Central State is one of Ohio’s premier universiti­es and I’m glad to see its strength is being recognized.”

 ?? MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF ?? Dunbar High School graduate Zaniyah Sanders and other incoming Central State students will have the benefit of a workplace training center.
MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF Dunbar High School graduate Zaniyah Sanders and other incoming Central State students will have the benefit of a workplace training center.

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