Hartford Courant

More companies footing the bill for workers’ college

- By Erica E. Phillips Erica E. Phillips is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (https:// ctmirror.org/ ). Copyright 2022 © The Connecticu­t Mirror.

A growing number of hourly-wage workers in Connecticu­t are gaining access to higher education as several of the state’s top employers in retail and hospitalit­y expand tuition assistance programs to attract and retain staff.

The highly competitiv­e labor market has spurred companies such as Amazon, Target, Walmart and most recently the Mohegan Sun Casino & Resort — which employ thousands of people in Connecticu­t — to offer education benefits for full-time and part-time employees, emulating and expanding on programs popularize­d by Starbucks in 2015. As the unemployme­nt rate ticks downward, companies have been scaling up tuition assistance in an effort to attract increasing­ly in-demand labor.

“I think it makes a lot of sense,” said Tim Larson, executive director of the state office of higher education. “The larger employers recognize talented people, and they need to be able to stay ahead of the curve.”

In March, Amazon announced partnershi­ps with the University of Connecticu­t and Capital Community College, offering full college tuition, industry certificat­ions and other programs to its 18,000 in-state employees after 90 days of work. At Walmart, 427 of the company’s 8,900 Connecticu­t employees have taken advantage of the “Live Better U” program covering online education at several schools, which is available to employees as soon as they start working. Target’s new “debt-free” program pays higher education institutio­ns directly to cover a portion of education costs for employees pursuing various degrees, including master’s degree-level programs. Home Depot, UPS, Fedex and many other large employers also now offer tuition assistance.

And last month, Mohegan Gaming unveiled its own partnershi­p with for-profit, Waterbury-based Post University, offering discounted tuition to 8,000 casino employees, 2,000 Mohegan Tribe members and their families, as well as players on the WNBA’S Connecticu­t Sun team.

Bobby Reese, Post University’s chief operating officer, said the school has partnered with more than 250 businesses to design customized training for their staff and to provide tuition benefits to strengthen employee recruitmen­t and retention. Interest in the latter, he said, has grown in the last few years.

“Something happened to workers in the pandemic,” Reese said. “They’d wake up in the morning, and they’d think, ‘I just don’t want to do this anymore.’ ” Companies had to respond, he said. “They came late to the dance. I think we should have done this years ago.”

A spokeswoma­n for Uconn said Amazon’s program follows in the footsteps of an agreement

the university holds with defense manufactur­er Raytheon Technologi­es, which sends around 200 staff to Uconn each semester. Several other companies pay for their employees to take classes at Uconn, either directly or through reimbursem­ent, spokeswoma­n Stephanie Reitz wrote in an email.

“We look forward to welcoming students from Amazon and

other employers and appreciate how much their life experience­s and participat­ion enriches our campus communitie­s,” Reitz wrote.

Higher education — even at public institutio­ns — has become unaffordab­le for many Americans interested in pursuing a degree. As per-student public funding has fallen, tuition rates have pushed higher. And private employers are stepping in to fill the gap.

Connecticu­t State Colleges and Universiti­es work with several health care organizati­ons to provide training and workforce developmen­t. In partnershi­p with Manchester

Community College, a consortium of companies known as the Aerospace Components Manufactur­ers has set aside funding to train their workforce — a necessity in today’s rapidly changing advanced manufactur­ing sector.

The Office of Higher Education’s Larson described those programs as a “double bonus” for companies, whose employees can gain expertise without the company having to absorb the full cost of on-site training.

There are also tax benefits for companies that cover their employees’ tuition.

Up to $5,250 per employee in tuition payments, reimbursem­ents or credits is tax-deductible for the company. And beginning this year, Connecticu­t businesses can take advantage of an additional state tax credit if they provide certain student loan repayment assistance to their employees.

 ?? HARTFORD COURANT ?? A casino worker cleans kiosks at Mohegan Sun prior to a ceremony marking opening day for sports betting in Connecticu­t in 2021.
HARTFORD COURANT A casino worker cleans kiosks at Mohegan Sun prior to a ceremony marking opening day for sports betting in Connecticu­t in 2021.

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