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January 26, 2004
Grand Rapids Business Journal
By Mark Sanchez
MUSKEGON — After years of planning, construction
is set to begin next month on an $8 million technical education
center in Muskegon that will provide a new venue to learn high-tech
trades and an added amenity in support of the local economic base.
The Muskegon Area Career Tech Center will offer instruction in
a variety of professions and skilled trades to 11th grade and
12th grade Muskegon County students.
Among the courses are electronics and computer repair, machining,
automotive and health care technologies, construction trades,
Web design, e-commerce and computer-aided design.
“It’s finally coming together,” said Michael
Bozym, superintendent for the Muskegon Area Intermediate School
District (MAISD) that’s developing the center in partnership
with Muskegon Community College.
Under the partnership, Muskegon Community College (MCC) has provided
land on its campus and financing for the technical education center
that the MAISD will operate.
Bozym said the partnership will enable high school students to
seamlessly transition from technical training into a two-year
college, including transferring college credit hours for some
technical courses to MCC or Baker College of Muskegon.
“This will articulate directly into college,” Bozym
said. “You have students on the campus and in some cases
they will be shoulder-to-shoulder with students at the college
level.”
Muskegon County presently lacks a local career and technical training
center, forcing many high school students in the area to travel
to neighboring counties — most often Newaygo County —
to get the training that they need.
For that reason, development of the technical education center
has received strong support and involvement from business organizations,
labor unions and the public sector in Muskegon County.
The center also provides another tool for economic development
leaders to use in marketing the Muskegon area to prospective employers.
“This is another piece of the economic development puzzle
Muskegon hasn’t had,” said Gary Martin, director of
career and technical training for the MAISD.
“We’ll have the full package and we’ll be able
to deliver.”
The Muskegon Area Career Tech Center will have the capacity to
provide instruction for up to 1,000 students annually, double
the number who now access vocational training through an assortment
of options. Martin said that having a single center generates
a critical mass and student volume that will make expensive high-tech
equipment, such as a computer-numerical control lathe, an affordable,
practical investment.
He explained that school districts now offering technical training
on their own have found many equipment purchases cost-prohibitive
because of their limited student capacity.
Martin said he anticipates the center expanding into evening and
adult classes in the future, as demand for and interest in technical
training grows.
“Once you open up, you increase demand when people see what
you’re doing,” Martin said.
Voters in Muskegon County approved a 1-mill, 20-year levy in September
2002 to pay to construct, equip and operate the center. The center
is targeted for occupancy a year from now.
Planning for the tech center and its curriculum has involved the
close participation of businesses and labor unions, Martin said.
He said both sets of interests provided the MAISD with valuable
direction as to what kind of training and equipment is needed
in the community.
The continued counsel of several industry advisory committees
is just as valuable in planning future programming, as the needs
of businesses change in the years ahead and as new employment
and career trends emerge, Martin added.
“We always have to have the pulse of the labor market and
what’s happening in business,” he said. “What’s
the next thing going? We continually, as a school district, have
to ask what that is.”
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