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Community Forums for Presidential Candidates at SKYCTC

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Bowling Green, Ky. (April 22, 2013) – On-campus visits with the four candidates to be interviewed for the position of president at Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College (formerly Bowling Green Technical College) are currently scheduled for April 29-30, 2013. 

 

The four candidates include:

  • Dr. F. Lynn Moore; Vice-President for Administrative Services and Student Development, Umpqua Community College; Roseburg, Oregon
  • Dr. Phillip Neal; Provost, Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College
  • Dr. George H. Sehi; Executive Director for University Relations, Warren and Butler County (OH) Educational Service Centers
  • Dr. Ralph G. Soney; Publisher/General Editor, North Carolina Community College Journal

During these visits candidates will meet with Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College (SKYCTC) faculty, staff, students, boards and local leaders.

Community forums are scheduled for the following dates and times to give the general public an opportunity to meet each candidate. The public is invited to attend all sessions.

  • Dr. F. Lynn Moore; Monday, April 29, 2013, 10:00 to 11:00 A.M. (CDT)
    Dr. Ralph G. Soney; Monday, April 29, 2013, 4:30 to 5:30 P.M. (CDT)
  • Dr. Phillip Neal; Tuesday, April 30, 2013, 10:00 to 11:00 A.M. (CDT)
  • Dr. George H. Sehi; Tuesday, April 30, 2013, 4:30 to 5:30 P.M. (CDT)

 

The community forums will be held in Building F - Conference Room
Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College Main Campus
1845 Loop Drive Bowling Green, KY 42101

 

If you are unable to attend the forums at the Bowling Green Main Campus, you may join via video conference at the following locations:  

Franklin-Simpson Center - Administrative Conference Room,
175 Davis Drive Franklin, KY 42134

Glasgow Health Campus: Building C - Conference Room
125 State Avenue in Glasgow, KY 42141

SKYCTC to Sponsor Area-Wide Job Fair

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Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College will host an area-wide job fair.

Date:     May 1, 2013
Place:    Building F Assembly room, Main Campus
Time:     8:30 am – 11:30 am

 SKYCTC students and personnel from all campuses, as well as community members, are invited to visit the vendor tables.

For answers to questions, please contact the following persons:
Kim Jackson        kim.jackson@kctcs.edu                901-1133
Sherita Clark       Sherita.clark@kctcs.edu               901-1064
Mark Powell       Mark.Powell@kctcs.edu               659-6928

 Job Fair poster

KCTCS APPOINTS PRESIDENT OF SOUTHCENTRAL KENTUCKY COMMUNITY AND TECHNICAL COLLEGE

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Dr. Phillip NealVersailles, Ky. (May 1, 2013) – Kentucky Community and Technical College System (KCTCS) President Michael B. McCall announced Wednesday the appointment of Dr. Phillip Neal as president of Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College (formerly Bowling Green Technical College).

 Dr. Neal is an experienced leader who has served as the Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College (SKYCTC) provost since 2008.  After consideration of four candidates the SKYCTC Board of Directors unanimously recommended Dr. Neal for the position. 

 “I am excited the next president of SKYCTC already has a history of leadership with the college,” said Dr. McCall.  “I am confident Dr. Neal will continue the success of SKYCTC and this will be a smooth transition.” 

 Dr. Neal will begin serving as president effective July 1, following the retirement of
Dr. Nathan Hodges.

 “It is truly an honor that Dr. McCall, the SKYCTC Board of Directors, faculty, staff and students have placed their confidence in me to be the next president of one of the nation's finest community and technical colleges,“ said Dr. Neal.  “I appreciate the outpouring of support from community partners and friends across South Central Kentucky and I look forward to a bright future.”

 Dr. Neal has 25 years of experience in higher education.   His career includes positions at community colleges and universities in Kentucky, Texas and Wyoming in the areas of academics, student affairs, institutional effectiveness and corporate training.  Prior to taking the position of SKYCTC provost in 2008, Dr. Neal was a research development coordinator for the National Institute for Staff and Organizational Development (NISOD) and he was a faculty member and chief student affairs officer for Laramie County Community College in Wyoming from 1995-2006.

 Dr. Neal earned a doctoral degree in educational administration from the Community College Leadership Program at The University of Texas at Austin, and completed his master’s degree in education and bachelor’s degree in psychology at the University of Wyoming.  Dr. Neal is co-author of, The Creative Community College: Leading Change Through Innovation, a Community College Press best seller, and he is active with numerous regional, state and national boards promoting academic success and economic development.

Golf Scramble Scheduled for Saturday May 4th is Cancelled

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THE SKYCTC GOLF SCRAMBLE FOR STUDENT SCHOLARSHIPS SCHEDULED FOR TOMORROW HAS BEEN CANCELLED DUE TO THE WEATHER FORECAST OF RAIN.
The event will be rescheduled at a later date. The rain date will not be next Saturday as PREVIOUSLY scheduled.
As soon as the event is rescheduled we will post the information.
Thank you for your understanding concerning this matter.

Retiring SKYCTC president, Dr. Nathan Hodges, praises teamwork

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By CHUCK MASON The Daily News cmason@bgdailynews.com/783-3262

Nathan Hodges said finding, growing and empowering leaders at Southcentral Kentucky CDr. Nathan Hodges holding a bookommunity and Technical College sets the stage for success.

Hodges, 70, is stepping down July 1 after leading the former Bowling Green Technical College since July 2005. He will eventually return to L.A – as in lower Alabama – where he and his wife, Becky, will enjoy their six grandchildren. When he came to the Bowling Green college, there were about 100 employees. That number has grown, full-time and part-time staff, to a little more than 400.

The student count has also grown from 2,511 to nearly 6,000. The college posted the best community college completion rate in Kentucky, and that rate was in the top 6 percent of all two-year colleges across the United States, he said. “This progress is designed by our faculty and staff in order to create a great success for our students,” he said.

The young Alabama man who ran a 500-student elementary school as principal in Dale County, Ala., following graduation in 1966 from then Troy State College with a psychology degree, found himself elected as a county superintendent of schools in the same county 10 years later. Those were just a few early career stops in Alabama.

“Some of the greatest (career) rewards have been right here. We have gone through a transformation. We built on the excellent talent that was here and then brought in additional great talent,” he said.
“Leadership is more than a small handful of people telling everyone what to do,” he said Wednesday, leaning forward in a wingback chair by the hearth in his office. “We invest in our own people.”

One staff member in whom SKYCTC invested in 2008 was Phillip Neal, who became college provost. Neal was appointed SKYCTC president Wednesday by Michael McCall, Kentucky Community and Technical College System president. Hodges said it has been a pleasure to work with McCall, who has supported his initiatives at SKYCTC.

Hodges focuses on people, in particular their potential, just as he learned to focus when competing in the senior bow hunter freestyle over 50 archery competitions. He’s finished second in the national indoor championships twice. But he would rather discuss the teamwork used to achieve accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools/Commission on College when SKYCTC had enlarged its educational mission beyond its technical college roots.

During that first accreditation process by SACS, there were very stringent requirements. Usually, institutions don’t meet the mark in certain areas; they then are given demerits, followed by a chance to correct those miscues.

However, when SKYCTC went through the process, there were no demerits. “It was a perfect finish,” he said. “We saw the great reward of that leadership” that was sought inside the college and out when he came to run it.

“We want our students to be the most successful that they can be,” he said. “We want to see people graduate with associate’s degrees. We want to get people through the pipeline so they can take good jobs,” he said.
Hodges is a member of the Auburn University College of Education National Advisory Council and serves on the boards of directors for the Bowling Green Area Chamber of Commerce and the Intermodal Transportation Authority.

SOUTHCENTRAL KENTUCKY COMMUNITY AND TECHNICAL COLLEGE WILL HONOR 350 CANDIDATES AT THE COLLEGE’S COMMENCEMENT CEREMONY

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Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College, formerly Bowling Green Technical College, will honor 350 graduates receiving 1,565 credentials at the College’s Commencement Ceremony, Friday, May 10, 2013. The ceremony will be held at the Southern Kentucky Performing Arts Center and will begin at 6:00 p.m.

Dr. Nathan Hodges, President of Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College (SKYCTC), will give this year’s commencement address.

"We honor each of our graduates for the hard work they have put forth to achieve their educational goals. We also pay tribute to the family and friends for their great support to the graduates," states Dr. Hodges.
Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College is one of the 16 colleges that comprise the Kentucky Community and Technical College System (KCTCS).

KCTCS will honor 7,423 candidates, receiving 14,189 credentials, for graduation this spring in 16 college ceremonies across the state.

HUNDREDS GRADUATE FROM SKYCTC

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By LAUREL WILSON The Daily News lwilson@bgdailynews.com/783-3240 bgdailynews.com
When Ricky Bibb, 54, of Bowling Green, began taking classes at Southcentral Kentucky Community & Technical College several years ago, he realized he was the oldest person in his class.

“I was scared to death, not knowing if I could do this,” he said.

But on Friday, he was proud as he stood in the Southern Kentucky Performing Arts Center lobby awaiting his graduation. “Now, I know that anything is possible,” he said. “I’m 54 years old, and I’m a graduate.”

Bibb was one of 350 graduates from SKYCTC who were honored at Friday’s ceremony. It was the first commencement for the college under its new name, previously having been called Bowling Green Technical College.

Graduate Heather Skaggs, 21, of Brownsville, was thrilled to be selected to give the invocation that began the ceremony. “I’m feeling nervous and excited at the same time,” she said before the ceremony.

Skaggs, who received an associate’s degree in office systems technology, said SKYCTC was a good fit for her because she met amazing people and the teachers helped her come out of her shell.

“It’s meant so much to me,” she said. “It’s changed a lot of parts of my life. I can’t imagine going to any other school.”

Student Government Association President David Theis led a packed SKyPAC in the pledge of allegiance during commencement.

“It’s been quite a process to go through, so I’m looking forward to reaching a temporary finish line,” he said before the ceremony.

Theis was awarded his associate’s degree in information technology Friday, but it isn’t the end of his higher education journey. He will be transferring to Western Kentucky University in the fall to pursue his bachelor’s degree in systems management. He was drawn to the technology field because it’s forever changing and new opportunities are constantly arising.

“It’s right up my alley,” he said. “I’ve always been involved in computers, so it was just a logical fit.”

Theis, 40, decided to go to college after he was let go from his job at Insight a few years ago. “I wanted to give students an example that it’s not too late,” he said.

In his commencement address, SKYCTC President Nathan Hodges told graduates he was proud of their achievements. “Every achievement, however, represents a new beginning. ... Learning is lifelong. It doesn’t end here tonight,” he said.

Friday was Hodges’ last graduation as president. He retires July 1, when Phillip Neal, currently provost, will take over.

Among those who graduated was Robin Brown of Hiseville, who received her associate’s degree in medical information technology. She said she enrolled in SKYCTC after the job she’d held at RR Donnelley in Glasgow for 22 years was outsourced overseas.

She got a grant from the Barren River Area Development District to cover her education expenses and also collected unemployment while in school. “I’ve looked at it as my job,” Brown said.

The teachers at SKYCTC helped her expand her skill set.

“They gave me the push to go on and strive to be my best,” she said.

Brown plans to look for a job in medical coding or billing.

“I realize that’s probably going to be a stepping position,” she said. “I’m willing to pay my dues.”

SOUTHCENTRAL KENTUCKY COMMUNITY AND TECHNICAL COLLEGE HONORED 350 GRADUATES AT THE COLLEGE’S COMMENCEMENT CEREMONY

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Bowling Green, Ky. (May 10, 2013)- Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College, formerlyGraduation speaker Dr. Nathan Hodges at podium Bowling Green Technical College, honored 350 graduates receiving 1,565 credentials at the College’s Commencement Ceremony, Friday, May 10, 2013. The ceremony was held at the Southern Kentucky Performing Arts Center.

"We honor each of our graduates for the hard work they have put forth to achieve their educational goals. We also pay tribute to the family and friends for their great support to the graduates," states Dr. Hodges.

2013 Graduates:
* with distinction
** with high distinction

 Three femal graduates in cap and gown
 Three femal graduates showing the tops of their graduation caps

ADAIR COUNTY:
Roger D. Huckaby Jr.*, Nicholas Thomas Janes

ALLEN COUNTY:
Amanda Christine Carter, Ashley Elizabeth Elmore, Alaina Nicole Givens, Wilma Hamilton, Jessica Brooke Harper, Jessica Henson, Zach Hicks, Kristena Holland*, Shelley Elizabeth Jones, Kitty Ann Keen*, Larry Madden, Brian P. Meador, Jessica Medley*, Andrew Newsome, Marsha L. Shorts**, Gregory Wayne Smith, Bobby J. Stinson, Ella Leona Stinson, Jacob Tabor, Lori A. Witschey**, Sarah Wolfe

BARREN COUNTY:
Lora A. Akers, Kerry Billingsley**, Robin N. Brown**, Steven B. Buckley**, Jonathan Wayne Daniel, Sheri L. Davis**, Courtney Donelson, Raesha B. Herrirnersbach*, Justin Hester, Rachel Paige Houchen, Brian Howard*, Scott Nicholas Johns**, Christina Michelle Leber**, Amanda M. Lile**, Joey N. McKinney**, Tyra D. Murray**, Lanny Robert Newton**, Crystal G. Parish**, Kelly Regina Paul, David A. Powell**, Jordan Scott, Adam C. Short**, Pattie Lynn Swafford, Lindsey L. Syra, Tammy L. Thomas, Jason Walsh, Robert Brandon Wilkins**, Timothy S. Wood**

BOONE COUNTY:
Brian James Fitzpatrick*

BRECKINRIDGE COUNTY:
Jennifer Marie Ralph*

BUTLER COUNTY
James W. Bishop III, Cynthia L. Coppersmith, Barbara Lynn Cox, Amber S. Doughty**, Matthew R. Embry, Amy M. Frazier*, Rebecca A. Hendrick, Taylor James Howard**, Catherine J. Martin**, Stephanie N. Martin*, Jessica Lynn McClister**, Kersie McKinney, Caitlin Nash, Bennie Ray Neal, Lisa Nicewinter**, Twanna C. Phelps*, Morgan Ashley Shepherd**, Nathan Shepherd, Daniel Allen Tomes*, Justin Tyler Wallace

EDMONSON COUNTY:Two female graduates in cap and gown
Rebecca Whitley Cassidy, Erica Cottongim, Kyle Thomas Cowles, Robert Kyle Culbreth*, Valerie Hunter, Ashley A. James, Tara L. Luttrell, Kyle Ray, Holly, Ann Redman, Heather Lynn Skaggs**, Cody Austin Tennison*, Tammy Tooley

GRAYSON COUNTY:
Amy Lauren Bryant*, Neil Shawn Carroll*, Erin Patrice Goff**, Dustin L. King, Pauletta C. Sanders, Bryan E. Tyner

HART COUNTY:
Elisabeth S. Gornik**, Helmut Gornik**, Justin Meredith*, Lacey A. Roussel, Anna Renee Thompson

LOGAN COUNTY:
Cristina Anne Anderson, Christina Joan Beaty, Kelly Nicole McIntosh Bibb, Lisa A. Bunce, Lora Ann Clark**, John Douglas Cornelius, Jason Wade Dillihay, Olivia Page Duncan, Richard Christopher Elamon, Kyra Forgy**, Glendy Maribel Gonzalez, Nikki Renee Grise, Paulette D Hall*, Brittany Lee Hardison**, Amanda D. Harrington*, Selena N. Hewgley, Jacob Maurice Hightower, David W. Kie**, Ursula M. Knight**, Denisha S. Moorman, Marty S. Morton, Amy Munday*, Misty Lynn Pratt, Hannah Jane Quade, Kendra A. Quarles, Angela Slaughter, Amy Stafford**, Kristen N. Swinney, Teresa Ann Thomas*, Jacob Tomes, Margaret D. Vick, Alvin DeVon Yoder*

LYON COUNTY:
Michael Cain Williams

METCALFE COUNTY:
Terry J. Acree, Tim L. Birge, Ryan Harris**, Kaleb C. Humes, Christopher Ray Jessie, Matthew Alan Jessie**, Colton Satterly, Donald Ray Trent, Robyn Lynn Underwood**, Sandy Villarreal**

MONROE COUNTY:
Keelynn Arnold, Thomas David Bartley**, Nolan Garth Dubree**, Micah Hammer, Richard Hatcher*, John M. Hummel**, Michael Trent Lyon*, Brianna Richardson Thompson, Lisa Ann Wilborn, Korey Wood**

MUHLENBERG COUNTY:
Richard Matthew Jarvis**, William Logan Oldham**

OHIO COUNTY:
Jessica R. James

OLDHAM COUNTY:
Evan Scott Cowles*

RUSSELL COUNTY:
Nicholas Kenneth Hopper

SIMPSON COUNTY:
Latoya Montreal Holcomb Atkins, Kelly M. Brady**, Eaden Brown, Kimberly Burns**, Sunni Carver-Gregory, Brian Chambers**, Heather D. Dunn, Tammy Lynn Garrett, Jason Gehret, Shannon Nichole Groves**, Alisha Nicole Johnson, Shanon Sue King*, Jimmy Morgan, Justin Traye Nealy, Jeffrey Allen Porter, T. Jill Slaughter*, Kelli G. Thurmond**

TODD COUNTY:
Seth Ryan Powell

WARREN COUNTY:
Nathaniel Adams, Jayn Adkison, Danielle Alexander, Ernesto Antonio Alfaro, Chrissy Allen, Whitney Regis Allen, Marivic Mangalindan Alvear, Takesha Amos, Crystal Andersen**, Larrita N. Anderson, William Harrison Armstrong, Justin Sentell Bacon, Brittany L. Baker, Kenya D. Barber, Ashton T. Bartley, Gwenevere Basham, Heather Basham, Jacob Kyle Basham, Romey Lance Beliles*, Ricky D. Bibb, Christy Michelle Biggs, Esteban Botero, Jessica Marie Botkin, Jonetta Kay Botkin, Amelia Liane Bowen, Leon Bratcher**, Kayla M. Brooks, Brittany Renee Brown, Kathleen Ann Brown, Elizabeth Browning, Jonathan C. Bunch, Mark Twain Carpenter, Tashina LeAnne Carr**, Brooke Carter, Jacob L. Chandler**, Jacob Ray Chapman, Krista Louise Cheek, Duane Childress, Kama S. Cichowicz*, Ashley R. Collins, Angela N. Comer*, Jennifer A. Cowles, Molly Dayle Cox, Leslie Crain, Zana Culic, Jeannette F. Dabit*, Robert William Davis Jr., Sara Clark DeCuir. Ryan Kevin Denton, John Alan Douglas, Shaterica M. Duncan, Brandy Emery**, James Matthew Ferguson, Denelda Flowers, Julie Nicole Flowers*, Anu Christianah Fowope**, Robert Frankenberg, Amber B. Fultz**, Matthew Geis, Cody Gentry, Matthew Brian Goatee II*, Charles F. Gott, John R. Gott, Lori Lynn Graham**, Karen Ann Gray, Rachel Lynne Green, Rhonda R. Green, Jordan Guest, James Hammond*, Shirley Ann Hampton, Sherry Lorene Hatcher-Baker, Samantha A. Hendrick, Nellie Hennion, Destiny Hester, Jason Allan Houston, Timothy J. Howard, Wesley Howard**, Anita Ellen Howell, Jennifer R. Hoyt**, Katherine Elizabeth Hughes*, Jamie Jo Jaggers, Joanna Jaggers**, Ashley Jenel Jefferson, Nicholas C. Johnson, Barry Jupin, Gulnisa K. Karadshayeva**, Monica King-Bewley**, Shana Fern Kinser*, Christopher Kitchens**, Jolin Kitchens, Kathy F. Lawrence**, Jennifer D. Lightfoot, Raymond L. Lott, Joshua L. Lucas, Coty Allen Lynn*, Wesley Nicholas Lyons, Matthew L. Martin**, Melissa Massey, Jessica Leanne May, Ashley Nicole Mayhugh**, Samantha L. McCormick*, Prentice Adam McCoy, Christina Meador**, Gregory Raymond Mielke, Brian Maurice Miller**, Britni Michele Miller**, Clyde Miller, Kathy L. Miller, Zachary T. Miller, Robert Glenn Miller III, Lindsey G. Morehead**, Mark D. Murrell, Christina M. Newsom, Amanda Nicole Noble, Mandi Bree Page, Jyrome Lee Paige, Charles A. Paul, Timothy M. Paul, Debbra J. Payne, Hannah Pearson, Lacey N. Phelps*, Steven Phelps*, Julie A. Phillips**, Mandy Tran Phung**, Latisha Ashlea Pierce, Laura Priddy, Adam Rasdall, Julia Elizabeth Reinstedler*, Liceth Rodriguez, D. Tannan Roof, Norman A. Rounds*, Bradley Allen Russell**, Margaret Lauren Russell, Raven N. Russell, Abelardo Sanchez, Kwamesha Sanders, Abigail Ellen Schaefer**, Samantha Kaye Schaefer, Jonathan C. Schultz*, Martie Richey Schultz, Heather Lee Skaggs, Yvette Michelle Slappy**, Alan Russell Smith*, Elizabeth A. Spicer*, Amanda Stanley, Leslie A. Steele, Casey W. Strader, Jaime L. Sullivan*, Willie Swoope, Beau Harrison Taylor, David P. Theis**, Eric Chu Thet, Jacob Wayne Thompson, Brandy M. Torres**, Armin Turkovic, Sherryl Lynn VanAcker, Katrina M. VanOver, Jami L. Wallace**, Marcus Watkins, Cynthia R. Wheeler**, Courtney White, Miranda Jo Whittinghill, LaTriece Willis, Wesley A. Willoughby, Jacqualine M. Windom**, Haley Elizabeth Womac, Destiny R. Wynn, Carol Yvonne Yoder**, Charles Graham Young


OUT OF STATE
Furman Wayne Holcombe** - Portland Tennessee
June Holcombe** - Portland Tennessee
Rachel M'Lynn Johnson – Madison Tennessee
Daniel A. Nicholson Jr.** - Portland Tennessee
Dakota Shrum- Westmorland Tennessee
Chris Sprinkles** - Portland Tennessee
Tracy A. Trogdon** - Cottontown Tennessee
Meia N. Webb** - Portland Tennessee


Local chef to start a revolution

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By ALYSSA HARVEY The Daily News aharvey@bgdailynews.com

Clyde “C.J.” Miller is getting ready to start a revolution against childhood obesity.
The recent culinary arts graduate of South Central Kentucky Community and Technical College has become the Food Revolution Community Ambassador for Bowling Green.
I was looking for ways to give what I do personally that would translate into something that I could do in our community,” he said.

Miller saw a video by celebrity chef Jamie Oliver, star of “Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution,” which showed his efforts to go into school lunchrooms to teach children about healthy eating.

“He would go teach the lunch people to feed children healthier food on the same budget they were on. He would hold up these vegetables, (ask the kids to identify them) and nobody got them right,” he said. “The only things that they knew were carrots, celery, onions. His problem with this was that the children didn’t know what the vegetable is. They’re not eating it. If they are eating it, they may not be taught about it, what it does to your body and for your body. It’s something we’re not required to learn but we really need to learn about.”

The Bowling Green man applied for the ambassador program and was chosen.
“I didn’t want to be the guy who donated a little time. We have two or three ambassadors who are way away from here,” he said. “I begged (the ambassador committee). I asked them to let me help. Jamie Oliver sent me a YouTube greeting welcoming me” to the program.

Miller’s first order of business is to make people aware of Food Revolution Day, which is Friday. The day is designed to teach people about good food and food education. He is directing people to his Facebook page at www.facebook.com/ClydesCulinaryJourneyLifeJustShowUp
“I’m trying to get people on Facebook to change their logo for that day,” he said. “It’s a fan page. They can friend me, like me, they can grab the logo.”

In the United States, 30 percent of all children are overweight, said BG pediatrician Dr. Rick Voakes, president of the Healthy Kids Coalition. Changes in the modern lifestyle, mainly eating sugar and not getting physical activity, have led to a “metabolic dysfunction.” Obesity is just a symptom of that, not the cause, he said.
“If the liver is not working properly to store and utilize what you’re eating, you get a buildup of fat,” he said. “This causes heart disease, diabetes, hypertension, strokes and liver disease. Obesity is a sign of a problem going on.”

Voakes has seen babies and toddlers with higher than normal body mass index.
“It’s because they’re drinking juice,” he said. “It’s extremely high in fructose. Fructose makes your brain hungry, so you want to eat all the time.”

ust making children exercise won’t be enough, Voakes said.
“It doesn’t really work that way. They can try to do it, but they’re going to be uncomfortable and have a lot of pain doing it,” he said. “We need to emphasize healthy eating – fruits, vegetables, low sugar, low fructose. They can exercise at the same time.”
Food is fuel, Miller said.

“It’s all about balance and portion sizes,” he said. “If you’re going to eat out, limit it to once or twice a week. If you go out for a cheeseburger, go for a walk.”
This fall, Miller wants to go into schools and help children become more aware of their food choices.
“Especially the younger kids – I want to teach them what a vegetable is, where it’s derived from,” he said. “I want to tell them a funny story (about the vegetable) and have a recipe that I could print out and send home with them.”

He looks forward to when he can do a bigger event for Food Revolution Day. By June 7, he plans to post YouTube videos in which he teaches people how to make food properly, why food reacts a certain way when you cook it and how it affects the body. Teaching people to eat better is “everything that I wanted to do,” Miller said.

SOUTH CENTRAL KENTUCKY TO HONOR SKYCTC PRESIDENT AT RETIREMENT RECEPTION

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BGTC President, Dr. Nathan HodgesFaculty, staff, students, and alumni of Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College (SKYCTC), as well as residents of South Central Kentucky, will honor Dr. Nathan Hodges, President of SKYCTC, at a retirement celebration on Thursday, May 16th. The event will be held at the College’s Main Campus beginning at 4:00 PM.

As President and Chief Executive Officer of SKYCTC , Dr. Nathan Hodges led the College to become a comprehensive community and technical college with six campuses serving over 16,000 citizens.
Under the leadership of President Hodges, SKYCTC has been committed to serving as the place where higher education begins for residents of South Central Kentucky. Since his appointment in July 2005, SKYCTC has led the College to achieve the following accomplishments:

• Being recognized as the Fastest Growing College in the Nation (#1 in 2008; 28th in 2010; #6 in 2011);
• Attaining the #1 degree completion rate in Kentucky; top 6% nationally;
• Recognized nationally as a best practice in creating “High Expectations” in students (2009);
• Among the top 50 colleges in the nation for one-year certificates awarded (2011);
• Doubled degree-seeking enrollment from 2006 to present (138% growth); and
• Dr. Hodges led the College to become a comprehensive community and technical college offering transfer (AA/AS) and technical (AAS) degrees, accredited through the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, Commission on Colleges.

Dr. Hodges has served for over 40 years in the field of K-12 and post-secondary education. He has served as president of three community colleges in two states prior to coming to Bowling Green, and has also served as superintendent of education for a public school system prior to becoming a college president.
He also served as senior consultant to the Executive Leadership Institute, The League for Innovation in the Community College. This institute is designed to prepare the next generation of community college presidents.

Dr. Hodges received his doctorate in educational administration from Auburn University. He also completed post-doctoral studies at the University of Texas at Austin.

Among his awards and recognition, Dr. Hodges was honored by being nominated by his staff as North Carolina Community College President of the Year in 2004. In 1997, he was presented the Distinguished Graduate Award from the University of Texas Community College Leadership Program, and was nominated nationally as an Outstanding Community College President, 1987. Based on his leadership and achievement as superintendent of education, Dr. Hodges received recognition as Outstanding Young Man of the Year.
Residents of South Central Kentucky are cordially invited to attend the event as we say farewell to a leader whose investment in the lives of faculty, staff, students, and residents of South Central Kentucky will have an impact for years to come.

FREE GED TESTING FOR LIMITED TIME AT SOUTHCENTRAL KENTUCKY COMMUNITY AND TECHNICAL COLLEGE ADULT EDUCATION CENTERS

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Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College (SKYCTC) is excited to announce that the GED® test will be free to Kentucky residents until July 31, 2013. Those testing during this timeframe will have the usual test fee of $60 waived courtesy of the Kentucky Adult Education, a unit of the Council on Postsecondary Education. The GED® test provides adults who did not finish high school with the opportunity to certify their attainment of high school-level academic knowledge and skills.

Mary Ford, SKYCTC's Director of Adult Education, strongly encourages anyone interested in obtaining his/her GED® certification to take advantage of this opportunity to test for free. In addition to free GED® testing, there are also free GED® classes to prepare individuals for successful testing. SKYCTC's Adult Education  program offers adult learner services at multiple locations in Warren, Barren, Metcalfe and Simpson counties. These locations include:

Ford also wants all current and future GED® students to be aware of upcoming changes. The current GED® test version (2002 series) will expire on December 31, 2013 and will be replaced with the new computer-based 2014 GED® test. The fee for the 2014 GED® test is set at $120. Individuals who have taken the 2002 Series GED® test but have not passed all five parts have until December 18 to complete the test before their scores are expired.

To learn more about scheduling the free GED® test or to enroll in the free GED® preparation classes contact:

  • SKYCTC Adult Education Warren County (270) 901-1017 
  • SKYCTC Adult Education Barren County: (270) 629-2061
  • SKYCTC Adult Education Franklin Simpson: (270) 586-1682
  • SKYCTC Adult Education Metcalfe County: (270) 432-0060

SKYCTC Adult Education Centers also offer:

  • Resources for improving basic employment foundation skills in reading, writing, and math
  • Self-paced learning program, accessible through the Internet
  • Customized training for companies and groups
  • Keyboarding
  • COMPASS remediation
  • Career planning
  • Refugee Services Resume writing
  • GED® preparation and  Pre- GED® assessment
  • Managed classroom instruction in math, reading, and writing
  • English as a Second Language instruction (ESL)
  • Family Education (Parent & Child)
  • WorkKeys Assessment/NCRC
  • Citizenship Exam Preparation

To find other Kentucky other adult education centers in Kentucky, call (800) 928-7323 or visit www.KnowHow2GoKy.org and click on "Adults."

SKYCTC ADULT EDUCATION TO HOLD COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES FOR GED GRADUATES

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Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College’s (SKYCTC), Adult Education Program will hold their annual graduation and recognition ceremony for those who have passed their General Equivalency Diploma (GED) during the 2012-13 Fiscal Year. The ceremony will take place 6:30 p.m. Friday, June 7, 2013 at Warren Central High School Auditorium.

Of the approximately 93 adults who have passed the GED test this year, approximately 32 have chosen to participate in the ceremony.

“Our students are dedicated to furthering their educational goal and pursuing their dreams,” states SKYCTC  Adult Education Director Mary Ford. “We have several graduates who are going on to college and others are enrolled in occupational training areas,” says Ford.

Dr. Maggie Shelton, Vice President of Academic Affairs at Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College will present the commencement address to this year’s graduating class.

The Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College Adult Education Centers in Warren, Simpson, Barren, and Metcalfe Counties provide GED preparation,  remediation in reading, writing, and math, and English as a second language (ESL).

A reception will be held after the ceremony for family and friends to honor the graduates.

SKYCTC Vice President of Student Affairs Honored by KCTCS with Outstanding Administrative Staff Award of Excellence

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Dr. Napoles recieving award from Dr. HodgesVersailles, Ky. (May 23, 2013) –  Dr. Gerald Napoles, Vice President of Student Affairs at Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College (SKYCTC) was one of fifty faculty and staff from the Kentucky Community and Technical College System (KCTCS) who were recognized for their leadership and significant achievements at an awards ceremony held Monday, May 20, at the Northern Kentucky Convention Center in Covington.

Statewide honors went to three individuals who not only supported their colleges, but also the entire System., Dr. Gerald Napoles, chief student affairs officer at Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College, was honored as the Administrative Staff Award of Excellence recipient. Summer Holland, administrative assistant for the Advising Center at West Kentucky Community and Technical College was honored as the Support Staff Award of Excellence recipient. Michael Nyagol, assistant professor of mathematics at Hazard Community and Technical College, was honored as the Faculty Award of Excellence recipient.

Each of the 16 KCTCS colleges selected an outstanding administrative staff member, support staff member and faculty member. Two individuals (one support staff and one administrative staff) from the KCTCS System office were also honored. 

Holland, Napoles and Nyagol were chosen for statewide honors by a committee of their peers. Each received $1,000 to be used for the professional development experience of their choice.

“KCTCS is fortunate to have so many hardworking, dedicated employees across the state with extraordinary talents and skills,” said KCTCS President Michael B. McCall.

Both faculty and staff honorees were nominated by their college for their innovative and significant achievements, as well as service to students and their communities.

Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College nominated the following individuals for Awards of Excellence. They were recognized and  honored at the KCTCS Awards Ceremony as well as at a local awards ceremony of the College.

                Administrative Staff Award: Amy Hurt, administrative assistant for mathematics
              and sciences

Staff Award: Dr. Gerald Napoles, chief student affairs officer

Faculty Award: Diane Wilkins, associate professor of English

CHEF CAMP - Kids learn culinary skills

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Kids learn culinary skills By CHUCK MASON The Daily News cmason@bgdailynews.com/783-3262

Two girls with chef hats on 
 Miranda Pederson/Daily News Katie Moore (left), 10, and Emma
Rutter, 8, both of Bowling Green, help make cookies Wednesday,
May 29, 2013 during Chef Camp for Kids at Southcentral Kentucky
Community and Technical College's main campus.
Brady Moore has this cooking thing figured out. The 9-year-old girl from Bowling Green said cooking is like blending the primary colors to create a new hue. Red and blue make purple, she explained Wednesday at Chef Camp for Kids at Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College’s main campus. Ingredients are primary colors, Brady said.

Cooking camp ends Friday for the 55 children 8 to 12 years old. The first camp was held in 1999, and many of the kids who first attended Chef Camp have gone on to enroll in the culinary arts program at SKYCTC, said Chef Mike Riggs.

Brady said ingredients used in a recipe are each a primary color. Combining certain ingredients makes a tasty dish to eat while others just don’t work together. Brady said the meatballs that she made Tuesday had ingredients that worked together, like ground meat, parsley and eggs.
“It’s like the pieces of a puzzle,” Brady said.

kids with chef hats on listening to chef 
 Miranda Pederson/Daily
News Chef Mike Riggs talks to children about formal place settings for a table Wednesday, May 29, 2013 during Chef Camp for Kids at Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College's main campus.

Riggs said cooking is becoming a lost art in America. “Cooking is starting to skip a generation,” he said, so the goal of the camp is to re-connect kids to food. “It’s an alternative type of camp. A lot of these kids are helping mom and grandma in the kitchen already.”

On Friday, the kids will cook lunch for their parents or other guests they invite, Riggs said. Lisa Hunt, a professor in the SKYCTC culinary arts program, said the menu is varied: mini chicken wraps, colored wraps with salsa; meatballs in marinara; Asian barbecue shooters on Hawaiian bread with slaw; focaccia bread sticks; cake box cookies; brownie bites; and chocolate chip cookies.

“The challenge with kids, just like with adults, is getting them to try new things,” Hunt said. “This is a great age to get kids interested in cooking.”

And it’s not just cooking. The kids also learn the proper way to set a formal dining table and how to fold napkins banquet style. Riggs looked over one table the kids had set with glassware, silverware, plates and napkins. Then he noted that the place settings have to line up exactly opposite of the one across the table. “It needs to be perfect,” he told the young students, each wearing a traditional high top chef’s hat with their name written on it. “How many chances do you have to make a first impression with a customer? One,” he said.

 kids with chef hats on listening to Chef
 Miranda Pederson/Daily News Chef Riggs (left) talks
with chef student volunteer, Georgia PAce of Alvaton,
as she instructs campers about sautéing onions Wednesday,
May 29, 2013 during Chef Camp for Kids at Southcentral
Kentucky Community and Technical College's main campus.
Kayla Harmon, 9, of Bowling Green, said she made sure when stirring the sauce for the spaghetti they made Tuesday that she didn’t burn her hand. Alex Ortiz, 9, of Bowling Green, said using the melon baller to form the meatballs was a challenge. He wants to learn how to make pizza, which is today’s task in the kitchen. Alex puts cheese, sauce, pepperoni and sausage on his pizza.

“I want to learn where everything is in the kitchen,” said Elijah Burckhard, 8, of Bowling Green. Elijah said he had to put the spaghetti noodles in the boiling water and it was quite a stretch for his short arms.
Rachel Harwood, 10, of Bowling Green, said her favorite food is sushi, which doesn’t require cooking. She said she wanted to learn how to properly season food at Chef Camp.

“I get to make things and I like to be with my friends,” said Audrey Paynter, 9, of Bowling Green. She likes to make pizza, too, but just the cheese and tomato sauce variety. “I don’t eat pepperoni. It gets greasy,” she said.
— Chuck Mason covers education for the Daily News. Watch for his reports on Twitter.com/bgdnschools or at bgdailynews.com

ATTENTION STUDENTS! - Credential Application Deadline June 14th

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Any student who is completing a certificate, diploma, and/or degree by the end of the Summer 2013 term must submit a credential application along with the advisor’s documentation (program check off list) to the Registrar’s Office by Friday, June 14, 2013.

Married couple among GED grads

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By CHUCK MASON The Daily News cmason@bgdailynews.com

 Husband and wife in cap and gown
 Lisa and Paul Bunch participate in the GED
Graduation Ceremony as husband and wife.
Lisa and Paul Burch of Warren County have been married 32 years. Both now 49, the Burches ran away to Tennessee when they were 16 to get married. Work and other responsibilities piled up, and school was put on the back burner.

 Not anymore. On Friday night, Lisa and Paul Burch each received a GED at the Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College Adult Education Commencement at Warren Central High School, a ceremony that was part pep rally and all graduation.

Several times while GEDs were being handed out in the cheer-filled auditorium, war whoops rang out.
Graduates “raised the roof” with fist pumps to appreciative family members. Festivities ended with the traditional tossing of mortarboards as Mary Ford, director of adult education at SKYCTC, counted “one ... two ... three” before the hats soared toward the ceiling. Family members hustled to the stage to get pictures of the new graduates as they received their hard-won recognition.

Paul Burch said he fell in love with Lisa, and they got hitched in Springfield, Tenn. Soon a daughter, Beth, now 27, joined the couple.

“I started working,” Lisa Burch said. “I didn’t really have the opportunity to go back to school,” she said.
“I always wanted to get a GED,” Paul Burch said.

When the opportunity to obtain a GED arose, the Burches were up to the task. “We studied together,” said Lisa Burch, adding, “We took the test together and made it on the first try.”

Lisa Burch said taking the first step to get a GED was the hardest for her. Paul Burch said English was a challenge. Both praised the efforts of their SKYCTC instructors.

“We are so proud of them,” said Paul Burch’s mother, Ellen. “I feel great. I’ve got a boy who went the extra mile.”

 

 Dr Maggie Shelton speaking to graduates
 Dr. Maggie Shelton, SKYCTC Vice President of
Academic Affairs gives the commencement address
at the Adult Education GED Graduation Ceremony.
Maggie Shelton, vice president of academic affairs for SKYCTC, told the graduates that they “looked fabulous” sitting in their blue gowns. “You made a lot of sacrifices to get here today.”
She compared the graduates to ripening tomatoes on the vine in a garden. “We don’t do it alone. We have people to tend our garden.”

 

Shelton said earning the GED is just a first step. “You have completed an important chapter in your life and you should be proud. Now do not stop your education. You are on a roll. Do not stop the momentum.”

 

 

GED graduates tossing their caps  Graduates of the Adult Education GED Graduation Ceremony toss
their caps in recognition of their accomplishment.

 

— Chuck Mason covers education for the Daily News. Check out his reports on Twitter.com/bgdnschools or at bgdailynews.com.

Tag team growth in Bowling Green

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Creative financing and proactive cooperation brings $1.35 billion building boom during recessionary times

 Six male area leaders of Bowling Green Warren County
 Since 2009, Bowling Green and Warren County leaders
since 2008 have collaborated informally to bring $1.375
billion in construction and capital investment to the
community. They are, left to right, Warren County
Judge-Executive Michael Buchanon; Western Kentucky
University President Gary Ransdell; Bowling Green
Area Chamber of Commerce Board Chair Brad Howard;
Bowling Green Area Chamber of Commerce President
Ron Bunch; City of Bowling Green Mayor Bruce Wilkerson;
incoming Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical
College President Phil Neal; and Warren County Downtown
Economic Development Authority Chair Doug Gorman.
(Photo by Clinton Lewis, WKU)

By Lorie Hailey - The Lane Report
Since 2008 and through the Great Recession, a time when the goal of many communities was just not to lose economic ground, Bowling Green and its 10-county region have experienced impressive growth – $1.375 billion in large-scale construction projects.

These dozens of ventures are the result of proactive local tag teaming, diversification, a winning chain of economic dominos falling, smart use of incentives, good strategy and perhaps “a combination of persistence and luck.” Perhaps it was all of the above, or more.

Whatever the impetus, signs of fresh Bowling Green growth are easy to find – a $25 million performing arts showcase; a $19.8 minor league baseball stadium; a $8.4 million five-story parking garage between them; the largest combination middle and high school in the state, located just blocks from downtown; the fastest growing university in Kentucky (with numerous new buildings); and a bustling industrial park.

The community now boasts 2,101 licensed contractors with 455 licensed general contractors, according to Warren County Judge-Executive Mike Buchanon.

Building permits for single-family residences in 2013 are up 42 percent thus far over last year. Single-family subdivisions with more than 2,500 new building lots are being developed.
Commercial, retail and Class A office space is even booming as well, Buchanon said. Two current developments total more than 150,000 s.f. A two-story office building with approximately 50,000 s.f. is under active construction in the Hartland area, and several small strip retail centers have been built.

More construction is in the works. The $15.6 million, 73,471-s.f. Medical Center-WKU Health Science Complex is nearing completion, a new hotel will be announced this year, and big-box stores such as Dick’s Sporting Goods, Bed Bath & Beyond and Meijer are opening their doors this year or early next year.
Other businesses are locating in TransPark, the city’s mecca for manufacturing, an important economic sector that now accounts for 17 percent of the city’s economy.

What is not as easy to find is a clear answer to how this phenomenon occurred – if you are looking for a single answer. Ditto for the leader behind the growth. Rather than one individual or organization, there are numerous heroes in this tale.

Ron Bunch, president of the Bowling Green Area Chamber of Commerce, said local growth is the result of the work done by multiple leaders each focusing on their area of expertise and then coming together in a kind of tag-team approach.

“It has not really been strategic and organized and coordinated,” Bunch said of the impressive results, “but individual leaders in each area doing their jobs exceptionally well. We have strong leadership in the private sector, in healthcare, business, tourism, arts, retail and education. Cooperation and collaboration happen on the fly.”

Diversification, Bunch said, is the other key.
“Our ‘special sauce’ is our diversified approach to growing the economy,” he said.

Persistence and luck
Explosive growth in downtown Bowling Green and on its fringes illustrates exactly how multiple leaders from disparate economic sectors worked together to implement a nearly $200 million transformation of what was a depressed zone just a few years ago.

Today, the area boasts Hot Rods Stadium, the Southern Kentucky Performing Arts Center (SKyPAC), a new parking garage, the $4 million Houchens Center for Business housing the Bowling Green Area Chamber of Commerce and the $19.6 million HitCents Park Plaza. The latter will be completed by September and include the successful technology enterprise HitCents.com, restaurants, businesses and Connected Nation, another thriving tech venture.

The state recently certified the area a Signature Tax Increment Financing district with the official name “WKU Gateway to Downtown Bowling Green.” Signature TIFs offer significant tax advantages for “blighted” areas to entice development. For instance, 80 percent of state sales tax collections above the starting-point base go back to the TIF for use in further development versus only 3 percent typically returning to the community normally.“We applied for the TIF District designation in 2008,” recalled Doug Gorman, president of Booth Fire and Safety and director of the TIF District.

“We had to have $150 million in investments before December 2014 to qualify. We have had $176 million in investments since 2008.”

One of those investments is SKyPAC, a 80,000-s.f. venue for Broadway productions, local and worldwide music acts, comedy shows and kid-friendly performances. SKyPAC opened in March 2012.
Buchanon said TIF financing was a big part of why SKyPAC was finally built after 12 years in the planning stages. In this case, the recession lent a hand also as the price of concrete and steel bottomed out and the cost of labor went down.

“One of the areas where we enjoyed the greatest savings was SKyPac,” Buchanon said. “We had been working on that for over 10 years, and costs were up to around $40 something million. Costs were getting out of control; there was no way we could afford to build it. When construction costs went down, we decided to get new estimates. They came down by $18 million.”

Local government managed to catch the bottom of the market on costs for concrete, steel and labor.
“We lucked out on hitting the low point in construction costs,” he said. “Since then costs have all bounced back up.

“We still had to be creative. We ended up with mixture of financing: a transient room tax for half the cost; the TIF District financing, which is what really made it possible to make up the difference; and a new (federal) market tax credit.” The latter is a U.S. government program that allows entities to sell tax credits and use the proceeds as equity for a project.

“It was a sequence of good fortune – good fortune that was the result of hard work,” Buchanon said. “We were pretty lucky – persistent and lucky.”

SKyPAC is now a three-legged stool, according to Tom Tomlinson, its executive director. “It has enhanced the arts in Bowling Green,” he said. “It is an economic development tool. And it is a part of downtown revitalization.”

KyPAC has 201 employees and has attracted 90,000 visitors, Tomlinson said. Using an arts economic calculator from Americans for the Arts to compile estimates, patrons have spent $6.945 million for tickets and event-related expenses such as restaurants, baby sitters and new clothes, he said. SKyPAC expenditures have funneled $3.985 million into the community.

Economic dominos

One street over is the Hot Rods Stadium. Art Solomon, a businessman from Boston, Mass., purchased a single-A minor league baseball team, brought them to Bowling Green and then spearheaded construction of the stadium.

The city of Bowling Green sold bonds to build the stadium, which has attracted 250,000 fans. Gorman said the TIF revenue being generated will help pay back the bonds.
“The community has embraced the Hot Rods,” Gorman said. “Because of the stadium, a lot of other dominos starting falling into place.”

‘Creative financing key to progress’

At the other end of the TIF District, WKU’s President Gary Ransdell has become known for his entrepreneurial approach to getting projects constructed. Two of the university’s latest – the Augenstein Alumni Center and the Medical Center-WKU Health Science Complex – are in the TIF District.

“We don’t own the alumni center,” Ransdell said. “It is leased through the TIF structure. This is how we do things in Bowling Green; we all work together. Each project has its own impact, and the community benefits from all of that.”

Since becoming Western’s president, Ransdell has overseen $490.9 million in construction, with another $94.5 million underway. Plans call for an additional $236.9 million in future construction that includes student housing, which will be started this summer. 

Campus construction the past five years has included a renovation of Van Meter Hall, which now gives music students a place to practice; an old College Heights building that is now home to the Math Department; plus the Preston Health and Activity Center, a student exercise facility that required expansion to keep up with demand. A few years prior to those projects, the state funded two other buildings: Gary Ransdell Hall, which houses the College of Education, and the Engineering-Manufacturing-Commercialization Center, which is home to WKU’s engineering program.

Renovation is under way on the 43-year-old Downing University Center, which will open in summer 2014 after a $50 million facelift accomplished with private money, $35 million in student activities fees and reusing bonding capacity available from the retired bonds originally used to build the structure.
“For most of the projects, we are able to use other people’s money or other organizations’ money and then take on leases or do other types of creative financing,” Ransdell said. “Creative financing is the key to progress.”

Another good example of creative financing is the Medical Center-WKU Health Science Complex.
“The Medical Center took on the debt to build the complex,” Ransdell said. “We will move our entire school of nursing and doctor of physical therapy program there. The Medical Center will own the building, and we will lease space from them. The net result is that we will be able to double the number of nursing students.”
Benefits from that collaboration extend into the community and the state.

“South Central Kentucky, like the rest of the nation, is facing a serious nursing shortage,” said Connie Smith, president and CEO of Commonwealth Health Corp., parent company of the Medical Center.
“Nursing is a critical component of a hospital’s delivery of care. Enabling Western Kentucky University to expand their program and ultimately their supply of nurses to the healthcare industry will have a significant impact on The Medical Center’s ability to maintain the quality care we provide in this region.”

Western’s impact, according to economic development studies done by its College of Business, show the university has $500 million a year in direct impact from its 2,300 faculty and staff and 21,000 students.
“That didn’t go up or down much during the recession, Ransdell said. “There was no big dropoff during the recession; our numbers did not decline. That is one reason Bowling Green was able to weather the recession so well. You can see the stabilizing effect on a community of our size.”

Western is not the only academic institution with an economic impact, either.
Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College (SKCTC), which has experienced a 33 percent enrollment growth the past five years, works directly with local industries.

“Our Kentucky Advanced Technology Institute (KATI) campus is home to the state Interactive Digital Center, which develops interactive, 3D training and assessment applications,” said Dr. Phil Neal, incoming president of SKCTC. “Our Workforce Solutions division provides customized industry training with opportunities for significant discounts on training costs using the Kentucky WINS (Workforce Investment Network System) program. Our Transpark Center now houses FANUC robots and provides all of the requisite training for General Motors employees working on the next model of the Corvette. Most importantly, though, we are providing educational opportunities for the potential workforce that these industries want to recruit.”

Building not limited to concrete and steel

Some of the construction in the Bowling Green area involves more grass and dirt than concrete and steel. Vicki Fitch, executive director of the Bowling Green Area Convention & Visitors Bureau, said the city’s ample ball fields and disc golf courses attract enthusiasts to tournaments.

“We have an excellent infrastructure for softball tournaments,” Fitch said. “We are able to attract big national tournaments. We also have several disc golf tournaments each year.”

The Corvette Museum is breaking ground June 28 on a $17 million motorsports facility that, according to its website, will have a track for high-performance driver training, corporate events, a training facility for emergency personnel as well as resources for engineering, math and science students at WKU.

Not going there

Interestingly, Bowling Green hasn’t chosen to grow with tax increases.
In a note distributed to community leaders at the end of May, Jeff Meisel, chief financial officer for Bowling Green, wrote: “The city has kept its real estate property tax rate the same since 2008 and lowered the occupational tax rate from 2 percent to 1 percent in 2007 (right before the recession started). This occupational tax rate reduction equated to approximately $14 million or more given back to the taxpayers during the last five years…

“The city has not raised any tax rates (real estate, occupational, etc.) since 2003, which was the year the occupational tax went from 1.5 percent to 2 percent.”

City officials plan to grow but with a different mindset than many other communities.
“I don’t think, as far as (economic development) incentives, Warren County provides anything not available anywhere else,” concludes Bowling Green Mayor Bruce Wilkerson. “I hope the difference is our attitude. We don’t say you can’t do that here. We find a way to make it work.”

Debra Gibson Isaacs is a correspondent for The Lane Report. She can be reached at editorial@lanereport.com.


MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS LEARN TO CREATE VIDEO GAMES AT SKYCTC CAREER CRAZE CAMP

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Career Craze Camp Student in front of buildingBowling Green, Ky. (June 13, 2013)— Twenty-two middle school students got to do more this summer than just play video games, they got to design video games. These area students attended Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College’s (SKYCTC) Career Craze, a hands-on camp featuring gaming programming and technology.

The three day camp gave these 7th, 8th, and 9th graders the chance to see how video games are made and with the help of the SKYCTC Interactive Digital Center staff they were able to design and create their own unique game.

“One thing I liked about the camp was using the skills I learned about programming to build my own video game,” said Camille Brandow, a freshman at Bowling Green High School. “After this week I am considering a career in programming,” she said.

“It’s amazing how much we learned is such a short time,” says Hailey Thomas Turner, a student at South Warren Middle School. “The teachers and advisors were great,” she said. “There is no way I could have learned this on my own.”

Middle school students at computersLt. Governor Jerry Abramson is the honorary chair of the KCTCS Career Craze initiative, with camps going on at KCTCS colleges throughout the state this summer.

"As honorary chair of this initiative, I’m thrilled to promote our community and technical college system and encourage students and their families to consider a technical career," said Lt. Gov. Jerry Abramson. "Parents often overlook the great paying career opportunities that their children can access with a community college certificate or associate degree. This makes KCTCS’ Career Craze summer camp program even more valuable to our Kentucky families."

Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College will hold one more Career Craze Camp July 8th – 11th at the College’s Transpark Center in Bowling Green. This camp will be open to high school students who are interested in Robotics and will allow the students to learn robotic programming at the new FANUC Robotics Training Center. The camp is offered at no cost to the students.

All 16 KCTCS colleges will host two camps during the summer. The camps will highlight differentmiddle school student at computer business/industry sectors such as utility, manufacturing, healthcare, etc. Students will learn more about each occupation and how it leads to high wage, high demand careers.
To learn more about upcoming SKYCTC Career Craze dates, times and locations, please contact Randy San at 270-901-1035 or randy.san@kctcs.edu. To register for the camp go to http://ws.kctcs.edu/southcentral/category/category.aspx and select LEAP Technology Robotics to reserve your spot.

9 inmates earn GED diplomas

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 Inmates in cap and gown listen to graguation speaker

 Inmates at the Warren County Jail listen as Dr.
Gerald Napoles (center), Dean of Student Affairs
from Southcentral Kentucky Community and
Technical College, address their graduating
class during a GED during a graduation ceremony
at the jail, Thursday, June 20, 2013 in Bowling Green, Ky
Photo by Nathan Morgan/Daily News

 

By JUSTIN STORY The Daily News jstory@bgdailynews.com/783-3256
David Gable was determined to succeed, and his persistence was rewarded Thursday when the Warren County Regional Jail inmate received his GED diploma in a ceremony in the jail’s library.

Gable, 46, of Bowling Green, was one of nine inmates who participated in Thursday’s GED commencement ceremony. Another eight people earned a GED diploma this year while incarcerated in Warren County, but were released or transferred before Thursday’s ceremony.

Gable began serving a sentence two years ago for burglary and drug charges, and he enrolled in the GED program within weeks of starting his sentence.

“I just wanted to prove to my family that I could succeed,” said Gable, who hopes to earn his release in November to a halfway house and eventually enroll in South Central Kentucky Community and Technical College’s culinary arts program. “I want to be able to leave my mark on the world and prove to people that I have changed.”

SCKCTC operates the inmate GED program, and while GED instructor Lyndell Graven singled out Gable for his accomplishment after two years of work, all the inmates were honored for earning their diplomas, taking part in a ceremony that involved them marching single-file into the library in caps and gowns to “Pomp and Circumstance” playing from a portable stereo.

Warren County Jailer Jackie Strode congratulated the inmates for focusing on their education and urged them to continue to improve themselves after their release.

“You have done the first step of making your life after this a better place,” Strode said. “I want to challenge you to have that be the beginning.”

Gerald Napoles, vice president of student affairs at SCKCTC, told the new graduates that they have performed admirably and have a tool that will be useful when they are released.

“You’re a model for other people in here to continue their education,” Napoles said.
People aspiring to earn GED diplomas in Kentucky will see changes to the test starting next year.
The price to take the GED test will double from $60 to $120 and the format of the test itself is also slated to change in 2014.

Currently, GED candidates are tested on five subjects – reading, math, writing, social studies and science – and must pass each subject individually in a comprehensive test. Students can score up to 800 points per subject, and a score of 410 is considered a passing grade, although a cumulative average of 450 is required to pass the test.

Under the new format, GED candidates will be tested in four subjects, with the reading and writing merged into one language arts subject that will feature components such as passages that will test a student’s reading comprehension, said Mary Ford, adult education manager at SCKCTC.

The test will also be entirely computerized, Ford said, and test takers will need to know computer skills such as scrolling down a page, dragging and dropping answers to a graph or chart, navigating tabs, selecting answers from a drop-down menu and copying and pasting from passages.

THE PASSING OF THE TORCH AT SOUTHCENTRAL KENTUCKY COMMUNITY AND TECHNICAL COLLEGE

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 Phillip Neal
 Dr Phillip Neal begins his tenure as
the new President of SKYCTC July 1, 2013
Bowling Green, Ky. (July 1, 2013)

Bowling Green, Ky. (July 1, 2013)

 Bowling Green, Ky. (July 1, 2013) – On July 1, 2013, Dr. Phillip Neal began his tenure as President of Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College as Dr. Nathan Hodges, past President of Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College (SKYCTC), passed the mantle of leadership to Dr. Neal. Hodges served as President of the former Bowling Green Technical College since July 2005. Neal was named the future President of Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College by Dr. Michael B. McCall, President of the Kentucky Community and Technical College System, and was unanimously recommended by the SKYCTC Board of Directors.

Dr. Phillip Neal has served as Provost of SKYCTC. Dr. Neal brings 25 years of experience in higher education. Previously, Dr. Neal led national corporate partnership development for the National Institute for Staff and Organizational Development. His teaching career began at Laramie County Community College where he was a faculty member for 11 years and also served as a chief student affairs administrator. Dr. Neal began in higher education at the University of Wyoming working with gifted and talented high school students and later served in student affairs and athletic counseling roles. With a career spanning community colleges and universities in Kentucky, Texas, and Wyoming, Dr. Neal has provided senior-level leadership in academics, student affairs, institutional effectiveness, and corporate training.

Dr. Neal earned a doctoral degree in educational administration from the Community College Leadership Program at The University of Texas at Austin, and completed his master’s degree in education and bachelor’s degree in psychology at the University of Wyoming.

Dr. Neal is passionate about creating institutional cultures promoting student success, community

 Dr. Nathan Hodges holding a book
 Dr. Nathan Hodges retires after eight years
of dedicated service at SKYCTC
development, and healthy working environments. From P-16 partnerships to economic development, he believes our country’s future rests in the hands of those we educate and those who educate them.

 “I appreciate the outpouring of support from community partners and friends across South Central Kentucky, and I look forward to a bright future,” said Neal. “My top priorities are student success, employee development, and community engagement. These three priorities will keep SKYCTC as an effective educational engine driving economic development. Strengthening our region with a world-class workforce and attracting high-wage/high-demand jobs are the mechanisms we will use to improve the quality of life for residents,” he said. “I am committed to collaborating with our community partners to expedite this future.”
“The degree of success we have tomorrow is, in part, due to the foundation Dr. Hodges created during the past eight years,” Neal says. “We are going to propel this institution into a future that we haven’t even imagined yet,” he said.

As President and Chief Executive Officer of SKYCTC, Dr. Nathan Hodges led the College to become a comprehensive community and technical college with six campuses serving more than 16,000 citizens.
“Some of the greatest rewards of my career have been right here,” said Hodges. “We have gone through a transformation the past eight years built on the excellent talent that was here and we were able to bring in additional great talent,” he said. “Leadership is more than a small handful of people telling everyone what to do, it’s trusting and investing in our own people.”

Under the leadership of President Hodges, SKYCTC has been committed to serving as the place where higher education begins for residents of South Central Kentucky. Since his appointment in July 2005, SKYCTC achieved the following accomplishments:
• Being recognized among the Fastest Growing Colleges in the Nation (#1 in 2008; 28th in 2010; #6 in 2011);
• Attaining the #1 degree completion rate in Kentucky; top 6% nationally;
• Recognized nationally as a best practice in creating “High Expectations” in students (2009);
• Ranking among the top 50 colleges in the nation for the number of one-year certificates awarded (2011);
• Doubled degree-seeking enrollment from 2006 to present (138% growth);
• Led the College in a comprehensive name change process, from Bowling Green Technical College to Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College, to better reflect the regional reach of the college and the expanded scope of becoming a comprehensive community and technical college offering transfer (AA/AS) and technical (AAS) degrees, earning accreditation through the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, Commission on Colleges.

Dr. Hodges served for more than 40 years in the field of K-12 and post-secondary education. He served as president of three community colleges in two states prior to coming to Bowling Green, and has also been a public school superintendent prior to becoming a college president.

As Southcentral Kentucky Community and Technical College bids farewell to Dr. Nathan Hodges, a true friend and leader of the college and community, it looks ahead with anticipation and excitement to a bright future in the very capable hands of Dr. Phillip Neal.

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