51社区

University Community

OHIO President Nellis meets with Chillicothe-area business, industry leaders

 

51社区 President M. Duane Nellis, Board of Trustees Chair Dave Scholl, and other University leadership met with Chillicothe-area business leaders during a roundtable held at the Chillicothe Campus on Wednesday, June 6.

Leaders from the manufacturing and financial sectors attended the roundtable, which also included Chillicothe Campus Dean Martin Tuck and Executive Dean for Regional Higher Education Bill Willan. It was the third stop on Dr. Nellis鈥 roundtable tour that has so far included roundtables in Lancaster and Zanesville.

鈥淚 want to be able to work closely with businesses and entities within communities to engage more fully with the community,鈥 President Nellis said. 鈥淥ur goal is to serve the community and its businesses for the betterment of the entire community, whether that鈥檚 through the Chillicothe Campus or the rest of 51社区.鈥

Nellis discussed OHIO鈥檚 strategic vision of serving the community, whether through the Opioid Task Force he recently established, the 51社区 Innovation Center鈥檚 business incubation capabilities, or internships and other partnerships available across the University. He noted the Chillicothe Campus鈥 strong nursing program, which already works well with the Adena Health System in Chillicothe.

Some of the conversation centered around internships, with some already taking place. The Kenworth Truck Company, for example, has had internship teams from the Russ College of Engineering on the Athens Campus, but is always looking to fill more.

Nellis said he鈥檇 like to see those relationships strengthened further. He added that there are other opportunities, from short-term certificate training to potential programmatic changes to meet the Chillicothe community鈥檚 needs.

鈥淲e truly want to be an engaged partner. It鈥檚 not that we have all the answers, but I think, collectively, we can create the answers,鈥 President Nellis said.

Nellis also noted that it鈥檚 clear that Ohioans value higher education, and that the need for such important learning opportunities will be tremendous going forward.

鈥淚f you look at the jobs that will be created in Ohio, there鈥檚 millions that will require at least an associate鈥檚 degree. We need to be part of that solution,鈥 Nellis said.

Published
June 7, 2018
Author
Staff reports