Rell signs NCCC nursing ed bill

WINSTED — Gov. M. Jodi Rell has signed legislation that requires the State Board of Trustees of Community-Technical Colleges to pursue federal funds to start a nursing program at Northwestern Connecticut Community College (NCCC).

“Anyone who has ever spent any time in a doctor’s office or a hospital knows the real backbone of medicine is the nursing staff,� Rell said in a press release after signing the bill. “Connecticut is already dealing with a serious shortage of qualified nurses and by 2020 that shortage is projected to be as large as 22,000.�

The new law, substitute House Bill 6336, An Act Concerning Nurses Pursuing Advanced Degrees, becomes effective July 1 and will allow NCCC to pursue federal stimulus funds. Authored by state Rep. John Rigby (R-63), the legislation does not guarantee the college federal funding, but it gets the institution’s foot in the door by allowing it to apply for funds out of the $200 million set aside for health care workforce development projects in Connecticut.

“All this is going to do is allow the college to apply for the funds,� Rigby said, adding that he hopes to arrange a bill signing ceremony here in Winsted. “We were hoping to have something a little more formal.�

Rigby also said there is a petition being circulated in the area asking Mark Herzog, chancellor of Connecticut Community Colleges, to support the program. “He knows there’s a call for it but I think we have to make more noise about it,� he said.

Rigby noted that NCCC and its president, Barbara Douglass, have already done most of the work toward implementing a nursing program, raising nearly $1 million through a private capital campaign. Rigby took the issue up as a member of the House Higher Education Committee. His bill was quickly approved by the committee and by the full House and Senate earlier this month.

If the college can access stimulus funds of between $400,000 and $500,000, Rigby said, it may be enough to get the nursing program started. The representative added that putting newly trained nurses to work is an ideal use of workforce development dollars. “Bridges and buildings are great but I think actual workforce development is more important,� he said. “You can have all the buildings you want but if you have no staff, what good is it for the community?�

NCCC currently offers several health care-related programs, including associate’s degrees and certifications for medical assisting, allied health, health career pathways and hospital patient care. Students who have started nursing courses at NCCC, however, have had to move on to other institutions to complete their degrees.

In pushing for approval of the nursing education bill earlier this month, Rigby said Connecticut’s nursing shortage is particularly profound in Northwest Corner towns. “If we can turn out some LPNs and even some RNs quickly, it will be good for the area,� he said. “I’ve met people who say they’ve started their coursework but they have to travel to a different community to finish up.

“What we’re trying to do is give as much encouragement as we can to the community college system to establish a nursing program in Winsted,� Rigby said. “Times are tight for our area economically, but this is such a good value and so much private money has already been raised that this makes good economic sense.�

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