$350,000 for planned nursing program

WINSTED — Northwestern Connecticut Community College (NCCC) is one step closer to adding a nursing degree to the wide array of majors it now offers area students, with the Connecticut State Board of Examiners for Nursing set to review the proposed program early next month.

Last Friday, during a celebration officially announcing that the school had received $350,000 in federal funding to help kick start the program’s progress, college President Barbara Douglass said the curriculum would be presented to the state board for its approval on March 5.

The grant money was included in appropriations legislation passed by the U.S. House of Representatives late last year and then signed into law by President Barack Obama on Dec. 16.

The college — which has raised $1 million in contributions for the program through a private capital campaign — is on track to bring its nursing program online by January 2011.

“Good things come to those who persist,� Douglass said during the event, which was also attended by Congressman John Larson (D-1), who helped to secure the federal grant money, and the chancellor of the Connecticut Community College System, Dr. Marc Herzog.

“And our small college is up to the task,� she said.

Larson agreed.

“When communities pull together like this, then anything is possible,� he said.

In addition to the board of examiners, the curriculum must also receive the approval of the Commissioner of the Connecticut Department of Public Health and the National League for Nursing Accrediting Commission before it can be offered as a degree program at NCCC.

“There are still a few more stages to go,� Herzog, a Barkhamsted resident, told the small group of private donors, school officials, faculty members and students who gathered for last Friday’s celebration.

“But without your support we wouldn’t have gotten this far,� he said.

According to Douglass, the Winsted school’s nursing curriculum will mirror similar programs already in place at five other state community colleges: Capital Community College in Hartford, Gateway Community College in North Haven, Naugatuck Valley Community College in Waterbury, Norwalk Community College in Norwalk and Three Rivers Community College in Norwich.

“And this will become the next site for this curriculum,� Herzog said, referring to the Winsted college.

The Connecticut Community Colleges Nursing Program (CT-CCNP) is a two-year, four-semester tract that awards those who successfully complete the required course work an associate’s degree in science. Program graduates are then eligible to take the National Council Licensing Examination for Registered Nurses.

Graduates can also apply for licensure through the Connecticut State Board of Examiners for Nursing. Once registered and licensed, nursing graduates can work in various entry-level health-care positions in hospitals, extended care facilities, doctors’ offices and medical clinics.

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 entered the pre-nursing program at NCCC, however, have had to transfer to other institutions to complete their degrees. This has helped to create a significant shortage of qualified nurses living and working in the Northwest Corner of the state.

Barbara Berger, a professor at Northwestern Connecticut Community College who has worked with Douglass to push for the local nursing program, said medical officials have projected that by 2013, there will be a 46-percent deficit in the number of nurses needed to fill positions in Litchfield County, and the number willing and able to work here.

“And in three to five years, there will be 163 openings annually for registered nurses,� Berger said of the area.

In response, last June, Gov. M. Jodi Rell signed legislation — written by Winsted’s state Rep. John Rigby (R-63) —  requiring the state Board of Trustees of Community-Technical Colleges to pursue federal funds to start a nursing program at NCCC.

Rigby, a resident of Colebrook, worked on the bill as a member of the House Higher Education Committee.

Legislators have noted that, in the next 10 years, Litchfield County’s nursing vacancy rate could reach double the statewide average.

“We’ll all benefit having a nursing program here,â€� Berger said. 

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