With a campus in downtown Hartford, Capital Community College offers more than 60 degrees and certificates. Chief Executive Officer Dr. G. Duncan Harris spoke with MetroHartford Alliance Content Manager Nan Price about how the college provides opportunities for people to upskill and find meaningful careers.

NAN PRICE: Tell us about how Capital leverages collaborations to create local workforce opportunities. 

G. DUNCAN HARRIS: Capital stood up several new programs during the pandemic. We created an 11-week Eversource lineworker certificate program. We also used some federal funding to launch a manufacturing program where students complete an introduction program for manufacturing, spend five weeks at A.I. Prince Technical School in Hartford, and then take classes on our campus. We’ve had three cohorts and all the students have come out with multiple job offers.

Capital also participates in the Travelers EDGE® Program, which is in its 15th year. The program provides college students with financial, academic, professional development, and mentoring support and prepares them for a career at Travelers or the insurance and financial services industry. Some of our students who were a part of the first cohort are in the C-suite at Travelers, but they got their start at Capital working on their associate’s degree.

We recently built another cool program with Asplundh, which does highway tree removal. They needed more arborists and reached out to us, so we created the Asplundh Utility Arborist Trainee Program, which provides students with the basic understanding of the skills needed to start in this career. The Capital Community College Foundation ponied up funding, which eliminates some of the barriers that cause people to think they can’t go to college.

Capital has also been working with the Governor’s Office Of Workforce Strategy to develop some statewide programs. And we’re collaborating with Amazon and Google.

We’ve been more deliberate about creating a workforce pipeline by identifying short-term training opportunities. A typical associates degree takes two years, but a lot of life can happen in that amount of time. So, we’ve been working on creating shorter programs, like the 11-week Eversource program. At the end of those 11 weeks, students will be set up to have a good job working for an international company.

And, we’re working with employers very differently now. In the past, we would’ve taken our chances that we were teaching what employers needed. Now we’re creating that process together where employers are helping inform the skills a successful employee needs versus us retrofitting our programming and teaching what we think students need to know—then they go to the company and need to be retrained.

We like to think of Capital as an important part of the region’s economic engine. So many people wonder where they can get the prerequisite skills and training needed to enter the workforce, whether it’s healthcare, technology, insurance, or manufacturing. We have students finding jobs at places like Infosys, The Hartford, and Aetna. When those companies need talent, it may come from some of Connecticut’s residential four-year institutions, but a lot of talent also comes from our public two-year institutions.

NAN: For those who are more interested in working for themselves, how does Capital encourage entrepreneurship?

DUNCAN: There’s an entrepreneurship option within the management program offered at Capital. A lot of our students aspire to own small businesses. They may have a knack for it, but they need the practical training in things like accounting and finance and marketing.

Photos:
Dr. G. Duncan Harris, Chief Executive Officer at Capital Community College
Capital Community College celebrates students who completed internships in the Travelers EDGE program

Read the entire interview at the MetroHartford Alliance