Kentucky Community and Technical College System
Marketing & Communications: Today's News

Farmers learn to use today's essential tool

Local health fair big draw

President Bush calls for bigger Pell Grants, more job training at 2-year colleges, and less federal spending

Republicans in U.S. House introduce bill to renew Higher Education Act that mirrors last year's

 

 

The Daily Independent
February 3, 2005

Farmers learn to use today's essential tool

COALTON Farming. It's a tough way of life.

Up early, feed and water the stock, plow the field, boot up the computer ...

Boot up the computer?

Yep, the PC has joined the John Deere as one of today's essential farm implements, and some northeast Kentucky farmers are learning how to maneuver through cyberspace as effectively as they guide their tractors down the rows of corn.

In a class at Ashland Community and Technical College's EastPark campus, they're learning to use their computers to manage their herds, keep their books, order their supplies and even sell their produce.

The class is offered through an $80,000 state grant to the Kentucky Community and Technical College System to offer courses to farmers in tobacco-dependent counties.

As part of the grant, the farmers taking the course get to keep the computers they use in class.

Most of them already know computer basics so, except for a few neophytes, they can skip over the what-is-a-mouse phase and get straight into how the computer can help them run their farm.

Randy Lowe, for instance, raises beef cattle on a spread in the Kavanaugh area in southern Boyd County.

He's a Lexington firefighter for whom farming is a sideline, and so far not a profitable one.

So if his computer will help him make his operation more cost-effective, it's worth taking the course, he said.

Further, tracking his herd and keeping his books with a computer will save him time, he said. "Most farmers around here have other jobs. They have limited time."

Instructor John McGlone introduced his students to accounting and spreadsheets, software designed for farm use, and the internet.

Having a farm background himself - McGlone has a small beef cattle operation, is a graduate of the Kentucky Master Cattlemen Program, and active in Boyd County 4-H - he was able to tailor his accounting presentation to farm needs.

For instance, he was able to show students how accounting software can organize their expenses for tax purposes by category, like fuel and feed and fertilizer.

His internet presentation focused on searches and sites most likely to provide valuable farm information and resources.

That's essential, said Jim Crace, who is retired from the information technology business but relatively new to farming. He's recently launched a cattle-breeding operation in the Bolts Fork area.

"There are thousands of farm- and agriculture-related Web sites out there. This is helping me find them. Otherwise I'd have to dig them out on my own," he said.

There's a growing trend to maintaining computer databases of animals for breeding purposes and also because of threats like mad cow disease, he said.

Chris Boggs is an ACTC professor who specializes in information technology. His own early background, he said, is in farming. "I grew up in farming and it's real backbreaking work. The ability to integrate technology can assist (farmers) in taking some of that load off their backs.

"It's working smarter, not harder," he said.

The Internet is increasingly a tool for buying and selling, said Missy Branham, who was taking the class with her parents, Ray and Phyllis Sammons of Rush.

Branham and her parents raise beef cattle and horses.

They can buy hay and corn and market their animals the same way consumers buy merchandise.

An agriculture teacher at Lawrence County High School, Branham thinks farmers need to keep up with technology like anyone else.

She expects the accounting segment of the course to be particularly useful. Currently their records repository consists of a box for receipts, she said.

McGlone is teaching a second class under the grant this month. It's already filled up. If there's further interest, ACTC may offer future classes for farmers, but without the grant money they wouldn't include free computers, he said.

 

The Henderson Gleaner
February 3, 2005

Local health fair big draw

The specially-equipped military Humvee and ever-so-realistic flight simulator drew them just as Uncle Sam had anticipated.

And when the various "nieces" and "nephews" of the world's most famous uncle explored those unique attractions at Henderson Community College's annual Health Careers Fair Wednesday, they discovered the multitude of healthy opportunities offered by the U.S. Army.

Captain Tony Taylor noted that the Army is in need of RNs, LPNs, X-ray and lab technicians, physical therapists and other medical personnel and is more than willing to educate them -- provided they qualify physically, academically and morally for that training.

Already-educated health care professionals are eligible for a possible direct commission, Taylor said, with the higher pay that status includes.

Uniformed recruiters were at the college because of the day's emphasis on health care opportunities, but Taylor said they weren't really focusing "on one particular profession." That flight simulator, for instance, could be the first step in identifying potential helicopter pilots to fly what Taylor called "the $14 million Apache or $7 million Black Hawk."

A black tent with the words "An Army of One" saw plenty of visitors, but so did the 19 booths manned by health careers recruiters from this area and as far away as Louisville and Cincinnati.

In fact, students and others began flooding the campus Fine Arts Center's corridors half an hour before the 10 a.m. fair was scheduled to begin.

"Next year I need to bring more stuff," sighed Carol Phebus, assistant director of West Area Health Education Center in Madisonville. Phebus, who promotes health care careers in 14 school districts -- including Henderson -- noted that even the coloring books she'd brought along for youngsters were all gone from her table.

Phebus still had some "Health Career Opportunities" brochures that were going fast. They list the pay range for various health care occupations in this area, and raise a few eyebrows. A number of careers requiring only two years of training have potential annual salaries of as much as $50,000.

But Chardae Chambers, a Henderson County High senior in the Health Science Program, intends to take a longer educational route -- six years -- to become a nurse practitioner specializing in OB/GYN. Nurse practitioners in this area reportedly have a starting salary range of $51,000-$76,800 in 2005.

Mary Frances Conn, a second year student in HCC's associate degree nursing program, already knows where she wants to work: Evansville State Hospital, which had a booth at the fair. "I loved my clinical rounds there," she said. "I fell in love with the people."'

Registered nurses find themselves in a buyer's market, particularly in areas where nursing shortages are more critical.

Methodist Hospital recruiter Jan Vibbert said the local hospital is finding the shortage easing, but St. Mary's recruiter Amanda Mason said that large medical entity always needs nurses.

Vibbert was promoting the local hospital's scholarship program, which provides funding for various health career occupations and requires that the graduate be employed by the hospital here "six months for each (paid) semester."

RiverValley Behavioral Health recruiter Kathleen Burton reported that agency's Owensboro psychiatric hospital for children is adding a new 24-bed unit this spring and will need 16 additional employees.

Health Alliance of Greater Cincinnati recruiter Sandy Richter drove nearly four hours to man a booth at the fair, but said that's hardly any distance compared to some of her recruiting trips. Her territory, she said, "is pretty much the eastern half of the U.S."

Richter said Health Alliance is a six-hospital system that is experiencing a nursing shortage. "There's always a need," she said. "I've heard some project that the shortage will last another 10-20 years in the U.S. I hope they're wrong."

Owensboro Community College radiography student Jason Boone asked if Richter was taking resumes. "Absolutely!" she replied, adding that if he should become a Health Alliance employee, "We do pay for your move."

 

The Chronicle of Higher Education
February 3, 2005

President Bush calls for bigger Pell Grants, more job training at 2-year colleges, and less federal spending

In his State of the Union address on Wednesday night, President Bush called for increasing the size of the Pell Grant, expanding job training at community colleges, and reining in federal spending.

The speech to a joint session of Congress, which focused mostly on Social Security and national security, barely touched on higher-education issues. When the president did talk about colleges or federal funds for research, he provided few details of his plans or reiterated what he has said in the past.

Of most interest to colleges is the president's plan for Pell Grants. The maximum grant has remained at $4,050 for the past three years because the appropriations have not been enough to keep up with an unexpected surge in demand for the awards.

"We will make it easier for Americans to afford a college education by increasing the size of Pell Grants," Mr. Bush said Wednesday night.

Last month, at an appearance in Jacksonville, Fla., President Bush said he would seek to raise the maximum grant by $500, to $4,550, over the next five years, and eliminate a $4.3-billion shortfall that has plagued the student-aid program (The Chronicle, January 17). But Mr. Bush is not expected to call for additional money for the program when he releases his budget request for the 2006 fiscal year on Monday. Rather, he has said that he will seek to generate savings by making changes in the federal government's guaranteed-student-loan program.

Indeed, Mr. Bush made it clear during the State of the Union speech that he plans to take aim at government spending in his budget request. "Next week I will send you a budget that holds the growth of discretionary spending below inflation," he told Congress.

The budget, he said, will reduce or eliminate 150 government programs. While he did not mention any by name, higher-education advocates have told The Chronicle that two of them will be Upward Bound and Talent Search, popular programs that help needy students prepare for college (The Chronicle, January 24).

What is not clear is whether the president will propose spending any new money on job training. In his speech, Mr. Bush proposed helping 200,000 workers "get training for a better career, by reforming our job-training system and strengthening America's community colleges." The president offered no specific dollar figure for the plan and did not say how it differed from the $250-million in federal funds that he pledged to community colleges in last year's State of the Union address. Budget cuts in other job-training programs eventually resulted in a net loss in the federal funds community colleges get for training workers (The Chronicle, March 19, 2004).

The president said that his 2006 budget would make the tax cuts enacted over the past several years permanent and he asked Congress to work with him on making major revisions in the tax laws "to give this nation a tax code that is pro-growth, easy to understand, and fair to all."

A commission appointed by Mr. Bush to look at changing the tax code is expected to issue its report this summer. Last week a Congressional panel that performed a broad review of the tax code recommended several changes that would affect higher-education institutions, including removing the tax exemption for tuition benefits provided to college employees.

On Wednesday night Mr. Bush also repeated his support for research that does "not take advantage of some lives for the benefit of others."

"America," Mr. Bush said, "will continue to lead the world in medical research that is ambitious, aggressive, and always ethical."

The president did not specifically mention his controversial policy of providing federal funds for only a limited set of embryonic stem cells. But he did say that he would "work with Congress to ensure that human embryos are not created for experimentation or grown for body parts."

Opinions in Congress are split on "therapeutic" cloning, the use of cloning techniques to create embryolike cells to provide a source of stem cells, a tool that biomedical researchers say is important to advance stem-cell research.

 

The Chronicle of Higher Education
February 3, 2005

Republicans in U.S. House introduce bill to renew Higher Education Act that mirrors last year's

The Republican leaders of the education committee in the U.S. House of Representatives on Wednesday introduced a bill to renew the Higher Education Act that is nearly identical to legislation they offered last year.

Efforts by the leaders of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce to push the earlier bill (HR 4283) through the chamber died last summer amid partisan bickering over a controversial provision that would have changed how the interest rate is calculated for borrowers who consolidate federal student loans. The change would have made the program less attractive to borrowers.

Congressional observers said at the time that the House Republican leadership would not allow the legislation to reach the House floor, out of concern that it would give Democrats ammunition to use against the White House and Republicans in Congress during an election year (The Chronicle, July 2, 2004).

Rep. John A. Boehner, the Ohio Republican who heads the House committee, included the provision -- which would prevent borrowers who wish to refinance their loans from being able to lock in a low, fixed interest rate, as they can now -- in the new version of the legislation (HR 507).

Mr. Boehner has repeatedly said that the billions of dollars that the government provides in subsidies each year to keep the costs of fixed-rate consolidation loans cheaper for borrowers would be better spent giving more benefits to current and future students. With that in mind, he said, savings from the change would be used to offset the costs to the government of other proposals in the bill that would benefit students, such as an increase in the amount they are allowed to borrow in their first two years of college and a cut in the origination fees they must pay to obtain their loans.

In a news release, Mr. Boehner said that the committee intended to pass "revenue neutral" legislation that would pay for itself by making "common-sense reforms," rather than by adding to the federal budget deficit.

"We need to reform federal higher-education aid programs to put incoming low and middle-income students back at the front of the line," he said. "The Higher Education Act's first mission is to improve college access for low and middle-income students. It has drifted away from that focus over the years, at the expense of the very students it was written to serve. We've got to change that."

But Rep. George Miller of California, the top Democrat on the committee, criticized the consolidation proposal, which he said "would make college even more expensive for students."

"I hope to work with Chairman Boehner to find common ground where we can," Mr. Miller said. "But I will oppose any changes to the law that raise the price of college."

Specifically, the legislation would increase the loan limits for freshmen to $3,500, from $2,625, and for sophomores to $4,500, from $3,500. The total borrowing ceiling for undergraduates would remain at $23,000. It would also reduce the origination fees students pay on their loans from 3 percent of the amount borrowed to 1 percent.

The bill would also:

Keep the authorized level for the maximum Pell Grant, set by Congress in 1998, at $5,800 over the next six years. (The figure is a ceiling that appropriators cannot exceed when setting actual grant levels each year. The current maximum grant is $4,050.)

Make Pell Grants available to students year-round, rather than only over the nine months of a traditional academic year.

Gradually phase out a part of the formula that the government uses to divvy up funds from three programs -- College Work-Study, Perkins Loans, and Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants -- that essentially guarantees colleges the same share of money that they have received since the 1970s.

Place colleges that consistently raise their tuition and other costs of attendance by more than twice the rate of inflation on a government watch list, and require them to provide a detailed accounting of all of their costs and expenditures.

Eliminate a provision in the law that requires for-profit institutions to earn at least 10 percent of their revenue from sources other than federal student-aid funds.

Clarify that student-aid applicants who have been convicted of drug-related offenses are ineligible for federal student aid only if the offenses were committed while they were attending college.

The education committee's leaders are expected to resume holding hearings on the legislation this month. They have said that they would like to bring the bill to the House floor this spring for a vote. The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions has not yet begun work on its version of the legislation yet.