Pflugerville - Hutto Edition | April 2024

Area colleges invest more than $180M to meet workforce needs From the cover

BY ELLE BENT

The details

What’s happening

In addition to the area’s growth, some industries are already feeling worker shortages, Moreno said. Texas is experiencing a nursing shortage, and March data from the Texas Center for Nursing Workforce Studies found that by 2036 there could be a shortage of 56,000 registered nurses. Matt Ho- man, Texas A&M University Round Rock School of Nursing assistant dean, said many nurses are aging out of the profession. Similarly, Moreno said many electricians, plumbers and HVAC workers are getting close to retirement. Programs at schools such as TSTC, ACC and TXST are aiming to address these gaps with expansions. While TAMU at Round Rock is not working on any expansions, the university has programs aiming to keep medicine and nursing workers in Texas.

hand, industries such as health care and skilled trades are in need of workers as they experience employee shortages and an aging workforce, Moreno said. Some of the largest area employers, with a combined 18,000 employees, include Dell Technologies, Tesla and Samsung. ACC and TSTC pointed to Samsung’s expansion in Taylor, which is expected to create thousands of semiconductor jobs, as a reason for expanding programs.

The population of the Austin-Round Rock- San Marcos metropolitan area grew 7.53% between July 2020 and July 2023, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Data shows that jobs in Central Texas have grown by 20% in the past ve years, a rate 16.5% higher than the national average. In the past decade, major employers such as Tesla and Samsung have moved or are moving into the area, bringing hundreds to thousands of jobs with them. On the other

Job growth

Information technology

Manufacturing

Construction Health care and social assistance

Professional, scientic and technical services

+22.5% +11.3% +38.1% Percent change*

200,000

150,000

“We have engineering that we’re slating to bring in a couple of years. ... We’re

100,000

really working with the industry that is around to help prepare degree programs that will help with the workforce pipeline.” JULIE LESSITER, TEXAS STATE ROUND ROCK VICE PRESIDENT

+15% +43.3%

50,000

0

*THE PERCENT CHANGE OF THE NUMBER OF JOBS FROM 20182022

2018

2019

2020

2021

2022

SOURCE: WORKFORCE SOLUTIONSCOMMUNITY IMPACT

The approach

What’s next

said they also plan to expand the Round Rock campus’s health science programs in the future. At TSTC in Hutto, ocials are working toward a new advanced manufacturing program as well as an expansion to the industrial systems technology program.

At the TXST campus in Round Rock, a new facility will house the College of Health Professions. At the ACC Round Rock campus, a new advanced manufacturing program is in the works. In partic- ular, ocials are working to expand automotive, construction and welding programs. ACC ocials

With the ongoing expansions, ocials hope these campuses will address current and future workforce needs. The construction of Esperanza Hall at TXST’s Round Rock campus—to house the school’s nursing program—is expected to begin in November. In June, ACC approved a construction manager to oversee the applied technology expansion to renovate one building and build a new one. TSTC is still determining logistics for its new building, which is expected to open in a few years. “We know advanced manufacturing is here,” TSTC Provost Kelly Coke said. “It’s the future, but it’s also here to stay.”

School

Project description

Investment

Facility expansions for a new advanced manufacturing program and the current automotive, building construction and welding programs to accommodate the current student population of over 3,600 95,000-square-foot building for advanced manufacturing programs to accommodate the current student population of over 200 81,600-square foot Esperanza Hall to house the College of Health to begin construction this fall and accommodate the current student population of over 2,000

Austin Community College at Round Rock

$75 million

Texas State Technical College

$54 million

Texas State University Round Rock

$52 million

SOURCES: AUSTIN COMMUNITY COLLEGE, TEXAS STATE TECHNICAL COLLEGE, TEXAS STATE UNIVERSITYCOMMUNITY IMPACT

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PFLUGERVILLE  HUTTO EDITION

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