Monroe County Community College leaders ask commissioners to support millage renewal, cite enrollment gains and economic impact
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Monroe County Community College officials briefed commissioners on enrollment increases, program expansions and a $363 million annual economic impact as they urged support for a millage renewal on the November ballot.
Monroe County Community College officials briefed the Board of Commissioners on campus enrollment gains and economic impact and urged support for a county millage renewal that will appear on the November ballot.
A college representative, joined by Vice President for Student Success Scott Behrends and Vice President for Finance and Administration Frank Thomas, told commissioners the college is ranked in the top 9% of community colleges nationwide and cited a $363,000,000 annual economic impact on the region.
Nut graf: The presentation said overall enrollment was up 7% year over year, total credit hours rose 9.3%, first-time college student enrollment increased 17%, and the college added 10 new programs including radiography and paralegal studies. Leaders described MCCC as the county's primary higher-education option for local graduates and called the upcoming millage a renewal, not a new tax.
The representative said the college supplies more than $500,000 in foundation scholarships and emphasized improved completion rates for Pell and non-Pell students. Commissioners responded with acknowledgement and the representative asked for continued support of the millage renewal.
Ending: The college framed the renewal as essential for maintaining current programs and services; commissioners did not take a formal vote on the millage but received the presentation and public comment in support of renewal.
