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A Presentation to AACC Annual Convention

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Colleen Hartfield, Vice President, Institutional ... 98,888 people housed in 36,600 FEMA trailers ... site or return to site as soon as safe travel is possible. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Presentation to AACC Annual Convention


1
  • A Presentation to AACC Annual Convention
  • April 24, 2006, Long Beach, California
  • Presented by
  • Dr. Mary Graham, Vice President, Perkinston
    Campus
  • Dr. Hal Higdon, Vice President, Administration
  • Colleen Hartfield, Vice President, Institutional
    Relations

2
  • About MGCCC and Hurricane Katrina
  • Preparedness and Recovery
  • Communicating in a Crisis
  • Aiding the Community
  • Realities and Challenges
  • A Few Final Thoughts and Questions

3
Date here
4
  • We make a
  • positive difference
  • in peoples lives
  • every day.
  • Mississippis Largest
  • Community College
  • ____

5
  • EG Budget 69.5 million
  • 37 State Appropriations
  • 34 Student Tuition Fees
  • 14 County Support
  • 9 State Grants Contracts
  • 1 Federal Grants Contracts
  • 5 Other

6
  • Four-County District
  • 2 Rural (Stone, George)
  • 2 Urban (Harrison, Jackson)
  • Eight Locations
  • 4 Campuses, 4 Centers
  • Facilities within 30 minute drive of every MS
    Coast resident

7
District Population 400,000 Race 79
White/Caucasian 21 Minority High
School Graduates 76 BS Degree and Higher
14 Homeowners 76 Median Household Income
35,000-40,000 Student Financial Aid 71 Average
Award 1,668
8
On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina pummeled
more than 70 miles of the Mississippi Coast. With
winds blasting up to 125 miles per hour, the
monster storm created a ground zero for the
entire Mississippi Gulf Coast.
9
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10
  • Katrinas Mississippi Impact
  • 98,888 people housed in 36,600 FEMA trailers
  • 32.8 million cubic yards of debris removed thus
    far
  • 4.5 billion in federal funding to Individual
    Assistance, Public Assistance programs and
    mission assignments
  • - Source FEMA, February 17, 2006

11
  • Katrinas Mississippi Impact
  • 231 Identified dead statewide
  • 5 Unidentified
  • 67 Missing
  • 65,380 Houses in South Mississippi destroyed
  • - Source FEMA, February 17, 2006

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Before
After
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Before
After
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Before
After
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Before
After
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Before
After
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After
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Before
After
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Highway 90Biloxi Ocean Springs Bridge
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After
Before
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Before
After
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Before
After
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Before
After
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29
  • Secure college facilities and safety of employees
    and students
  • Cleanup and restoration of facilities
  • Resume classes and services

30
  • Determine financial status and recovery of
  • institution
  • Assess communication needs
  • Restore IT infrastructure

31
  • COMMUNICATING the institutions needs
  • Governor and MS Legislature
  • Federal Government and MS Congressional
    Delegation
  • Local Counties Supervisors and Municipalities
  • Other organizations that can provide help
    Bush-Clinton Katrina Fund and community colleges
    across the nation

32
  • Expect that all communication technology will be
    unavailable or unreliable
  • We lost lives and had prolonged suffering
    because we lost the ability to communicate and
    coordinate and as a result saw the loss of
    command and control.
  • Rep. Chip Pickering, R-Miss.

33
  • Establish the college website as the major source
    of information
  • Everyone is hungry for information employees,
    students, the media, alumni, colleagues and
    public officials.
  • All official college statements and decisions
    should be prominently posted on the site.

34
  • Designate special links for students, employees
    and media
  • Post photos of damage to facilities
  • Provide frequent messages from the college
    president
  • Include date and time in all news postings

35
  • Create an employee blog
  • Its a method to account for employees,
    understand their concerns and answer their
    questions.
  • Its also a way for the college family to feel
    connected during the crisis wherever they are.

36
  • Partnership with construction industry
  • Job placement
  • Construction Management Technology program taught
    at night

37
  • HEALTH-CARE WORKER SHORTAGE
  • Evening LPN Program at two campuses, funded by
    National Emergency Grant from US Dept. of Labor
    tuition covered by grant
  • Certified Nurse Assistant 80-hour training
    course to meet workforce needs of hospitals,
    nursing homes and assisted- living facilities on
    the Coast. Industry pays student tuition (385)
    and 9/hour wage to program participants during
    training and advertising costs

38
  • ENROLLMENT
  • More than 3,000 students withdrew after
    hurricane
  • 25 percent decline in Fall 2005 (7,806
    compared to 10,424 in Fall 2004)
  • 18 percent decline in Spring 2006 (pre-audit)
  • Could be years before enrollment returns
  • State Funding loss of 6 million FY 07

39
  • Damages to Facilities and Infrastructure
  • More than 17 million
  • Three buildings at Perkinston Campus had to be
    demolished
  • Loss of local ad valorem tax will likely get
    worse before it gets better
  • Could be three years before local tax base
    returns to pre Katrina level

40
  • Relief efforts must be organized.
  • Housing for emergency personnel, utility workers
    and
  • government officials.
  • Returning operations to normalcy is critical but
    does
  • not ensure our lives have returned to normal.
  • VoIP better communication.
  • Disaster RFP ensures speedy cleanup and recovery
  • Continuity plans

41
  • Set clear expectations for leadership team to
    stay on
  • site or return to site as soon as safe travel
    is possible.
  • This team must help survey damage and make
  • decisions about employees.

42
Challenge To design a technology education
model for preparing a workforce with
technological capabilities applicable to natural
or manmade disaster preparedness and
recovery. MGCCC Proposal to National Science
FoundationFunding for Planning Initiative for a
Gulf Region Technology Education Project for
Disaster Preparedness and Recovery
43
  • Planning Initiative.
  • Establish vision
  • Develop partnership/collaboration model
  • Design workforce development system
  • Prepare strategic action plan for educational
    delivery
  • system for preparing technicians for disaster
  • preparedness and recovery.

44
  • NSF Planning Initiative--technologies, processes
    and functions
  • Voice, video, text communication
  • Business/institution continuity plansremote
    data
  • storage
  • Connectivity (wireless, satellite)
  • Interoperability
  • Integrated mobile and fixed access
  • Internet Protocol (IP) enabled to converge
    data
  • transport and data storage.
  • Security

45
  • FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION
  • Examine your regions technological workforce
    capability, requirements for preparedness and
    recovery and educational capacity to deliver
  • Technology needs of community
  • Who are the Stakeholders?

46
  • Educational delivery system? On-line
  • Skills or program areas neededdisaster
    technician, computer forensics, games and
    simulations, wireless with VoIP, convergent
    technology, home technology integration and other
    emerging technologies.

47
Nell Murray murray258_at_aol.com Anna Faye
Kelley-Winders annafaye.kelley_at_mgccc.edu
48
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