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Bismarck State College's reputation as a leading provider of education for
the energy industry was noted by a U.S. Department of Energy official this
week during a U.S. Senate committee hearing.
The college was cited as an example of a successful public-private
partnership working to ensure training and education opportunities for the
energy industry during testimony Nov. 6 at a U.S. Senate Committee Hearing
of the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
BSC President Larry Skogen and BSC Vice President of Energy Technology
Programs Kari L. Knudson were present at the hearing during testimony by
Patricia A. Hoffman, a deputy director within DOE.
Skogen says, "BSC has uniquely positioned itself as the leading source of
education for the energy industry. The fact that we were used as the example
in her testimony is another indicator that we are poised to help solve the
nation's need for highly skilled energy industry workers now and in the
future."
Hoffman is Deputy Director of R&D and Acting Chief Operating Officer of the
DOE's Office of Electricity Delivery & Energy Reliability. Her testimony
concerned the nation's domestic energy sector workforce and the strong need
for the U.S. to invest in a vibrant workforce because of looming retirements
in the industry, among other related issues.
In her testimony about BSC, Hoffman said: "One example of a successful
public-private partnership . is the Department's designation of Bismarck
State College in North Dakota as a National Power Plant Operations
Technology and Educational Center. Bismarck State's programs in power plant,
process plant, electric power, electrical transmission systems, and nuclear
power technologies will educate and train many of our future energy sector
workers. It also uses the latest technologies via the internet and training
simulations to speed up the knowledge transfer process."
Skogen and Knudson were in Washington to meet with the DOE, the National
Science Foundation, North Dakota's congressional delegation and other
agencies. He says BSC is seeking the means to be the lead college in a
national consortium of energy workforce educators.
Link to the full testimony: http://energy.senate.gov/public/_files/HoffmanTestimony110607.pdf |