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Latest round of Strengthening Community Colleges grants support 18 colleges in 14 states

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Labor today announced the award of $65 million in grants to 18 colleges in 14 states to support programs that help community colleges scale affordable, high-quality workforce training to meet employers’ and workers’ skill development needs in critical industry sectors, such as advanced manufacturing, clean energy, semiconductors and biotechnology. 

Administered by the department’s Employment and Training Administration, the fifth round of Strengthening Community Colleges Training Grants will use proven strategies to enhance career pathway programs and support more equitable outcomes for marginalized and underrepresented populations. This funding will harness the unique strengths of community college partnerships to drive broad, lasting improvements within the system. 

“The Biden-Harris administration is investing in training programs that end in a job, rather than a job search,” said Acting U.S. Secretary of Labor Julie Su. “Our Strengthening Community Colleges grantees run programs that help lift whole communities, like by helping community colleges equip workers with the skills they need right now, while strengthening workforce infrastructure. This is how we fundamentally shift workforce training programs to better invest in improving the lives of America’s workers.”

The Strengthening Community Colleges grants announced today will support 18 lead institutions, including a Tribally Controlled College, a Historically Black College and University, and 5 Hispanic Serving Institutions, as well as 23 consortia members. Grantees will provide training across multiple sectors, many of which align with the Biden-Harris administration’s Investing in America agenda, such as advanced manufacturing, healthcare, IT, agriculture and infrastructure-related sectors, including transportation and broadband. 

Through five rounds of grants to date, the department has invested $265 million, allowing 207 colleges in 35 states to address major workforce priorities for employers and workers in their respective states and local communities. 

The department awarded Strengthening Community Colleges grants to the following recipients:

Recipient City

State

Amount

JF Drake State Community and Technical College Huntsville

AL

$1,514,520

Foothill – DeAnza Community College District Los Altos Hills

CA

$5,627,122

Merced Community College District Merced

CA

$1,514,520

Yosemite Community College District – Columbia College Sonora

CA

$5,750,000

Trinidad State College Trinidad

CO

$5,749,949

Mott Community College Flint

MI

$1,446,400

Macomb Community College Warren

MI

$1,512,800

Ozarks Technical Community College Springfield

MO

$5,659,696

Montana Technological University Butte

MT

$5,750,000

Little Priest Tribal College (Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska) Winnebago

NE

$1,425,300

Ocean County College Toms River

NJ

$5,742,966

Lorain County Community College District Elyria

OH

$5,749,925

Southwestern Oregon Community College Coos Bay

OR

$1,514,520

Alvin Community College Alvin

TX

$1,514,520

Dallas College Dallas

TX

$5,748,729

Central Virginia Community College Lynchburg

VA

$1,514,520

Spokane Community College Spokane

WA

$5,750,000

West Virginia Northern Community College Wheeling

WV

$1,514,513

Total    

$65,000,000

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