Author Archives: Daniel Perry

TSTC in Waco HVAC Program Receives National Ranking

(WACO) – The Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning Technology program at Texas State Technical College in Waco has received nationwide academic recognition.

The Nevada-based Community for Accredited Online Schools recently ranked the technical program in the top five in the nation for this year among two-year institutions. The ranking took into account financial aid, student-teacher ratios, graduation rates and placement and counseling services. Information from the National Center for Education Statistics was used to rank the list’s top 50 institutions.

There are about 70 students studying this semester for the certificate and associate degree in Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning Technology.

David Brannen, the program’s campus lead, said some students underestimate the algebraic conversions and physics involved in learning about HVAC.

“You have to have the theory to do a lab,” Brannen said.

Cheyanne Hill, 19, of Florien, Louisiana, is in her first semester of studying for the certificate. She learned about TSTC from her high school band director.

Hill said she has enjoyed learning about pipefitting, the different stages of refrigeration and manifold gauges.

“I have family that work in HVAC and I have helped my uncle,” she said. “It’s demanding work, and not a lot of females are willing to do that type of work. It can be overwhelming.”

Joseph Paul, 19, of China Spring will graduate in December with his HVAC certificate. Paul said he likes the program because it combines his interests in plumbing and electricity and he gets to use his hands.

“It’s fun and there is no dull moment, really,” he said. “I can’t sit behind an office desk the rest of my life.”

Some of the classes that majors can take include Basic Electricity for HVAC, Air Conditioning Control Principles and Heat Pumps.

Students will have a new opportunity to learn about HVAC when a $15,000 rooftop package unit lab will open in fall 2017. The lab will be used in a new commercial air conditioning class that will be offered.

For more information on TSTC, go to tstc.edu.

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TSTC in Waco Environmental Students Attend Chicago Leadership Conference

(WACO) – Texas State Technical College in Waco students attending a leadership conference in Chicago found a world of opportunities to motivate them in their future careers.

Jason Lehrmann, 34, of Mart, Katelyn Scott, 23, of Ennis and Thomas Roberts, 33, of Granbury, earlier this month attended the American Society of Safety Engineers 12th annual Future Safety Leaders Conference.

“Each of these students offers their own abilities and perspectives in safety,” said Patti Tate, an instructor in TSTC’s Environmental Health, Safety and Radiation Protection Technology program. “I have no doubt that all three of these students will go far and will be part of a bright and productive future as a safety or even an environmental professional.”

The students represented the Texas State Technical College in Waco Student Section of the Central Texas Chapter of the American Society of Safety Engineers. The students are all double majors in Environmental Technology – Compliance Specialization and Occupational Safety Compliance Technology.

“It was a good networking opportunity for us to meet some of the high-profile people in the ASSE community and learn about leadership from them,” Lehrmann said. “They have been in the field for 30-plus or more years.”

Some of the conference’s roundtable topics included fire protection, industrial hygiene, safety communication and training, and compliance for a bilingual workforce. Participants also learned about resume writing and had mock interviews with professionals.

“I love all these regulations and safety inspections,” Roberts said. “We are the nerds of the safety world.”

Scott found a discussion on the use of drones intriguing.

“Drones get into areas that are unsafe for employees to get to, such as checking transformers,” she said. “This cuts production time in half. Employees are working in confined spaces and entries. Drones can be sent in and they see what the actual hazards are.”

Roberts said the conference was a way to get reacquainted with networking.

“There is nobody in a high position that is going to say ‘I am better than you,’” he said. “They have arms open, mentoring and asking what they can do to inspire us. It was cool to feel that energy from strangers.”

The conference helped one of the students make a sharper focus on a career possibility.

Scott said she is interested in doing consulting work after listening to a presentation by Regina McMichael, president of South Carolina-based The Learning Factory Inc., an education and training design and delivery company focused on safety, leadership and risk management.

“Having a strong female example in the leadership role is a good starting point,” Scott said. “It was a good eye-opener for me in having a mentor. I can do consulting or training.”

The students also explored Chicago. Scott said the group took an Uber ride around the city and had fun spotting safety hazards at construction sites they passed. And, the group experienced the energy that Chicago residents had celebrating the Chicago Cubs’ World Series victory.

“These people were out in the city at 2 a.m.,” Lehrmann said.

For more information on the American Society of Safety Engineers, go to asse.org.

For more information on TSTC, go to tstc.edu.

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TSTC in Marshall a Employment Source for SEVEN Networks

(MARSHALL) – SEVEN Networks and Texas State Technical College in Marshall are proving to be good neighbors.

The mobile device traffic management and analytics company has three TSTC alumni as employees, along with two students as interns. The company is located in TSTC’s Center for Applied Technology, just steps away from the administration building.

“The benefit to us is their students are concentrating on their trade while they are getting educated,” said Keyvan Shahrdar, SEVEN’s director of operations in Marshall. “That’s a great plus for us because we are getting students who are doing the same exact thing that we are wanting to hire.”

Chastity Rhodes of Marshall has three associate degrees from TSTC in Marshall: Biomedical Equipment Technology, Cyber Security, and Computer Networking and Systems Administration. She was hired earlier this year to work with SEVEN’s marketing, quality control, network administration and cyber security.

“This is great international enterprise experience that Marshall has needed for many years,” said Rhodes, 33. “East Texas is behind in technology terms, and SEVEN provides a doorway to technological advancement for this area. There are great opportunities for graduates from this area who are not in a position to relocate just to have a job.”

The company will soon launch its iPhone Ad Clear platform for the United States. Ad Clear is an advertising blocking application that is already available for Android phones.

“I think that is going to have a major impact in our offices here, with us needing to hire more engineers from the area,” Shahrdar said.

Dustin Morgan, 22, of Jefferson graduated this summer from TSTC in Marshall with an Associate of Applied Science degree in Software Development and is a SEVEN software engineer working on Ad Clear’s Android version.

“The current projects the company has are challenging, and there is always something to learn and improve on,” Morgan said. “It never gets boring or repetitive and is constantly changing. It’s also interesting to see a lot of people use something you are working on, including people you know.”

The company opened its Marshall office in summer 2015. Ross Bott, president and chief executive officer of SEVEN Networks, said the company looked at Texas because some of its senior executives and customers are based in the state.

“We explored a variety of cities in Texas, but our early interactions with the Marshall Economic Development Corp. were so positive that Marshall quickly rose to the top of the list,” Bott said. “The ability to partner with TSTC and other nearby colleges for engineering talent was a second critical factor and ultimately led to our final decision to move to Marshall.”

The Marshall site has 10 employees and one contractor. SEVEN’s workers in Marshall and Hangzhou, China, divide their engineering and feedback workload.

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TSTC in Waco Alumnus Flying High as Instructor in McGregor

(WACO) – David L. Ruiz can touch the sky, whether it is preaching a positive message from the pulpit or flying airplanes cross-country.

“I’ve always wanted to be a pilot since I was 3 years old,” said Ruiz, 52, a 2004 graduate of Texas State Technical College in Waco. “Our house was under the flight path of an airport. I would spend hours watching the airplanes coming in.”

Ruiz has been chief flight instructor at Aurora Aviation in McGregor since 2008. Aurora Aviation provides corporate flight service and teaches people how to fly. The company is owned by federal defense contractor Advanced Concepts and Technologies International with offices in Waco and Arlington, Virginia.

Aurora Aviation uses the same flight syllabus that TSTC’s Aircraft Pilot Training program in Waco uses for its students. TSTC currently has 125 students who can earn the Associate of Applied Science degree in Aircraft Pilot Training or the degree with a helicopter specialization. The students can also earn a certificate in Aircraft Pilot Technology Commercial Pilot-Helicopter or an enhanced skills certificate in Multi-Engine Aircraft Pilot.

“Our graduates have a variety of choices with regard to job opportunities, including but not limited to flight instruction, banner towing, tour flights, ferry flights, aerial photography, pipeline patrol, firefighting and agricultural applications,” said Rick Connor, lead instructor in the Aircraft Pilot Training program. “Those who choose the airline route have pipeline programs to choose from such as Skywest, ExpressJet or Envoy.”

Boeing’s 2016 Pilot and Technician Outlook found North America will need 112,000 pilots in the next two decades.

“Right now the demand for pilots is high,” Ruiz said. “For McLennan County to have aviation schools is an advantage for the students here.”

The company has three full-time flight instructors and one part-time instructor, with Ruiz being the only one having graduated from TSTC.

“Really, from the get-go he has been like a mentor,” said Matt Wallace, 28, a U.S. Army veteran and a former TSTC flight instructor now working for Ruiz. “He has been great, saying that I need to come along on flights. It has been good seeing David in action. I have gotten to go on some of David’s corporate flights.”

Ruiz stays busy in other areas of aviation. He is a corporate pilot and an adjunct lecturer at Baylor University’s Institute for Air Science. He buys and sells airplanes, and he owns Pegasus Drone Service in Waco for real estate, agricultural and search and rescue work. He also officiates at weddings.

Ruiz was born in Midland and grew up in Odessa. His father was from Mexico and worked in oil fields, but when Ruiz was a young child he wanted his family to be migrant farmworkers.

“If there was a field to pick, the Ruiz family was there,” Ruiz said. “We picked in the Southwest and up the West Coast. My father said if you could walk you could work.”

The family eventually settled in Eloy, Arizona, and Twin Falls, Idaho, before his father died and his mother moved her four children back to Texas. The children were homeschooled by their mother, but Ruiz eventually graduated in 1982 from Lee High School in Midland.

Ruiz went on a mission trip to Brazil in high school and felt God called him into the ministry. He put his aviation dreams on hold and graduated in 1986 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Biblical Studies at Hardin-Simmons University in Abilene. He worked three jobs to put himself through college.

It was during his junior year at Hardin-Simmons that Ruiz traveled to TSTC in Waco to meet the Aircraft Pilot Training faculty. Ruiz said he does not remember how he heard about TSTC, but he knew he needed to see the campus.

Ruiz studied flight training in the late 1980s at TSTC in Waco and took an academic hiatus before graduating in 2004 with an Associate of Applied Science degree in Aircraft Pilot Training.

“You have to go where the job is,” Ruiz said. “You just have to love aviation.”

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TSTC in Marshall Alumni Indulging in Maintenance Work at Dallas Culinary Company

(MARSHALL) – Two Texas State Technical College in Marshall graduates are ensuring that the production of icing, cupcakes and cookies is trouble-free and on time for clients nationwide.

Derrick Jackson, 41, of Garland and Bradley Moody, 25, of Irving work in maintenance at CSM Bakery Solutions’ manufacturing facility in northwest Dallas. Jackson is a regional maintenance manager working with company-wide safety efforts and providing oversight to plants in Dallas, Houston and Bonner Springs, Kansas. Moody is a maintenance administrator and coordinator.

Jackson and Moody had some things in common before they began working together: both grew up in Marshall and graduated from Marshall High School – Jackson in 1993 and Moody in 2009.

“I still have family in Marshall,” Jackson said. “When Bradley graduated from TSTC, my sister was working in Marshall with his fiancée (now wife) at the time. She told me there was a young man named Bradley working in my field and he was willing to move. We made contact to see what he was looking for. He came up and interviewed and was hired.”

CSM Bakery Solutions has more than 8,500 employees working at 34 manufacturing facilities, 26 distribution centers and four innovation centers in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, North America and Europe. The industrial baking company’s frozen doughs, batters, brioches, muffins and other items are distributed to customers in 100 nations.

Jackson said the Dallas plant, which has more than 250 employees, can produce more than 300,000 cupcakes in an eight-hour shift. The Dallas plant functions 24 hours a day.

Some of TSTC’s statewide technical programs that fit the company’s mission include Culinary Arts, Computer Science, Engineering, Industrial Maintenance, Industrial Systems Technology and Logistics Technology.

“CSM is looking for enthusiastic, positive and hard-working employees,” said Francoise Caraguel, global vice president of talent management based at the company’s headquarters in Sandy Springs, Georgia. “We look for individuals who are willing to take on roles that will challenge them daily. Communication and the ability to work with others is key.”

Jackson began work at CSM in 2009 after working in industrial maintenance at other organizations in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

“Updates in the real world don’t change as fast as technology changes,” Jackson said. “When you walk into a facility, you may not have worked on the equipment you are seeing. They may be a generation behind, but they are running hard. If you will get the same output out of something, why change it?”

Jackson said that away from the machinery it is good for newer workers to find a mentor with experience to learn from.

“Just don’t be out there on your own,” he said. “You need to learn this business as a whole. It is a lucrative career path that a lot of people overlook.”

Jackson was in the second graduating class at TSTC in Marshall in 1994 when he received a certificate in Industrial Maintenance. He liked that he could attend college locally.

“You can graduate from TSTC and go straight to work and understand what the business is about,” Jackson said. “Their programs are designed for the industry. The instructors came out of industry.”

Moody graduated from TSTC in Marshall with an Associate of Applied Science degree in Industrial Mechatronics in 2012.

“I liked that hands-on experience prepared me and at least got me familiar with the equipment,” Moody said. “I just applied the theories I learned to the actual real-life situations.”

Moody started as a company floor technician in 2013 before being promoted to his current position. He credits Jackson with being his professional mentor.

“I assist Derrick and the maintenance supervisors with the daily tasks and planned work,” Moody said. “I manage the assets of all our equipment and assist with projects.”

Moody transferred all his TSTC credit hours to earn a bachelor’s degree in Technical Management from DeVry University in 2015.

Caraguel said the company recruits college students nationally through its new CSM UP! initiative, putting them to work in their degree fields with other interns, managers and administrators. Video conferencing is used for students to learn from company executives located at other facilities.

For more information on CSM Bakery Solutions, go to csmbakerysolutions.com.

For more information on TSTC, go to tstc.edu.

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Double That: TSTC, Whataburger of East Texas Unite to Raise Scholarship Money

(MARSHALL) – Add the bacon, order the ketchup or ask for double patties – Whataburger fans can do all these and more to benefit students at Texas State Technical College in Marshall.

Longview-based Whataburger of East Texas will have an Oh Whata Night! fundraiser from 4 to 8 p.m. on Thursday at the East End Boulevard South and Victory Drive locations in Marshall. Twenty percent of all orders from the eateries will be given to the Make a Texas-Sized Difference campaign developed by The TSTC Foundation for the Texan Success Scholarship. The technical college will match the proceeds.

“By supporting this effort, you are not only helping a person get the skills they need to get a high- paying job and change the life of their family, but you are also helping to fill industry demand and build a stronger workforce for East Texas and across the entire state,” said Jessica Ford, field development officer for The TSTC Foundation.

The East End Boulevard South location will host the restaurant chain’s mascot, Whataguy, and have games and prize giveaways.

“The event helps the community know what is going on and also educate people that TSTC has a scholarship program,” said Kayla Richardson, marketing director of Whataburger of East Texas.

This is the first time Whataburger of East Texas and TSTC have united for an education effort.

“Our goal is to help fund any area in the education system that is lacking or needing some assistance,” Richardson said. “We pinpoint and go toward trying to help them as much as possible.”

For more information on TSTC, go to tstc.edu.

TSTC in Waco Hosts Industry Career Day

(WACO) – More than 600 Texas State Technical College in Waco students attended Thursday’s Industry Career Day to learn about careers in welding technology, aviation maintenance, instrumentation technology and other fields.

The event included companies from throughout Texas, and as far away as the U.S. Virgin Islands, convening to talk to students who could be future employees.

Washington County Tractor in Brenham sells a variety of hay equipment, tractors, trailers and parts for the agricultural and construction industries. The company is quickly expanding in Central Texas and has a need for diesel mechanics to work on the New Holland and Kubota brands they sell.

John Dowling, the company’s corporate parts and service director, wanted to attend the event because of the quality of TSTC graduates he has employed in the past. The company has more than 130 employees in Brenham, Bryan, Navasota, Sealy and Temple.

“We need more schools like TSTC,” Dowling said. “We need quality employees.”

Plastipak Holdings Inc. has facilities in Garland and Highlands and specializes in plastic bottle manufacturing. Kevin Tolly, the company’s human resources manager, said he was seeking technical degree majors who knew how to mechanically troubleshoot.

Tolly credited TSTC’s Career Services staff for having good business knowledge of what is needed in industry.

“We met a lot of folks that will be very good,” he said.

Dustin Uptmore is familiar with TSTC in Waco; he is a 2007 Heating Ventilation and Air Conditioning Technology graduate and has been employed at Capstone Mechanical in Waco his whole career. The company has 150 employees.

Uptmore said the company was interested in finding potential plumbing apprentices, service technicians and HVAC commercial mechanics.

“It was good today,” Uptmore said. “I met a lot of welding and HVAC students. I’ve been to every Industry Career Day event the past three years.”

Some students were impressed employers took time to visit the technical college to learn about them.

Eligio Puente, 19, of Rosebud is a Computer Networking and Systems Administration major planning to graduate in the spring.

“I liked the way you learn what they have in jobs and you can take your resume to give to people,” he said. “It’s good interaction with them.”

Bryne Henry, 20, of Moody is majoring in Cyber Security and Computer Networking and Systems Administration and said he was encouraged by company representatives giving him information on how to learn about their work and available jobs. He is scheduled to graduate next summer.

Henry said he enjoyed visiting the Austin-based Loop1 Systems Inc. booth. The company specializes in Internet technology professional services and training and was recently named a Top 5,000 fastest-growing company, according to Inc. Magazine.

For more information on TSTC, go to tstc.edu.

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Del Rio Students Continue Welding Technology Tradition at TSTC in Waco

(WACO) – The presence of Del Rio High School graduates studying Welding Technology at Texas State Technical College in Waco is becoming a familiar sight.

“As far back as when I was a student at TSTC in the late 1990s, there were guys from Del Rio here,” said Ashley Yezak, a Welding Technology instructor at TSTC in Waco.

Del Rio on the Texas-Mexico border and Waco in Central Texas are more than 300 miles apart. But what connects the cities is Tod Townsend, Del Rio High School’s welding instructor and his passion for the field he wants to pass on to his students. He estimated 25 Del Rio students have traveled in the last seven years to Waco to study for certificates and Associate of Applied Science degrees in Welding Technology.

“Every year I take some of my juniors and seniors on a tour around Texas for three days and we visit all the welding schools we can,” Townsend said. “When I was at TSTC and met all the instructors and saw the rigor of the courses, it looked like the best program for sure.”

Arturo Ponce, 19, took one of the college tours and liked the hands-on tradition of attending TSTC.

“You can go anywhere there is a job,” he said about welding. “There is always a need.”

Ponce and Luis Saucedo, 19, are already connecting their college learning experiences to industry by working part time at a fabrication shop in Crawford. Luis Saucedo’s brother graduated from TSTC in Waco earlier this year with an associate degree in Welding Technology and worked at the same business.

Saucedo said he likes learning additional skills in gas tungsten arc welding that build on the basics he learned in Del Rio.

Jose Munoz, 20, a second-year Welding Technology student, said he wants to learn about metalworking so he can work on older automobiles and hot rods.

Most of the students live on campus in the Village Oaks Apartments, though not all are roommates. The apartments the students congregate in typically have the newest video games and occasionally flow with musical sounds from the border.

“Here in Waco you need money to do something, but down there in Del Rio, not really,” Munoz said. “You can go to the creek, the lake.”

Some of the students said it has been an adjustment getting used to Waco, particularly with traffic and stop lights. Some students have learned that Spanish is not the dominant language in the area, while others crave Del Rio’s locally made tortilla chips.

“We feel like we are taking care of each other,” Ponce said.

Roberto Lopez, 19, a second-year Welding Technology student, does not think the drive to Del Rio is that lengthy. He grew up on a ranch and often helped his father with welding projects.

“I go home almost every weekend,” he said “The biggest thing I have miss is my family.”

Townsend sends his students off with other skills to help them in classes, and later, jobs.

“Pretty much anyone can teach the skill of welding,” he said. “But I can teach them how to be professional. I meet them in the hall, look them in the eye and shake their hands. I believe you have to be professional before anything. If you teach them that, no matter what field they are in, they are going to be successful.”

Townsend thinks more of his welding students will be on their way to Waco in years to come. Del Rio’s welding program has at least 60 students this year, Townsend said.

“He actually cares about the program and the reputation it has at the high school,” said Joshua A. Garcia, 19.

The San Felipe Del Rio Consolidated School District is finishing construction on the Gerardo J. Maldonado Career and Technical Education Center, which will house welding, automotive, construction and other technical programs that are now taught at Del Rio High School. Townsend expects all the technical programs to grow because there will be more learning space. Classes will begin at the new building in January.

For more information on TSTC, log on to tstc.edu.

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TSTC Alumnus Drives Consumer Data For Brand Impact in Austin

(WACO) – Just like the tools he uses in his job, Jerry McNeal has had to evolve and learn new methods and tasks.

From starting as an illustrator with pens and boards in the 1980s at a Fort Worth defense and aerospace company to now using sophisticated software as a member of Austin’s growing technology sector, McNeal, 52, has to keep up. He is a technical success manager at Bazaarvoice in north Austin where he works with the company’s more than 5,000 global clients on technical issues.

McNeal graduated in 1985 from Texas State Technical College in Waco with an Associate of Applied Science degree in Design and Technical Illustration (now an Associate of Applied Science degree in Visual Communication Technology).

“There are a lot of students that are best suited to go to TSTC because they need to go to work,” McNeal said. “They don’t have the time to invest in going to school for five years. I really do like TSTC. I think it’s a great school and offers a great education.”

Bazaarvoice sets up platforms used for global consumer-generated reviews and content for brands and companies, and it maintains search engine optimization for clients. Social media also plays a role in keeping information relevant to consumers, driving their buying habits.

“It is a very casual place to work,” McNeal said. “It’s much like other technology companies that you run into. We are about 12 years old and that is fairly new.”

Bazaarvoice has about 800 employees worldwide. Some of TSTC’s technical programs that fit the company’s mold include software development, computer science, web design and development technology, and digital media design, said Graham Pionkowski, Bazaarvoice’s director of talent acquisition in Austin.

Challenges, risk, striving for innovation and collaboration are some of the qualities Bazaarvoice’s potential and present employees should have besides technical knowledge, Pionkowski said.

“I feel the company is on a path of growth in the coming years,” he said. “It’s important to have a foothold in the talent market and the employer brand to make sure we are filling the organization with the right lifeblood to continue to succeed. We are built around our employees.”

McNeal grew up in Austin and is a graduate of Reagan High School. He heard about TSTC from his brother, who studied aviation maintenance in the early 1980s in Waco.

“When I got out of high school I wasn’t interested in a four-year college at the time,” McNeal said. “I liked working more than I wanted to go to school. That is why I chose to go to TSTC. It allowed me to take all the courses I wanted to take that were of interest. I worked full time when I was going to school.”

He said he had three job offers upon graduation from TSTC. From Fort Worth, McNeal went on to work in College Station and Tennessee before returning to the capital of Texas.

“Names like Google, Facebook, Amazon and well-known brands in the United States and worldwide are setting up shop and expanding in Austin, which has made it more competitive but also welcome because we are getting some of the best talent across the world in this wonderful city,” Pionkowski said.

For more information on Bazaarvoice, go to bazaarvoice.com.

For more information on TSTC, go to tstc.edu.

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TSTC in Marshall Instructor Recognized With Chancellor’s Excellence Award

(MARSHALL) – Edward Chaney dreamed of teaching junior high school or high school mathematics while growing up.

Now he is fulfilling his dream, but for older students as an instructor in the Industrial Maintenance program at Texas State Technical College in Marshall.

“I feel like I am giving something back to the people giving something to me,” Chaney, 50, said.

He was recently honored as a TSTC Chancellor’s Excellence Award recipient.

“Society is changing so fast because of the impact technology is having in our lives,” TSTC Chancellor and CEO Mike Reeser said. “But the one thing that doesn’t change is the strength of a leader and their character, and the profound impact we have on each other. And that’s why TSTC is a special place and a unique player in Texas.”

Chaney has taught at TSTC in Marshall for four years. The Industrial Maintenance program has about 70 students for the fall semester.

“Edward is clearly one of our top teammates and a great example of a true servant-leader,” TSTC in Marshall Provost Barton Day said. “He is a mentor to students and fellow staff and faculty and a terrific choice for this well-deserved recognition.”

Chancellor’s award recipients are nominated by coworkers.

“I got notification about the award from email and that UPS was sending me a package,” Chaney said. “I thought it was spam at first. There was a letter that came from the chancellor. Once I got the envelope and found out what it was, it was a sense of awe because I wasn’t expecting it.”

Chaney grew up in Mount Enterprise, where he graduated in 1984 from Mount Enterprise High School. He was active in FFA and a member of the electrical skills team.

He joined the U.S. Marine Corps and served for four years as an electrician while stationed at Marine Corps Air Station El Toro in California and Marine Corps Base Hawaii in Kaneohe Bay.

“I would help hook up tent cities in the field and on training missions,” Chaney said.

After leaving the military, he worked in maintenance and production for a tire manufacturer in California before returning to East Texas to work for 16 years at the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. plant in Tyler before it closed in 2007.

“When they shut the plant down, I got to come to TSTC in Marshall as a student and did two associate degrees: Industrial Electrical Technology and Industrial Mechanical Technology (later combined to be the Associate of Applied Science degree in Industrial Maintenance).”

After a couple of more jobs, Chaney discovered TSTC in Marshall had a faculty position open.

“I like the fact we change lives and that is what I’m excited about,” he said.

For more information on TSTC, go to tstc.edu.

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