This fall 24 students will have the opportunity to enroll in
precision machining programs at York County Community College’s new
facility in Sanford.
The community college held an open house on
Monday to celebrate the new program and to give the media a look at the
newly renovated 6,050-square-foot space at One Eagle Drive in South
Sanford that will house the program. The facility includes classrooms
and a fully outfitted manufacturing laboratory.
Interim YCCC
President Scott Knapp guided a visitor to the laboratory where new
conventional machining equipment and computer numerically controlled
machining tools were positioned in work stations around the cavernous
room. Knapp pointed out a long row of conventional, manually operated
metal-working machines, along a wall of the laboratory.
“That’s where you start in the field,” he said.
The larger, computer numerically controlled (CNC) machines stood in another row.
Knapp
said the field is called “precision machining” because tools and parts
for the aircraft industry, automobile industry and other high-tech
applications really do have to be precise. He said starting salaries,
with an associate degree, can be $40,000 or more.
YCCC had
originally planned to accept 12 students into the program the first year
and another 12 the next year. Knapp said Monday that the program will
accept 24 students for the first year and that there is room at the
facility for an additional program, if there is a need and a demand for
it. Knapp pointed to a wall of the laboratory and said that YCCC has the
option to lease another 5,000 square feet beyond the wall.
“We know we’re not meeting the state’s needs,” he said.
In
addition to his interim position at YCCC, Knapp is president of Central
Maine Community College in Auburn, one of three community colleges in
the state that currently offers a precision machining technology
program.
Bob Franklin, an engineer, who used to work in the
aerospace industry, was lured away from a school in Hudson, N.Y., where
he taught mechanical engineering and built a high-tech manufacturing
program for students. He has been hired to head up YCCC’s new precision
machining program. Knapp said YCCC is in the process of hiring an
additional teacher.
“We’ve got great hopes for this program,” Franklin said on Monday. “We think we can [accommodate] over 100 students.”
YCCC
will offer two precision machining programs beginning in September.
Students can take a one-year certificate program in which they will
learn to operate conventional machine tools, read and analyze
engineering drawings and use precision measuring and inspection
instruments. They will also receive an introduction to CNC machines and
their operation.
The two-year associate degree program is designed
to prepare students to apply technical knowledge and skills to use
either conventional or CNC machine tools, such as lathes and milling
machines, to produce precision parts. It will include instruction in
blueprint reading, machining, lathe and mill operations, and other
computer and related technical instruction as well as liberal arts,
applied mathematics, and shop and safety practices.
There are a
number of manufacturing companies in York County that employ highly
skilled machinists, including Pratt & Whitney in North Berwick and
General Dynamics in Saco, the two largest in the state, as well as many
smaller companies. In addition, many positions are going unfilled
because companies cannot find employees with the skills they need. More
information about the program is available on the web site at www.careel-tech.com.
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