Hocking College


Hocking College is a public community college in Nelsonville, Ohio. The college offers more than 60 Associate and Vocational programs. Hocking College is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission. The college was chartered in 1969, by the Ohio Board of Regents.
Hocking has 3,474 students enrolled. Its 2,300-acre campus is set in a rural setting and uses a semester-based academic calendar. Hocking's athletic teams are the Hawks. The college is a member of the National Junior College Athletics Association.

History

Hocking College came into existence as the Tri-County Institute. In the 1960s, the need for a vocational school became apparent in Southeast Ohio through demographic studies and population surveys. The Tri-County Institute was built on the campus of the Tri-County Joint Vocational School with the schools sharing laboratory and service areas. Fall 1968 marked the opening of the Institute with approximately 250 students and 28 instructors. In 1969, the Ohio Board of Regents granted a charter to the institute, and they were authorized to grant degrees in 13 technical programs. The first commencement took place in June 1970 with 117 graduates.
In 1972, the official name of the school was changed to Hocking Technical College and 250 acres were purchased for new building and future development. In 1975, the college relocated its main campus to its current site on Hocking Parkway. The same year, residence halls opened on Hocking's campus, making it the only two-year school in Ohio to have college-owned residence halls available to its students. Hocking College was first accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools, Higher Learning Commission in 1976. During the 1980s, Hocking College continued to grow and expand, establishing many sister-colleges worldwide, in places such as Taiwan, Japan and Jamaica. In 1990, the Perry Campus in New Lexington opened to serve the needs of Perry County residents. In 1991, the college's name officially changed for a second time to Hocking College. In 1997, the college purchased Lake Snowden in Albany, Ohio and in 1998 renamed it as the Lake Snowden Education and Recreation Park.
In addition to their main campus, Hocking College owns and operates Lake Snowden, a recreation area in Lee Township. They also own of open-space land in the rugged landscape of York Township, west of the campus.

Academics

The college offers programs within the areas of Allied Health; Arts, Business and Science; Engineering and Information Technology; Hospitality; Natural Resources; Nursing; and Public Safety Services.

Research

Hocking College became one of two licensed cannabis testing laboratories for Ohio in 2018. In early 2018, the Ohio Department of Commerce licensed Hocking College to test Ohio's medical marijuana before it is passed through the state-regulated supply chain. Jonathan Cachat, Director of Laboratory Sciences, lead the development of these cannabis focused initiatives. The college's medical and chemical laboratory, confirmed by the Ohio Department of Higher Education, tests available supplies for common cannabinoids, purity, potency, and chemical content. In July 2018, The Ohio Department of Higher Education confirmed the college's associates programs in Applied Science and Laboratory Science. The laboratory is located in the historic downtown area of Nelsonville. The lab will also be used in courses related to a new major in the associate degree in Laboratory Sciences program, Cannabis Laboratory, beginning in early 2019.

Notable Events

2008 presidential transition

In August 2008, the Ohio Auditor's office announced an audit of Hocking College to investigate possible financial irregularities. Then-president John Light, along with his wife, who served as a senior vice president, and two other employees were found to have taken money illegally from the college. They were charged with crimes related to these allegations in June 2011. They pled no contest to the charges, were fined, and ordered to pay restitution.
Light was replaced by Ron Erickson, who was himself removed from office the same month as his appointment, after sending a campus-wide e-mail in which he claimed he was micromanaged by the board of trustees. Despite his dismissal and the email, he was reinstated three months later.

Safety and security

In January 2010, a note threatening that black students would be killed on a specific date the following month was found in a dormitory bathroom. The school increased security measures and offered a financial reward for information leading to the arrest of the perpetrator. Two black students who feared for their safety withdrew from the college. Safety concerns prompted the college to review and revise campus security policies. The college installed security cameras throughout each dormitory in addition to hiring additional residence hall staff.

The First in the Nation '''to offer two-year cannabis-related degree'''

Of note, Hocking College is one of two public institutes of higher education participating in Ohio's new medical cannabis program serving as a medical cannabis analytic testing lab to ensure patient safety and informed selection. The Cannabis Lab Technician program at Hocking College is the first Associate Degree in Laboratory Sciences with a major in Cannabis Laboratory in the United States. Students will be learning cannabis specific tests and techniques while spending a significant amount of hands-on training with the same analytical instruments found in other commercial labs.