Alex Anacki
Community & Insights Advisor, Future of Work and Innovation Economy Initiative
NSF budget cuts, reductions in force, and funding freezes hamstring community college programs around emerging technologies, including AI, quantum, biotechnology, and advanced manufacturing.
This article was produced as part of 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Future of Work and the Innovation Economy Initiative. Subscribe to our Future of Work Bulletin newsletter to stay current on our latest research, events, technical assistance, and storytelling.
On February 12th, 麻豆果冻传媒 and the Association of Community College Trustees (ACCT) hosted a briefing on Capitol Hill sponsored by the , co-chaired by Representative Gus Bilirakis (R-Fla.) and Representative Joe Courtney (D-Conn.).
The briefing, titled 鈥淭urbocharging Community College Pathways to the Future of Work and the Innovation Economy,鈥 focused on the critical role of the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), the federal agency dedicated to STEM R&D and education, in supporting community college workforce pathways to a strong, skilled technical workforce across STEM industries 鈥 especially for industries or jobs shaped by emerging technologies, including biotechnology, artificial intelligence (AI), and . Panelists included Shalin Jyotishi, Founder and Managing Director of the Future of Work and Innovation Economy Initiative at 麻豆果冻传媒, President of Forsyth Technical Community College, and , Associate Vice President of ACCT鈥檚 Center for Policy and Practice.
Research from 麻豆果冻传媒 has illuminated community colleges' vital role in meeting employer talent needs for future-forward industries catalyzing the future of work and the role of the NSF in enabling that work. Particularly following the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022, the NSF has significantly expanded its support of community colleges in emerging technology areas by creating to support institutional capacity-building, experiential learning, and partnerships in .
Key NSF programs include but are not limited to the , , the , and the programs. These programs contribute to two national objectives: ensuring that American technological leadership can be maintained abroad in the and making certain that more Americans can benefit from that leadership here at home by gaining the education and skills needed to secure good jobs in STEM and emerging industries shaping the present and future of work.
During the briefing, Rep. Bilirakis emphasized community colleges鈥 importance in workforce development and economic growth in advanced manufacturing and AI. As co-chair of the , a community college graduate, and an adjunct professor at St. Petersburg College, Bilirakis is familiar with the vital role of community colleges in transforming local economies. In his remarks, Bilirakis cited community colleges as 鈥渨here our future high-skill workers will get their training鈥 and named them key vehicles for communities鈥 workforce development. During his time in the Florida Legislature, Bilirakis was an architect of community college bachelor鈥檚 degrees, which have been awarded to over 75,000 Floridians since 2001.
Beyond their role as , community colleges directly work with employers and economic development organizations to identify and meet urgent and future local workforce needs. For Spriggs鈥 institution, the NSF鈥檚 support is 鈥渋ndispensable.鈥 She named the , which has called Forsyth Tech home since 2004, as one example of the NSF鈥檚 role in fostering 鈥減athways out of poverty.鈥 NSF funding made the center鈥檚 existence possible. Beyond funding physical spaces and programs, the NSF supports Forsyth Tech鈥檚 efforts to acquire cutting-edge and costly equipment like scanning electron microscopes, bioprinters for organ transplants using synthetic tissue, and a mass spectrometer 鈥 all essential for powering North Carolina鈥檚 bioeconomy.
Like the center Spriggs cited, early investments are catalysts for future growth. The NSF鈥檚 help to get the center in operation made Forsyth Tech鈥檚 innovation economy work immediately attractive to a litany of postsecondary partners, hospital systems, local governments, workforce development leaders, and businesses. NSF funding often precedes private support; the NSF鈥檚 rigorous oversight and assistance give business leaders confidence and present opportunities for high-impact investing.
Beyond their role as , community colleges directly work with employers and economic development organizations to identify and meet urgent and future local workforce needs. As open-access institutions with a clear local focus, community colleges are primed to serve students from all walks of life who wish to skill up or reskill into emerging sectors. NSF funding provides an indispensable acceleration of these pathways, complementing investments from employers such as , Intel, and investment in community college AI education and from states like Texas鈥 .
As the NSF faces , , , and proposed by the Trump administration, Spriggs and the panelists urged legislators to recognize the benefits of NSF funding for community colleges like Forsyth Tech and to listen to community college leaders like her who have voiced concern about the impact of NSF cuts on their students and employer partners. 鈥淭here鈥檚 still a lot of room for us to be able to have a conversation like this. Our purpose [today] is to describe the invaluable impact the NSF funding has had for community colleges鈥e need to really explain to our legislators what that means in terms of the impact鈥 on the workforce and the economy.
From the technologies underpinning Google to GPS to , NSF funding is key. Federal agencies like the NSF and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) are fundamental partners in fostering and sustaining economic growth and innovation鈥攏ot just through research in labs but also in STEM career preparation. Efforts at community colleges to train workers in cutting-edge technologies like Miami Dade College鈥檚 or MiraCosta College鈥檚 are vital to continuing this record of success.