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Hartnell College of California May Shut Down Auto Collision Program
6/7/2011 1:10:29 PM

Officials at Hartnell College in Salinas, Calif., are recommending to the school's board of trustees that they wipe out auto collision classes due to weak enrollment.

According to The Californian, the program has been on academic probation since 2007 because it didn't have enough students completing the coursework needed to graduate. Plus, there was a documented lack of jobs in the collision industry.

The Californian said that out of 449 students enrolled in at least one class in the program between 2006 and 2010, only six students earned auto collision repair and refinishing certificates and degrees. On top of that, a research consultant predicted that between 2010 and 2015, there would only be 18 jobs available in the collision industry in the Salinas Valley.

A local collision business owner, Javier Tostado, owner of Alpha Auto Collision Parts and Glass in Salinas, expressed dismay about the possibility of the collision classes going away.

"As a supplier, I haven't seen a drop in sales," Tostado told The Californian. "The industry speaks for itself. There are so many autos out there. Who is going to fix them?"


More information:

Read the full story in The Californian


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